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  1. Other Names: Rudolf Berliner. Gender: male. Date Born: 14 April 1886. Date Died: 26 August 1967. Place Born: Ohlau, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, Germany. Place Died: Berchtesgaden, Bavaria, Germany. Home Country/ies: Germany. Subject Area (s): Byzantine (culture or style) and Early Christian.

  2. Rudolf August Johann Ludwig Wilhelm Berlin (2 May 1833 – 12 September 1897), also known as Rudolph Berlin, was a German ophthalmologist . Life and work. Rudolf Berlin was born to August Berlin (1803–1880), a physician, and his wife Amalie (née Runge, 1808–1884) in Friedland (Mecklenburg).

  3. Rudolph Berliner (1886–1967) was an art historian and a curator of fine arts at the Cooper Union Museum for the Arts of Decoration and the Textile Museum in Washington, DC. He also taught museum studies at New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts. Titles. Ornamental Design Prints. From the Fifteenth to the Twentieth Century. Rudolf Berliner.

  4. It is 130 years since the term ‘dyslexia’ was coined by Rudolf Berlin, a German ophthalmologist and professor in Stuttgart. In the course of his practice, Berlin observed the difficulties faced by some of his adult patients in reading the printed word. He could find no problem with their vision.

  5. Feb 11, 2024 · BERLIN, Feb. 16.—The German balloon pilot Hans Berliner, who ascended with two passengers on Feb. 8 in his spherical balloon, telegraphed to-day from Kirgischan, in the Ural Mountains, that he had landed near there after a forty-seven-hour flight from Bitterfield. The flight, it is understood, broke the distance record but not the duration record.

  6. Rudolph Berliner (1886–1967) was an art historian and a curator of fine arts at the Cooper Union Museum for the Arts of Decoration and the Textile Museum in Washington, DC. He also taught...

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  8. Rudolf Berliner. With an Introduction by Corinna Rösner. From finely drawn florals to ornate baroque flourishes, ornamental design prints have long been important to architectural firms and design studios that have relied on the prints to rapidly disseminate the newest styles.

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