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  1. Gertrud’s confession was the start of the Mora witch trials – called “Det Stora Oväsendet” (“The Great Noise”) and lasting almost a decade – and led directly to the death of Märet. Many of the initial accusers were also children claiming to have visited Blakulla, partying with and seeing both demons and angels.

  2. Believing that individuals were born good but corrupted by society, Rousseau pictured his fictional pupil Émile growing up in a rural environment under the guidance of a male tutor, whose main duty was to stimulate the boy’s innate capacity for learning. 12 Close Rousseau’s German disciples, who called themselves the Philanthropists ...

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  4. Thanks to our persistence, we can now account for most of Gertrud’s whereabouts from the time she was born in Bladiau, East Prussia on 24 February 1899, until the day Gertrud and her daughter Sonia disappeared from a transport to Auschwitz on 24 August 1943.

  5. Gertrude the Great, OSB (or Saint Gertrude of Helfta; Italian: Santa Gertrude, German: Gertrud die Große von Helfta, Latin: Sancta Gertrudis; January 6, 1256 – November 17, 1302 [1]) was a German Benedictine nun and mystic from the monastery of Helfta. She is recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church and figures in the General Roman ...

    • cross, radiant heart
  6. Geertruidenberg, gardeners, pilgrims, poor people, widows, cats, against rats, mice and pestilence. Gertrude of Nivelles, OSB (also spelled Geretrude, Geretrudis, Gertrud; c. 628 [2] – 17 March 659) was a seventh-century abbess who, with her mother Itta, founded the Abbey of Nivelles, now in Belgium.

    • crosier, rats, mice and cats
    • Geertruidenberg, gardeners, pilgrims, poor people, widows, cats, against rats, mice and pestilence
  7. Mar 16, 2020 · Gertrude was born in Nivelles (a city in modern-day Belgium) in 626 into a family of wealthy nobles. Her father, Pepin I, was mayor of the palace of Austrasia under the Frankish kings Clotaire II, Dagobert I, and Sigebert III. Her mother, Itta, was believed to be the daughter of the bishop of Metz. Gertrude was the fourth and youngest child in ...

  8. Apr 26, 2024 · Here we have the confectioner's daughters Gertrud (2nd from left) and Josefine (3rd). Far left is Gertrud's husband, Wilhelm Heinrich Habrich. Josefine's husband, Wilhelm Max Holler, is the 6th from left. On either side of him two Holler children, and on the right of the picture four Habrich children lined up.

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