Driving From Penzberg To Sindelsdorf Germany, ( Deutschland )
Driving from Penzberg To Sindelsdorf Germany
Bavaria, Deutschland
Robert Myrick Photography
GoPro Hero 3 Black Edition
Bergwerksmuseum Penzberg
Mit der TaoTronics ThorLite TT-TF01 Taschenlampe
Waldhandwerk Bushcraft - Survival Trainings:
Bergzeit Outdoorshop:
Bergwerk in Penzberg: 50 Jahre Schicht im Schacht | Zwischen Spessart und Karwendel | BR
Mit der Schließung des Kohlebergwerks ging im oberbayerischen Penzberg eine Ära zu Ende. Der ehemalige Bergarbeiter Michael Mayr hat sie noch hautnah miterlebt und lässt sie in seinen Erzählungen wieder lebendig werden.
Zwischen Spessart und Karwendel im Internet:
Autorin: Sabine Frühbuss
Tunze : visite du musée
En exclusivité, nous avons eu la chance de visiter le musée Tunze avec Claude Hug dans l'usine de fabrication à Penzberg, en Allemagne. Découvrez l'histoire de la marque à travers les prototypes et produits développés depuis 1960.
L'article détaillé :
Récifal News - L'actualité de votre aquarium marin récifal
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Gospelnight Penzberg 1999
Auftritt unseres Schülergospelchores in der Gospel Night Penzberg im November 1999
Penzberg
Vielen Dank für Ihre Unterstützung:
Penzberg
Penzberg ist eine Kleinstadt im oberbayerischen Landkreis Weilheim-Schongau und liegt rund 50 Kilometer südlich von München.Die ehemalige Bergwerksstadt wird heute durch die Firma Roche Diagnostics geprägt.
------------Bild-Copyright-Informationen--------
Urheber Info: Vektorisierung: Jürgen Krause
Lizenz: Public domain
Urheber:
Jürgen Krause (//commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:J%C3%BCrgen_Krause)
✪Video ist an blinde Nutzer gerichtet
✪Text verfügbar unter der Lizens CC-BY-SA
✪Bild Quelle im Video
LEBENSLINIEN (2) - Peter Koppen am 28.04.1997 im Bayerischen Fernsehen
LEBENSLINIEN (2) - Peter Koppen am 28.04.1997 im Bayerischen Fernsehen
(Original-Analogvideo von 1997)
Autobahn Driving Into Sindelsdorf, Germany
Autobahn Driving Into and through Sindelsdorf, Germany
Bavaria
Sindelsdorf is a municipality in the Weilheim-Schongau district, in Bavaria, Germany.
Robert Myrick Photography
Shot with GoPro Hero 3 Black
HSD 2001
LAN Party in der Penzberger Stadthalle im Jahr 2001
trailer hsd
Trailer zur LAN-Party HSD2 2004 in der Stadthalle Penzberg
Zeitgenössische und moderne Kunst im Kallmann-Museum Ismaning
Interview mit Rasmus Kleine, Leiter Kallmann-Museum Ismaning:
Das Kallmann-Museum zeigt in einem Nachbau der ehemaligen Orangerie im Schlosspark der Gemeinde Ismaning zeitgenössische und moderne Kunst. Neben einer Dauerausstellung der Werke des deutschen Malers Hans Jürgen Kallmann sind auch wechselnde Exponate anderer Künstler zu besichtigen. Seit der Eröffnung 1992 finden in der Kulturstätte zudem regelmäßig Jazzkonzerte statt, um das Museum mit Leben zu füllen.
Webseite des Kallmann-Museum Ismaning:
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Die Social-Media-Seiten von Ismaning:
WEBSEITE:
FACEBOOK:
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YOUTUBE-Channel Ismaning - Jetzt hier kostenlos abonnieren:
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Impressum:
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Farbenflashmob mit dem Kindermuseum
Am 20. Juni 2016 haben wir gemeinsam mit den Kindern der Bürgermeister-Smidt-Schule in Bremen gefeiert wie schön bunt und vielfältig unsere Welt ist. Gleichzeitig gab dieser Farbenflashmob auch den Startschuss für unserer neuen Mitmachausstellung Das Gelbe vom Ei - Farbenrausch 3, die am 28.August 2016 in den Räumen des Museums Weserburg eröffnet.
Foucaultsches Pendel, Darstellung Erddrehung, Deutsches Museum München | Faszination Museum
Der französische Physiker Jean Bernard Léon Foucault (1819-1868) zeigte mit einem Pendel eindrucksvoll die Erddrehung.
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Faszination Museum entführt Sie in die fantastische Welt der Museen Europas! Ob Glas, Verkehr oder Schokolade... wir haben für Sie die interessantesten und außergewöhnlichsten Museen in Deutschland und Umgebung ausfindig gemacht. Faszination Museum bietet Kultur zum Anfassen und erlebnisreiche Unterhaltung für Groß und Klein!
open air konzert penzberg
kurzer Einblick zum Open Air Konzert mit 3 Bands in Benzberg
biotechnologie.tv: Folge 111
In Folge 111 von biotechnologie.tv werden die Sieger des Erklärwettbewerbs Famelab prämiert. Außerdem: Das Facebook-Spiel Syrum und ein Bericht zu den Deutschen Biotechnologietagen, die Mitte Mai in Stuttgart stattfanden.
Beitrag 1: Famelab 2013
Wie kann man in nur drei Minuten erklären, woran man schon seit Jahren forscht? Genau diese Aufgabe haben Wissenschaftler, wenn sie beim Famelab-Wettbewerb mitmachen. Anfang Mai kamen nun Deutschlands beste wissenschaftliche Wortakrobaten zum Finale nach Bielefeld.
Beitrag 2: Syrum
Die Gesundheit der Welt ist in Gefahr und nur Du kannst sie retten! So lautet der Aufruf des Facebook-Spiels Syrum. Hier können Spieler zu Online-Forschern werden und in einem virtuellen Labor allerhand Experimente durchführen.
Beitrag 3: Biotechnologietage
Wie hat sich die Biotech-Branche im vergangenen Jahr entwickelt? Bei wem läuft es gut, wer hat zu kämpfen? Mit Fragen wie diesen haben sich mehr als 700 Biotech-Experten aus ganz Deutschland Mitte Mai in Stuttgart beschäftigt.
Ein Service von biotechnologie.de
Rechts Raus - Folge 7 - Franz Marc Museum in Kochel am See
Driving From Sindelsdorf To Garmisch Edelweiss Lodge, Germany
Driving from Sindelsdorf on The Autobahn To Garmisch Edelweiss Lodge with a stop at Ibsee Train Station that goes to The Zugspitze then back into Garmisch to Edelweiss American Military Lodge
Alps Bavaria, Germany
Garmisch-Partenkirchen (German pronunciation: [ˈɡaʁmɪʃ paʁtn̩ˈkɪʁçn̩]) is a mountain resort town in Bavaria, southern Germany. It is the administrative centre of the district of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, in the Oberbayern region, and the district is on the border with Austria. Nearby is Germany's highest mountain, Zugspitze, at 2,962 m (9,718 ft.).
The town was the site of the 1936 Winter Olympic Games.
Garmisch (in the west) and Partenkirchen (in the east) were separate towns for many centuries, and still maintain quite separate identities.
Partenkirchen originated as the Roman town of Partanum on the trade route from Venice to Augsburg and is first mentioned in the year A.D. 15. Its main street, Ludwigsstrasse, follows the original Roman road.
Garmisch is first mentioned some 800 years later as Germaneskau (German District), suggesting that at some point a Teutonic tribe took up settlement in the western end of the valley.
During the late 13th century, the valley, as part of the County of Werdenfels, came under the rule of the prince-bishops of Freising and was to remain so until the mediatization of 1803. The area was governed by a prince-bishop's representative known as a Pfleger (caretaker or warden) from Werdenfels Castle situated on a crag north of Garmisch.
The discovery of America at the turn of the 16th century led to a boom in shipping and a sharp decline in overland trade, which plunged the region into a centuries-long economic depression. The valley floor was swampy and difficult to farm. Bears, wolves and lynxes were a constant threat to livestock. The population suffered from periodic epidemics, including several serious outbreaks of bubonic plague. Adverse fortunes from disease and crop failure occasionally led to a witch hunt. Most notable of these were the trials and executions of 1589–1596, in which 63 people — more than 10 percent of the population at the time — were burned at the stake or garroted.
Werdenfels Castle, where the accused were held, tried and executed, became an object of superstitious terror and was abandoned in the 17th century. It was largely torn down in the 1750s and its stones used to build the baroque Neue Kirche (New Church) on Marienplatz, which was completed in 1752. It replaced the nearby Gothic Alte Kirche (Old Church), parts of which predated Christianity and may originally have been a pagan temple. Used as a storehouse, armory and haybarn for many years, it has since been re-consecrated. Some of its medieval frescoes are still visible.
Garmisch and Partenkirchen remained separate until their respective mayors were forced by Adolf Hitler to combine the two market towns in 1935 in anticipation of the 1936 Winter Olympic games. Today, the united town is casually (but incorrectly) referred to as Garmisch, much to the dismay of Partenkirchen's residents. Most visitors will notice the slightly more modern feel of Garmisch while the fresco-filled, cobblestoned streets of Partenkirchen offer a glimpse into times past. Early mornings and late afternoons in pleasant weather often find local traffic stopped while the dairy cows are herded to and from the nearby mountain meadows.
During World War II Garmisch-Partenkirchen was a major hospital center for the German military. After the war, it was used by the U.S. military as a recreation center for U.S. military men stationed in Europe and their families.
More Info Here:
Driving Mercedes Benz Viano Ambiente
Robert Myrick Photography
GoPro Hero 3 Black Edition
Beladen des Museumsschiffs, Tutzing-Starnberger See
Das kleine Rote - ein großes Geräusch....
Leidenschaft Flippern: Die Flipperfreunde Regensburg | Schwaben & Altbayern | BR
Roland Chrobok und Carola Kohlbeck von den Flipperfreunden Regensburg wollen sich auf ihrem Turnier einen höheren Platz in der Weltrangliste verdienen. Dazu müssen die Kugelzauberer erst mal einen der alten Flipper in Stand setzen. Und am Ende Altmeister Sto besiegen.
Autor: Sandra Wiest
Aus der Sendung vom 19.1.2019
Mehr von Schwaben & Altbayern in der BR Mediathek:
Weitere Informationen zur Sendung:
#flippern #regensburg #oberpfalz
Driving From Sindelsdorf To Olympia Skistadion Ausstellung
Driving From Sindelsdorf, Germany - Bavaria To Olympia Skistadion Ausstellung
We went to hike the Gasthof Partnachklamm and back along the Incredible Partnach Gorge
Garmisch-Partenkirchen (German pronunciation: [ˈɡaʁmɪʃ paʁtn̩ˈkɪʁçn̩]) is a mountain resort town in Bavaria, southern Germany. It is the administrative centre of the district of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, in the Oberbayern region, and the district is on the border with Austria. Nearby is Germany's highest mountain, Zugspitze, at 2,962 m (9,718 ft.).
Garmisch (in the west) and Partenkirchen (in the east) were separate towns for many centuries, and still maintain quite separate identities.
Partenkirchen originated as the Roman town of Partanum on the trade route from Venice to Augsburg and is first mentioned in the year A.D. 15. Its main street, Ludwigsstrasse, follows the original Roman road.
Garmisch is first mentioned some 800 years later as Germaneskau (German District), suggesting that at some point a Teutonic tribe took up settlement in the western end of the valley.
During the late 13th century, the valley, as part of the County of Werdenfels, came under the rule of the prince-bishops of Freising and was to remain so until the mediatization of 1803. The area was governed by a prince-bishop's representative known as a Pfleger (caretaker or warden) from Werdenfels Castle situated on a crag north of Garmisch.
The discovery of America at the turn of the 16th century led to a boom in shipping and a sharp decline in overland trade, which plunged the region into a centuries-long economic depression. The valley floor was swampy and difficult to farm. Bears, wolves and lynxes were a constant threat to livestock. The population suffered from periodic epidemics, including several serious outbreaks of bubonic plague. Adverse fortunes from disease and crop failure occasionally led to a witch hunt. Most notable of these were the trials and executions of 1589–1596, in which 63 people — more than 10 percent of the population at the time — were burned at the stake or garroted.
Werdenfels Castle, where the accused were held, tried and executed, became an object of superstitious terror and was abandoned in the 17th century. It was largely torn down in the 1750s and its stones used to build the baroque Neue Kirche (New Church) on Marienplatz, which was completed in 1752. It replaced the nearby Gothic Alte Kirche (Old Church), parts of which predated Christianity and may originally have been a pagan temple. Used as a storehouse, armory and haybarn for many years, it has since been re-consecrated. Some of its medieval frescoes are still visible.
Garmisch and Partenkirchen remained separate until their respective mayors were forced by Adolf Hitler to combine the two market towns in 1935 in anticipation of the 1936 Winter Olympic games. Today, the united town is casually (but incorrectly) referred to as Garmisch, much to the dismay of Partenkirchen's residents. Most visitors will notice the slightly more modern feel of Garmisch while the fresco-filled, cobblestoned streets of Partenkirchen offer a glimpse into times past. Early mornings and late afternoons in pleasant weather often find local traffic stopped while the dairy cows are herded to and from the nearby mountain meadows.
During World War II Garmisch-Partenkirchen was a major hospital center for the German military. After the war, it was used by the U.S. military as a recreation center for U.S. military men stationed in Europe and their families.
More Info On Garmisch Here:
Google Map of drive here
Robert Myrick Photography
Shot With GoPro Hero 3 Black Edition
Google Photos Here