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Darmstadt Germany:

Darmstadt Germany He subsequently Id diplomatic posts at Karlsruhe, darmstadt germany, d Nassau, was the confidant and adviser of King ederick William IV, and after the Revolution 1848 supported the efforts of Prussia to give a nstitution to Germany. For a few months in 50 he was Prussian minister of foreign affairs. August 1852 he became director of military ucation. He wrote several works, mainly polit-.1. RADZIWILL, ra-je'vel (Pol. RADZIWIJLI,), althy Lithuanian-Polish family. Its members :ame princes of the empire in 1556. Among its ist famous members are :

I've already glowed about the Weserbergland, but keep in mind also the glorious Moselle Valley and its side valleys; the Harz area (part of this is on the free side of the line); the North Sea and Baltic islands and beaches; the so-called Romantic Road, a chain of treasured towns from Wurzburg through Rothenburg and Augsburg clear to the border of Tyrol, at Fiissen (map-work is suggested); the Zugspitze, Germany's highest peak (9730 feet), reached by a cogwheel train; the Danube Trail, from the river's birth in Donaueschingen, in the Black Forest, through Ulm to Passau, at the Austrian border; the pretty Bergstrasse, from darmstadt germany down to Heidelberg; and what one might call the "Hohenzollern Highway," a road of great interest leading from Donaueschingen through the rolling Swabian countryside to Stuttgart.The cities of Germany are a gleaming galaxy, each worthy of at least a day, but they are so numerous that each can have barely a sentence here. They shall be presented in alphabetical order.


Early American foundations were the Community of St. Mary for women (1865) and the Order of the Holy Cross for men (1885). Anglican communities commonly followed the "mixed life" of regular congregations,-but since 1900 there have been contemplative convents, and followers of the rules of St. Benedict and St. Francis. In continental Europe. Protestant monastic communities have arisen more recently, as a response to the call of the Gospel to self-dedication. The Brotherhood of Taize near Cluny grew in 1942 out of work for refugees, and there are a number of new sisterhoods (such as the Ecumenical Sisters of Mary at darmstadt germany, 1947) in France, Germany, and Scandinavia.
 
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