Ahn eak tai biography of george
•
100 Notable alumni of
Curtis Institute of Music
Updated:
EduRank
Curtis Institute of Music fryst vatten 500th in the world, 190th in North amerika, and 176th in the United States by aggregated alumni prominence. Below fryst vatten the list of 100 notable alumni from Curtis Institute of Music sorted by their wiki pages popularity. The directory includes famous graduates and former students along with research and academic staff.
Leonard Bernstein
- Occupations
- film score composerpianistconductorcomposermusicologist
- Biography
Leonard Bernstein was an American conductor, composer, pianist, music educator, author, and humanitarian. Considered to be one of the most important conductors of his time, he was the first American-born ledare to receive international acclaim. Bernstein was "one of the most prodigiously talented and successful musicians in American history" according to music critic Donal Henahan. Bernstein's honors and accolades include sju Emmy Awards,
•
Members of the Korean Royal Family
The awards given to Emperor Kwangmu, Emperor Sunjong and Crown Prince Yi Un, while obvious from the pictures, are not recorded by date. So, they do not show up in the official recipient roles. For additional still pictures see the film The Korean Imperial Family 대한제국 황실가족.
Yi Jae-myeon 리재면 (李載冕) (1845 ~ 1912) (Pictured to the right and left.)
King Cheoljong 철종 (1849 – 1864) died without leaving an heir to the throne. The Andong Kim clan, which held control of the throne, nominated Yi Myung- bok 이명복 (李命福) to become the next King. He became Prince Ik-seon shortly before his coronation, and entered the palace on Dec. 9, 1863 as King Kojong. Because he was only 12 years of age at the time of his coronation, his father Yi Ha-eung 이하응 (李昰應) (1820-1898) became Heungseon Daewongun 흥선대원군 (興宣大院君 lit. ’Great Prince Heungseon’) and served as regent during the minority of his son. The Daewongun’
•
Berlin Koreans and Pictured Koreans
Introduction
Andreas SCHIRMER Lost and unexpected historical records continue to be discovered, sometimes gaining media attention throughout the world. In historical areas that seem completely exhausted or lacking adequate records, truly new findings are all the more surprising. When an old document is found, when an artifact is excavated, when the restoration of an old house suddenly opens up a hidden room and thus a window into the past, we celebrate -or historians, at least, celebrate -such discoveries, eager to integrate them into the historical record or probe whether they can challenge the accepted image of the past and rewrite it.
The initial impetus for this project was our recognition that we, as well as contemporary Koreans in Vienna, had little inkling about the Koreans who lived in Vienna for some time eight decades ago and that many discoveries could be made based on substantial records that were buried in letters, archival newspap