Möhring, Bruno
Möhring, Bruno (1863–1929). German architect. He was involved in the design of several international exhibitions (e.g. St Louis, MO, 1904), but he is remembered primarily as an authority on town-planning, and, with Alfred Grenander (1863–1931), as a protagonist of Art Nouveau (or Jugendstil), mostly expressed in the bridges and stations of Berlin's elevated tramway system. A disciple of Sitte, he proposed plans for Greater Berlin (1910), and, with Gurlitt, founded Stadt-baukunst alter und neuer Zeit (Ancient and Modern Civic Design—from 1919).
Bibliography
Stadtbaukunst alter und neuer Zeit, x (1929), 1–4
More From encyclopedia.com
Hans Scharoun , Scharoun, Hans Bernard (1893–1972). German architect. Sometimes described as influenced by Expressionism, he was actually more eclectic, drawing on i… Max Stirner , Stirner, Max
Stirner, Max
Max Stirner (the pseudonym of Johann Caspar Schmidt), German philosopher and writer, was born in 1806 in Bayreuth and died… Johann Heinrich Roos , Scheibler, Johann Heinrich
Scheibler, Johann Heinrich, German inventor and writer on music; b. Montjoie, near Aachen, Nov. 11, 1777; d. Krefeld, Nov.… Andreas Schluter , Schlüter, Andreas
Schlüter, Andreas (c.1659–1714). Born in Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland), he is claimed as a major Baroque sculptor and architect by bo… Rudolf Carl Virchow , Virchow, Rudolf Carl
VIRCHOW, RUDOLF CARL
(b. Schivelbein, Pomerania, Germany, 13 October 1821; d. Berlin, Germany, 5 September 1902), pathology, soc… Concordat Of Worms , Bibliography: Monumenta Germaniae Constitutiones (Berlin 1826–) 1.1:159–161, for the text, ed. l. weiland. b. gebhardt, Handbuch der deutschen Geschi…
You Might Also Like
NEARBY TERMS
Möhring, Bruno