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         Germany History:     more books (100)
  1. The Long Nineteenth Century: A History of Germany, 1780-1918 by David Blackbourn, 1998-01-08
  2. The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949 by Norman M. Naimark, 1997-09-01
  3. Germany and the Second World War: Volume II: Germany's Initial Conquests in Europe (Germany and the Second World War) by Klaus A. Maier, Horst Rohde, et all 1991-08-22
  4. The Course of German History (Routledge Classics) (Routledge Classics) by A. Taylor, 2001-05-23
  5. Germany and the Second World War: Volume I: The Build-up of German Aggression (Germany and the Second World War) by Wilhelm Deist, Manfred Messerschmidt, et all 1991-01-17
  6. Germany's Tiger Tanks - Vk45 to Tiger II: Design, Production & Modifications (Schiffer Military History) by Thomas L. Jentz, 1997-08
  7. Staging Philanthropy: Patriotic Women and the National Imagination in Dynastic Germany, 1813-1916 (Social History, Popular Culture, and Politics in Germany) by Jean Helen Quataert, 2001-04-03
  8. A History of Germany, 1815-1985 by William Carr, 1987-02-01
  9. Germany: The Long Road West: Volume 2: 1933-1990 by Heinrich August Winkler, 2007-12-07
  10. Germany from Partition to Reunification: A Revised Edition of The Two Germanies Since 1945 by Henry Ashby Turner, 1992-11-25
  11. The History of the German Resistance, 1933-1945 by Peter Hoffmann, 1996-09
  12. Panzer: The Illustrated History of Germany's Armored Forces in WWII by Niall Barr, Russell Hart, 1999-11-27
  13. Turbojet: History and Development 1930-1960 Volume 1 - Great Britain and Germany by Antony L. Kay, 2007-08-01
  14. Postcards of Hitler's Germany, Vol. 3 by Roger James Bender, 2002-02

61. Germany - History
Sample germany history Worksheet Reading Comprehension Worksheets germany - history. Sample This is only a sample pre-made worksheet. Sign up now!
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Sample Germany - History Worksheet
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Germany - History
By Ekaterina Zhdanova-Redman Although there is evidence of people in the area of Germany many thousands of years ago, recorded history of Germany only goes back to about 98 AD. That's when the Roman historian Tacitus wrote about Germany. He wrote that inhabitants of Germany at the time came from Scandinavia about 100 BC to avoid overpopulation.
These people spread across much of central Europe, into modern-day Germany, France, and Italy. The Franks, one of the largest Germanic tribes, came to control most of this territory. The Catholic pope crowned their ruler, Charlemagne, as emperor of all this territory in 800 AD. But the region was too big for one man to rule, so the region broke into three territories. In 911, the inhabitants of the Western Frankish Kingdom (who spoke an early form of French) elected their own ruler. This left the Eastern and Middle kingdoms to German rule.
These kingdoms became what is known as the Holy Roman Empire, with rulers crowned by the pope. The empire tried to expand and conquer new lands, but such efforts weren't entirely successful. New lands were gained, but the empire was disorganized for many hundreds of years. This disorganization would be made worse by a man who became very dissatisfied with the empire's Catholic rule.

62. Germany Info: Culture & Life
Basic information on the culture, life, arts and history from the German Embassy in Washington, D.C.
http://www.germany-info.org/relaunch/culture/culture.html
Germany Info Home: Culture and Life German life is a mix of generations-old traditions and dynamic cultural development. Germany Online offers highlights of what's new - and old.
Latest News
Solidarity Through Music: Benefit Concert in Houston
Help for Acadamics Displaced by Hurricane Katrina Chancellor Reopens Gutenberg Gymnasium in Erfurt Oktoberfest 2005 in Germany and America ...
Archives

Life Learn more about life in Germany: the Wineland, cookbook, holidays, sport and religion. More
Arts A look at sources for more information about the German cultural scene.
More

History From Arminius to Adenauer and beyond - a timeline of major events in Germany's past.
More

Celebrating German-American Heritage Nearly 43 million people in the United States identify German as their primary ancestry, the US Census Bureau reported in July 2004. Learn about the colorful history of German immigration through the centuries, the contributions of some influential German immigrants, the vibrant US communities that continue to nurture their German-American heritage, and the exemplary stories of some Germans and German-Americans in Hollywood.
More
Goethe-Institut The Goethe-Institut brings German culture to the rest of the world.

63. Bookstore Berlin, Berlin Wall, Germany, History And Travel Books
Berlin, Berlin Wall, germany, history and travel books.
http://stores.dailysoft.com/
Books from US
History

Berlin Airlift

Berlin Wall

East Germany
...
Impressum

all trademarks are the property of their respective owners
Search Now: Bookstore
Books, videos and Cds about the history of the Berlin Wall Books about the Berlin Airlift Books about the history of
East Germany
Travel Guides and Maps
Berlin
German Books from UK

64. 1Up Travel : Germany - History And Culture Of Germany.
germany Learn in depth about the history and Culture of germany. The German people have greatly influenced the culture of Western Europe, especially its
http://www.1uptravel.com/international/europe/germany/history-culture.html

Flags
Maps Sightseeing Travel Warnings ... National Parks More Categories Introduction Topography Local Life Local Cuisine Local Holidays Festivals-Events Embassies Administration News Stand Worth a See !! Sight Seeing Maps Flags Shopping Eating Out Recreation Travel Essentials Country Facts Geography People Government Economy Communications Transportation Military
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Worth a Visit !! Cities Attractions Shopping Eating Out ... Travel Links
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Germany Maps
Germany Hotels Germany Flag ... Germany Travel Warning
Germany History and Culture
History Germany's hill-and-trough history kicked in early: from the time that everyone's favourite fossils, the Neanderthals, left their jaw-jutting remains in the Neander Valley near Düsseldorf, this joint has been in the thick of it. All of Europe's great empires got their paws into Germany, but none was ever able to count all its inhabitants as faithful subjects.

65. Germany | The WWW Virtual Library
Virtual Library devoted to the history of germany from antiquity to the 20th century. this resource in English is indexed under germany, history.
http://vlib.org.uk/Germany
Germany :   en es fr zh
The WWW Virtual Library
Germany
Quick search: German History German History
Virtual Library devoted to the history of Germany from antiquity to the 20th century.
this resource in English is indexed under: Germany History
German History: Third Reich and World War II
German History: Third Reich and World War II (in German)
Die Sektion Zeitgeschichte der Virtual Library Geschichte im internationalen History Network (University of Kansas) bietet eine qualifizierte Auswahl von Datenquellen und Angeboten im Internet zur Neueren und Neuesten Geschichte Deutschlands.
this resource in German is indexed under: Germany History
German Resources in Philosophy
German Resources in Philosophy (in German)
Internationale Virtual Library Sektion: Deutsche Datenquellen - Philosophie.
see also: Philosophy
this resource in German is indexed under: Germany Humanities and Humanistic Studies Jewish History in Germany Jewish History in Germany Links to online resources in German Jewish history. see also: Religion this resource in English is indexed under: Germany History Peoples Museums in Germany ... Museums in Germany (in German) Die Virtual Library Museen b¼ndelt als Teil der Virtual Library Museums Pages des ICOM sowie als Abteilung Museologie der WWW-Virtual Library Deutschland des W3C museumsspezifische Online-Ressourcen im deutschsprachigen Raum. Die verschiedenen Sektionen werden von fachlich ausgewiesenen RedakteurInnen betreut. Im Bereich Ausstellungsbesprechungen und Literaturrezensionen kooperiert die VL Museen u.a. eng mit H-Soz-u-Kult und H-ArtHist sowie mit H-MUSEUM.

66. SSDeV - Lockpicking In Germany -- History
history Sportenthusiasts of Lockpicking germany It is currently a registered sporting association in Hamburg, germany.
http://www.ssdev.org/SSDeV/uk-hist.htm
History Sportenthusiasts of Lockpicking - Germany
The sport club "Sportenthusiasts of Lockpicking - Germany" was offcialy established on 9 February 1997. It is currently a registered sporting association in Hamburg, Germany.
The club's foundation was the result of an evolution which took many years, driven by curiosity and the desire to know more. The driving force behind this was the present club President Steffen Wernéry, who already at age 12 was playing around with locks. He writes:
"My first pick, made from a little coat hanger, I had when I was 12. It was a great help, espicially when my teacher had misplaced the key to the classroom."
In August 1994 Wernéry was at the Hope Congress in New York City. During a break in the congress, he went into a "spy" shop where he bought a basic pick set. Coupled with some archive material which he found buried at the Chaos Computer Club (of which Wernéry was one of the founding members), the seeds were planted.
Along with Juergen Dreessman, Wernéry started to play with locks. Both would exchange information about locks, finding out how easy some were, how difficult some appeared to be ... and slowly, lockpicking became a passion.
At the 1996 Chaos Communication Congress Dreessmann and Wernéry gave their first public lockpicking workshop. It was a total success. Wernery wrote:

67. Germany- Catholic Church Local History And Ancestors Genealogy Research
Translate this page Directory and Guide links for genealogical and historical research of Catholic Churches and Catholic ancestors in germany.
http://home.att.net/~Local_Catholic/Catholic-Germany.htm
Local Catholic Church History and Genealogy
Bundesrepublik Deutschland
(Federal Republic of Germany) DIOCESES CATHOLIC HISTORY
CATHOLIC BIOGRAPHIES
MORE CATHOLIC LINKS ...
Germany History, Genealogy and Directories LINKS

See also Neighboring: [ France Poland Czech Republic
Netherlands
... Austria

or Return to Catholic Country Index Do you have a site link suggestion?
Return to: [
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[ Contact: Webweaver
Germany
New College English-German, German-English, English-Spanish, Spanish-English
  • AltaVista: Translations
  • To Translate a web site from/to English, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, or Spanish - enter the URL of the page (for example: http://home.att.net/~Local_Catholic/ )

    68. Browse Topics: Germany - History - 1933 - 1949
    The prince of liars who told the truth, germany history - 1933 - 1949; Hitler, Adolf, 1889 - 1945 World War, 1939 - 1945
    http://infocus.sl.nsw.gov.au/res/sublist.cfm?subName=GERMANY - HISTORY - 1933 -

    69. Browse Topics: Germany - History - 1918 - 1933
    You selected germany history - 1918 - 1933, 6 items Crisis in the cities the collapse of Weimar, germany - history - 1918 - 1933; germany - Politics
    http://infocus.sl.nsw.gov.au/res/sublist.cfm?subName=GERMANY - HISTORY - 1918 -

    70. MSN Encarta - Further Reading - Germany, Federal Republic Of
    A political history of East germany, focusing on the events of 1989. germany Then and Now. Watts, 1994. Two thousand years of German history.
    http://encarta.msn.com/readings_761576917/Germany.html
    Web Search: Encarta Home ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta Go to article Further Reading from Encarta Further Reading offers additional information about your topics. Germany, Federal Republic of For younger readers German Literature German Politics, Society, and Culture Germany: History Also on Encarta Compare online degrees Train for a better career College life Encarta word of the day For younger readers Ayer, Eleanor. Germany: In the Heartland of Europe. Marshall Cavendish, 1995. For readers in grades 4 to 6. Blashfield, Jean K. Germany. Children's Press, 2003. For readers in grades 6 to 9. Nickles, Greg, and Niki Walker. Germany. Raintree Steck-Vaughn, 2001. For readers in grades 4 to 8. German Literature Furness, Raymond, and Malcolm Humble, eds. A Companion to Twentieth Century German Literature. Routedge, 1997. Surveys the work of over 400 contemporary authors of German-speaking countries. Garland, Henry, and Mary Garland. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Oxford, 1997. Covers literature, philosophy, culture. Sagarra, Eda, and Peter N. Skrine.

    71. Study Abroad In Germany - History Of The Junior Year In Munich 1953-2003
    The establishment and history of Wayne State University s Junior Year in Munich dates back to a tradition first developed in the early 1920s when as an
    http://www.worldbridge.wayne.edu/JYM/illustratedhistory1.html

    home
    students parents advisors ... give to JYM
    The Junior Year Abroad Tradition
    The establishment and history of Wayne State University's Junior Year in Munich dates back to a tradition first developed in the early 1920s when - as an effort to promote international peace and understanding in the aftermath of World War I, a new form of international education was conceived for American undergraduates: the Junior Year Abroad. Shortly after the First World War, Prof. Raymond W. Kirkbride, a young instructor in the Modern Languages Department at the University of Delaware and a World War I veteran, successfully promoted an idea that would soon become known as the Delaware Foreign Study Plan. Unlike already existing programs which were limited to the exchange of graduate students, the Delaware Plan was unique in that it was designed as a foreign study plan for undergraduates. In 1923 the Junior Year Abroad tradition began with the establish-ment of a program for undergraduate students at the Sorbonne in Paris. The Delaware Plan had a great impact on the expansion of study abroad for American undergraduate students in the years following the First World War, and soon caught the attention of the Institute of International Education (IIE). Founded in 1919 in the aftermath of the First World War, IIE had also started to organize student, faculty and teacher exchanges in Europe.

    72. Study Abroad In Germany - History Of The Junior Year In Munich 1953-2003
    By 1931 an extension of a junior year plan to germany was agreed upon by IIE and the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst (DAAD), and a special
    http://www.worldbridge.wayne.edu/JYM/illustratedhistory2.html

    home
    students parents advisors ... give to JYM
    Junior Year in Munich
    - the pre-war years
    Professor von Klenze (A.B. Harvard, Ph.D. Marburg) may rightly be considered the "father" of the Junior Year in Munich as it existed in the pre-war years, and a great deal of continuity with JYM's original design still remains embedded in JYM today. After his retirement from the College of the City of New York, Professor von Klenze was appointed Honorary Professor of American Culture at the University of Munich where, together with his wife Henrietta (Ph.D. Chicago), they successfully guided the newly established Junior Year in Munich during its first "experimental year" of 1931-32. It is certainly worth recalling that "success" was a word probably not heard all that often in 1931, just two years after the stock market crash of October 1929. And by 1931 the Great Depression had firmly set in. Nevertheless, despite the bank panic and business failures, declining incomes and rising unemployment (10 million in 1931), fifteen students participated in JYM during the program's inaugural year: (IIE, Twelfth Annual Report of the Director, Dec. 1931. Bulletin No. 3).

    73. Encyclopedia Of Aikido [GERMANY, HISTORY OF AIKIDO IN]
    AikidoJournal, the leading worldwide aikido publication featuring videos, articles, forums, the Encyclopedia of Aikido, and anything else related to aikido
    http://www.aikidojournal.com/encyclopedia.php?entryID=221

    74. Syllabus
    Finally, what, if anything, can we learn from germany s history in order to 1) Mary Fulbrook, A Concise history of germany (Cambridge Concise Histories)
    http://faculty.plattsburgh.edu/doug.skopp/his324a2000f/
    Modern Germany Douglas R. Skopp
    Syllabus
    History 324: Germany Since 1870 SUNY Plattsburgh Professor Douglas R. Skopp Fall 2000 Wednesday 4:30-7 pm Hawkins Hall Room 143 Course Content: This course describes and analyzes significant aspects of Germany's history between 1870 and 1989: from unification to re-unification. The intervening twelve decades find Germany be­coming Europe's most industrialized, bellicose power. Its military forces are crushed twice, in World War I and with even greater devastation in World War II. Germany begins the twentieth century as an ambitious empire without significant imperial holdings outside of Europe. Its defeat in World War I brought may have brought down the Kaiser, but it did not dampen Germany's aspirations to exercise significant international influence. In order to achieve this, many Germans demanded that the punitive Versailles Peace be breached. Although Germany was reconstructed after World War I inside a shell of democracy, Ger­mans on both the right and the left of the political spectrum despised the new state and its burdens under the Treaty. In addition, the right wing feared Bolshevism and couched their fears in vicious anti-Semitic rhetoric and action.

    75. Syllabus
    Finally, what, if anything, can we learn from germany s history in order to better The study of German history reveals fundamental truths about Western
    http://faculty.plattsburgh.edu/doug.skopp/historyhis324a2004sp/default.htm
    History of Modern Germany Douglas Skopp
    Syllabus
    History 324: Germany Since 1870
    SUNY Plattsburgh Professor Douglas R. Skopp Spring 2004
    Course Content:
    This course describes and analyzes significant aspects of Germany's history between 1870 and 1989: from unification to re-unification. The intervening twelve decades find Germany becoming Europe's most industrialized, bellicose power. Its military forces are crushed twice, in World War I and with even greater devastation in World War II. Germany begins the twentieth century as an ambitious empire without significant imperial holdings outside of Europe. Its defeat in World War I may have brought down the Kaiser, but it did not dampen Germany's aspirations to exercise significant international influence. In order to achieve this, many Germans demanded that the punitive Versailles Peace Treaty be breached. Although Germany was reconstructed after World War I inside a shell of democracy, Germans on both the right and the left of the political spectrum despised the new state and its burdens under the Treaty. In addition, the right wing feared Bolshevism and couched their fears in vicious anti-Semitic rhetoric and action. As a result of the Great Depression and worldwide economic disorder, Germany became the stage for one of Europe's most brutal dictatorships. Between 1933 and 1945, Adolf Hitler led the Reich on a course of military preparedness, political repression and economic growth that culminated in World War II. More than fifty million Europeans became victims first within and then beyond German borders of Hitlerian policies.

    76. LaRouches In Berlin: Learn The Lessons Of Germany's History
    germany s history. by Ortrun Cramer. In the last weeks of 2002, American economist and precandidate for the 2004 US Presidential elections Lyndon H.
    http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2003/3001berlin_eirsem.html
    This article appears in the January 10, 2003 issue of Executive Intelligence Review.
    LaRouches in Berlin:
    Learn the Lessons of
    Germany's History
    by Ortrun Cramer In the last weeks of 2002, American economist and pre-candidate for the 2004 U.S. Presidential elections Lyndon H. LaRouche conducted a tour of European centers, addressing seminars and press conferences, and holding private meetings with influentials from politics and the economic sector. After visits to Milan, Paris, and Budapest, he spoke on Dec. 18 at a seminar sponsored by EIR Mr. LaRouche's keynote address , published below, emphasized the importance of defining a policy orientation for the United States and the world, in the first weeks of the new year. He announced that he would give a State of the Union address on Jan. 28, and that until that speech, and President Bush's own State of the Union address, have been made, "it will be extremely difficult to estimate what U.S. policy is going to be, and consequently, very difficult to estimate what the world situation will be." In the audience were diplomatic representatives of Arab, African, and Central European countries; journalists from German, East European, and Arabic media; representatives of various political, cultural, and economic associations. There were also many supporters and friends of the LaRouche movement. What was particularly refreshing, was the presence of a group of students from several Berlin universities, joined by youth from Denmark and France, who were visiting Berlin at the time. These young people contributed to a very lively debate after the presentations.

    77. Germany | The WWW Virtual Library
    Virtual Library devoted to the history of germany from antiquity to the 20th Links to online resources in German Jewish history. see also Religion.
    http://vlib.org/Germany.en
    Germany :   en es fr zh
    The WWW Virtual Library
    Germany
    Quick search: German History German History
    Virtual Library devoted to the history of Germany from antiquity to the 20th century.
    this resource in English is indexed under: Germany History
    German History: Third Reich and World War II
    German History: Third Reich and World War II (in German)
    Die Sektion Zeitgeschichte der Virtual Library Geschichte im internationalen History Network (University of Kansas) bietet eine qualifizierte Auswahl von Datenquellen und Angeboten im Internet zur Neueren und Neuesten Geschichte Deutschlands.
    this resource in German is indexed under: Germany History
    German Resources in Philosophy
    German Resources in Philosophy (in German)
    Internationale Virtual Library Sektion: Deutsche Datenquellen - Philosophie.
    see also: Philosophy
    this resource in German is indexed under: Germany Humanities and Humanistic Studies Jewish History in Germany Jewish History in Germany Links to online resources in German Jewish history. see also: Religion this resource in English is indexed under: Germany History Peoples Museums in Germany ... Museums in Germany (in German) Die Virtual Library Museen b¼ndelt als Teil der Virtual Library Museums Pages des ICOM sowie als Abteilung Museologie der WWW-Virtual Library Deutschland des W3C museumsspezifische Online-Ressourcen im deutschsprachigen Raum. Die verschiedenen Sektionen werden von fachlich ausgewiesenen RedakteurInnen betreut. Im Bereich Ausstellungsbesprechungen und Literaturrezensionen kooperiert die VL Museen u.a. eng mit H-Soz-u-Kult und H-ArtHist sowie mit H-MUSEUM.

    78. EUROPA - IDABC - EGovernment Factsheet - Germany - History
    European CommissionIDABC uses information and communication technologies to support the delivery of cross-border public sector services to citizens and
    http://europa.eu.int/idabc/en/document/1386/418
    document.write(""); document.write("English"); document.write(""); en eGovernment Factsheets by topic eGovernment Factsheets - History > eGovernment Factsheet - Germany - History Contact Who 's Who Search on EUROPA eGovernment Observatory ... eGovernment Forum Search MyIDABC Call for Tenders Site Map
    eGovernment Factsheet - Germany - History
    Main developments and key milestones (in reverse chronological order)
    Last updated: June 2005 For the latest developments, see: eGovernment News - Germany 01 June 2005 The German federal Interior Minister Otto Schily presents the country’s future biometric passport , which will be issued in phases starting in November 2005. Called ‘ePass’, the new German travel document will include an embedded radio frequency identification (RFID) chip that will initially store personal information such as name and date of birth, as well as a digital facial image of the holder. In a second phase – starting in March 2007 – the chip will also store a scan of the holder’s left and right index fingerprints. 13 March 2005 The federal government launches an open source software (OSS) competence centre , aimed at facilitating the spread of best practices regarding the use of OSS in the German public sector.

    79. SPIEGEL Forum: How Normal Is Germany? - International - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News
    In fact and this is the main break with German history they destroyed SPIEGEL What s the difference between germany s history and that of other
    http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,354746,00.html
    German Site Home Politik Wirtschaft Panorama Sport Kultur Netzwelt Wissenschaft UniSPIEGEL Reise Auto DER SPIEGEL English Site Schlagzeilen Wetter Forum Archiv Dossiers Newsletter Shop Abo Spiegel TV KulturSPIEGEL Leserbriefe Marktplatz Today Newsletter SPIEGEL Magazine English Site ...
    Current Stories

    May 2, 2005 Print Send this article Feedback
    SPIEGEL FORUM
    How Normal is Germany?
    German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer and historian Heinrich August Winkler discuss the burden of Germany's Nazi past. Can Germany urge other countries to address human rights violations considering its own horrific crimes? And, just how big should the European Union become?

    REUTERS German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer: "We have a problem." SPIEGEL: Mr. Fischer, why is it that the Third Reich is still so present today, 60 years after its downfall?
    Fischer: Because the Hitler dictatorship was a process of national self-destruction that still hasn't been completely explained nor have we really come to terms with it. To this day, our country is deeply traumatized. No one poses the question "Am I normal?" when they are, indeed, normal. Only people who truly have a problem ask a question like that, and we do have a problem.
    In his famous work on Germany's history ("Der lange Weg nach Westen" "The Long Path to the West"), Professor Winkler traced the political process of western integration. But it seems we haven't really arrived at ourselves. My thesis is this: We are not having a debate about what we did to ourselves. The Nazis destroyed this wonderful country in the name of Germany. In fact and this is the main break with German history they destroyed the soul of this country.

    80. Invivo Germany - History
    history. history. Jobs. Engineering. Sales/Marketing. Address. Invivo germany GmbH Located in Schwerin in the northern part of germany, DAUM medical
    http://www.daum.de/about/about.html
    Interventional MRI Neuro Products Orthopedic Products Soft Tissue Accessories Schedule Meet us Distributors Distributors History History Jobs Engineering Sales/Marketing Address Invivo Germany GmbH
    Hagenower Strasse 73
    D - 19061 Schwerin
    phone +49-385-3993-109
    fax +49-385-3993-152
    email medinfo@invivocorp.de Invivo Germany GmbH
    Würzburg Operation
    Schweinfurter Str. 28
    97076 Würzburg
    phone +49-931-35976-76
    fax +49-931-35976-10 email info@invivocorp About DAUM medical DAUM medical was founded in 1993 with the intention to develop innovative products for the growing markets of: interventional procedures under magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) guidance Located in Schwerin in the northern part of Germany, DAUM medical has in its direct vicinity several university centers, which has allowed us to develop a constructive dialog with physicians from different fields and has helped our staff understand what the needs of the users are. In the meantime we cooperate not only in Germany, but also interna- tionally, with leading centers. In this cooperation we continuously seek new ideas that we can then turn into products. Our focus is to offer

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