- palaces,
including the
Wratislaws'
palace in Prague.
After the
Communist party of
Czechoslovakia seized power in 1948, the
Wratislaws were
forced to give...
-
Eugen Count Wratislaw von Mittrowitz-Nettolitzky (8 July 1786 in Vlčí Pole (now part of Dolní Bousov),
Bohemia – 14
February 1867 in Vienna) was an Austrian...
-
Theodore William Graf
Wratislaw (1871–1933) was a
British poet and
civil servant. He was
educated at
Rugby School from 1885–1888; he
entered his father's...
-
Albert Henry Wratislaw (5
November 1822 – 3
November 1892) was an
English clergyman and
Slavonic scholar of
Czech descent.
Albert Henry Wratislaw was born...
- ISBN 80-7021-655-7 Hans Patze: Die
Pegauer Annalen, die Königserhebung
Wratislaws v. Böhmen und die Anfänge der
Stadt Pegau.
JGMODtl 12, 1963, 1-62 Percy...
- Wrocław (Polish pronunciation: [ˈvrɔt͡swaf] ; UK: /ˈvrɒtswɑːf/ VROT-swahf, US: /ˈvrɔːtswɑːf, -slɑːf/ VRAWT-swahf, -slahf. German: Breslau, [ˈbʁɛslaʊ]...
-
Count Johann Wenzel Wratislaw of
Mitrovice (Czech: Jan Václav
Vratislav z Mitrovic, German:
Johann Wenzel Wratislaw von Mitrowitz; c. 1670 – 21 December...
-
Evelyn ****berbatch (1866–1924),
married Albert Charles Wratislaw, the son of
Albert Henry Wratislaw.
Alice Maud ****berbatch (1868–1869).
Cyril James ****berbatch...
- (1819–1895)
Pavol Dobšinský,
collector of
Slovak folktales (1828–1885)
Albert Wratislaw,
collector of
Slavic folktales Oskar Kolberg,
Polish ethnographer who...
- of tales,
Sixty Folk-Tales from
Exclusively Slavonic Sources by A. H.
Wratislaw, the
fable entitled "The she-wolf"
tells of a huge she-wolf with a habit...