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Controversial Concordats: The Vatican's Relations with Napoleon, Mussolini, and Hitler.
Church History
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March 1, 2001|
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COPYRIGHT 2001 American Society of Church History. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.
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Copyright
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Controversial Concordats: The Vatican's Relations with Napoleon, Mussolini, and Hitler. Edited by Frank J. Coppa. Washington, D.C.: Catholic University Press, 1999. viii + 248 pp. $44.95 cloth; $24.95 paper.
This analysis, focused on three Vatican concordats and the effect that they had on the European political stag(.,, is the work of John K. Zeender, William Roberts, Frank Coppa, Joseph Biesinger, and Stewart Stehlin. The origin of this scholarly monograph can be found in a panel of papers presented at the twenty-seventh meeting of the Duquesne History Forum ...
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CLEF'S NOTES.
News Wire article from: United Press International
; ...supporter, despite the fact that she was English by birth. FELIX MOTTL On this day in 1911, the conductor and pioneering Wagnerite Felix Mottl collapsed and died while conducting ``Tristan and Isolde...
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R E V I E W S.(PREVIEW)(Sound recording review)
Newspaper article from: Albany Times Union (Albany, NY)
; ...conductor, has assembled arrangements by Joseph Joachim, Felix Mottl and Anton von Webern. Joachim took the ``Sonata in...score, and performance and piece jog along as equals. Felix Mottl, orchestrator of Wagner's Wesendoncklieder, had better...
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Stephanie Blythe
Magazine article from: Opera News
; ...high voice and piano; most often, they are heard in their more familiar 1890 orchestration by Wagnerian conductor Felix Mottl. Mottl emphasized the songs' Tratowesque character with his heavy instrumentation, and listeners can choose from an ample...
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Furtwangler, 50 anos de un mito.(El Angel)
Newspaper article from: Reforma (México D.F., México)
; ...Richard Wagner y los grandes pioneros que fijaron las bases tcnicas de la direccin orquestal -Hans Richter, Felix Mottl, Arthur Nikisch y Felix Weingartner-, Furtwngler aliment su pensamiento musical con la conviccin de que la nica buena interpretacin...
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Who will follow Solti? // A great turn deserves another
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times
; ...sincere but inexperienced. But no one realized how difficult the post would be to fill. A typical response came from Felix Mottl, the great Wagnerian. Asked if he would like to come to Chicago, he responded with a one-word cablegram: no...
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Der Barbier von Bagdad
Magazine article from: Fanfare
; ...Franz Dinglstedt, who hired a claque to boo it and physically attack its supporters at Der Barbier's debut in 1858. Felix Mottl championed it at Karlsruhe 26 years later, but rearranged the original until it vanished: two acts became one, major...
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Homage to Berlioz, Not a Century Too Soon
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune
; ...Lyrique in Paris in 1863, and it was not given in a reasonably complete version until 1890 in Karlsruhe, Germany, under Felix Mottl. This continued into modern times. Covent Garden in London made musical history with a virtually complete production...
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Viewing the arts: Modest Menzinsky; the Ukrainian Siegfried
Newspaper article from: Ukrainian Weekly, The
; ...of Siegfried and Cosima Wagner. The composer's widow later personally coached him and introduced him to conductor Felix Mottl. And everywhere he sang, the public responded with rousing ovations. Composer Nestor Nyzhankiwsky wrote that Menzinsky...
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WAGNER: Das Rheingold
Magazine article from: Opera News
; ...in particular. In 1968, at the age of sixty, he died while conducting Tristan in Munich. His illustrious mentor, Felix Mottl, had met the same fate in the same place fifty-seven years earlier. Wieland Wagner, the iconoclastic director of...
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LustMusik: Bill Viola's much-anticipated reinterpretation of Tristan und Isolde's sexual angst is oddly neuter.(CLASSICAL MUSIC)(Opera review)
Magazine article from: New York
; ...true in 1968 when he collapsed and died on the podium during a performance in Munich--exactly as his predecessor Felix Mottl had, 57 years earlier. Wagner himself felt that a faithful account of this intoxicating music would be more than most...
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