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Curtius and Wachsmuth
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1884 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 1-2
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1909 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 4
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1912 ), Ioannis Stobaei Anthologium, Volume 5
* Curtius Wachsmuth, Otto Hense, ( 1923 ), Appendix-Index of Authors

Curtius and ),
* Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Vita Gallieni Duo & Vita Divi Claudii, Loeb Classical Library, 1921 – 1932 ( English translation ), on-line at Lacus Curtius
Curtius wrote as follows in the opening pages of European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages ( 1953 English translation ), following close on Toynbee, as he sets the stage for his vast study of medieval Latin literature.
He edited Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria ( 1831 ), Cicero's Verrines and De officiis ( 1837 ), and Curtius.
Literary sources are Alexander's propagandist Arrian ( Anabasis Alexandri 2. 3 ) Quintus Curtius ( 3. 1. 14 ), Justin's epitome of Pompeius Trogus ( 11. 7. 3 ), and Aelian's De Natura Animalium 13. 1.
* Jean Curtius, also known as Jean De Corte and Juan Curcio ( 1551-1628 ), a industrialist from Liége
* Ernest Robert Curtius ( 1886 – 1956 ), German scholar, philologist
* Ernst Curtius ( 1814 – 1896 ), German archaeologist, historian
* Georg Curtius ( 1820 – 1885 ), German philologist
* Jacob Curtius ( died 1594 ), Imperial Pro-Chancellor for Emperor Rudolph II, astronomer, mathematician and instrument maker
* Janus Henricus Donker Curtius, ( 1813 – 1879 ), the last Dutch chief of Dejima, Japan
* Julius Curtius ( 1877 – 1948 ), German politician
* Ludwig Curtius ( 1874 – 1954 ), archaeologist
* Theodor Curtius ( 1857 – 1928 ), German chemical scientist
* Curtius ( crater ), a lunar crater
* Quintus Curtius Rufus ( 1st century AD ), historian
Mitt in the 1930s was Ludwig Curtius ), the rest of the academy agreed this figure is Agrippa.
* Julius Curtius ( DVP ), Minister of Economics
), Q. Curtius Rufus: Historiae ( Berlin ; New York: Walter De Gruyter, 2009 ) ( Bibliotheca Teubneriana ).

Curtius and 3
Alexander populated the city with 7, 000 Macedonians, 3, 000 mercenaries and thousands of natives ( according to Curtius VII. 3. 23 ), or some 7, 000 natives and 3, 000 non-military camp followers and a quantity of Greek mercenaries ( Diodorus, XVII. 83. 2 ), in March 329 BC.
The Curtius rearrangement may be thought of as a two-step process, the first step being the loss of nitrogen gas, forming an acyl nitrene ( 2 ), and the second step being the rearrangement of acyl nitrenes by migration of R-group to form the desired isocyanate ( 3 ).

Wachsmuth and Otto
The modern edition is that by Curt Wachsmuth and Otto Hense ( Berlin, 1884 – 1912, 5 volumes ).

Wachsmuth and ),
* Wilhelm Wachsmuth, Hellenische Altertumskunde aus dem Geschichtpunkt des Staates ( Teil 1 & 2 ), 2.
There is an edition of De Ostentis by Curt Wachsmuth ( 1897 ), with full account of the authorities in the prolegomena.

Otto and Hense
Chapter 1, page 1, of the works of Gaius Musonius Rufus, in Greek, edited by Otto Hense in the Teubner series, 1905.

Otto and 1894
Socialist leader Otto Grotewohl ( 1894 – 1964 ) became prime minister until his death.
Otto Monsted, a Danish margarine manufacturer, built a large factory at Southall in 1894.
Airmen like Otto Lilienthal, who introduced cambered airfoils in 1891, used gliders to analyze aerodynamic forces. The Wright brothers were interested in Lilianthal's work and read several of his publications. They also found inspiration in Octave Chanute, an airman and the author of Progress in Flying Machines ( 1894 ). It was the preliminary work of Cayley, Lilienthal, Chanute, and other early aerospace engineers that brought about the first powered sustained flight at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina on December 17, 1903, by the Wright brothers.
It was described by Otto Binswanger in 1894, and Alois Alzheimer first used the phrase " Binswanger's disease " in 1902.
* July 26 – Otto Singer, composer ( d. 1894 )
* Otto Grotewohl ( 1894 – 1964 )
* Otto Nagel ( 1894 – 1967 )
* Otto Kähler ( 1894 – 1967 ), German admiral
Otto Ernst Lindemann ( 28 March 1894 – 27 May 1941 ) was a German naval captain.
Otto Ernst Lindemann was born on 28 March 1894 in Altenkirchen in the Westerwald, Rhine Province.
Otto Ernst Lindemann was baptised into the Evangelical Church on 26 April 1894.
From 1894 to 1897 Plečnik studied with noted Viennese architect and educator Otto Wagner and worked in Wagner's architecture office until 1900.
Photographs by the late Otto Perry ( b. 1894, d. 1970 ).
Thanks to his father's connections, in 1894 he entered in contact with Otto von Bismarck, who supported the creation of a new, all-German nationalist organization that would unite all Germans interested in strengthening the German spirit and property in Polish-inhabited areas.
* Otto Berger ( to 1894 )
Otto Perry ( 1894 – 1970 ) was an American photographer and railfan specializing in railroad photos.
This residential building was erected between 1894 and 1895 by Otto Wagner, presumably for himself.
* Binswanger &# 39 ; s disease ( subcortical leukoencephalopathy ), in neurology, a form of multi-infarct dementia first described in 1894 by Otto Binswanger

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