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Wiking Post PMS 81-11 Aktie Gelb 3tlg. Set

Wiking Post PMS 81-11 Aktie Gelb 3tlg. Set

Kategorie: Modellbau > Modellautos > Wiking > Lkw

Versandkosten für EU und Rest der Welt stehen unten im Angebot!!!!
Nachtrag für Bücher-/Warensendung ganz unten im Angebot!!!
Shipping costs for EU and rest of the world are standing on Sale!!
Sie suchen andere Modelle im Maßstab 1:87 und 1:43, schicken Sie uns eine Mail - wir melden uns ! Hier finden Sie Modelle von Matchbox, Wiking, Herpa, Märklin, Schuco und vieles mehr!!!! " Verkauf im Kundenauftrag " Wiking Post PMS 81-11 Aktie Gelb 3tlg. Set
Modell 1: 87 - Fabrikat / Bezeichnung : Wiking Post PMS 81-11 Modell : 3tlg. Set Farbe : ca. gelb und diverse - Irrtum vorbehalten !! Thema : Aktie Gelb Zustand : unbespielt - neuwertig - Verpackung : OVP - Pappschachtel - Modell wurde nur zum Fotografieren ausgepackt ! Angebot - Irrtum ...

Preis: 29,90 EUR
Angebotsende: 23.03.2012, 16:40:04 Uhr

Wiking Post PMS 81-11 Aktie Gelb 3tlg. Set kaufen bei eBay



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Peters Christine: Aktien online

Die besten Infos im Netz. Vom Online-Banking zur Aktienorder

Preis: 2.01 EUR

Peters Christine: Aktien online kaufen bei Libri.de – Gebrauchte Bücher

Kategorie: Gebrauchtbuch

Artikelnummer: 5587993
Keywords: Christine,Peters,Aktien,online
EAN: 9783774233409


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BUCH - Fälle mit Lösungen zum GmbH-, Aktien- und Konzernrecht - Markus Käpplinge

BUCH - Fälle mit Lösungen zum GmbH-, Aktien- und Konzernrecht - Markus Käpplinge

Kategorie: Bücher > Studium & Wissen > Rechtswissenschaften > Sonstiges

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Info Ausland finden Sie hier. Fälle mit Lösungen zum GmbH-, Aktien- und Konzernrecht 24,90€ (Preis inkl. 7% MwSt) Autor: Markus Käpplinger Verlag: VAHLEN, HEYMANNS ISBN 10: 3800638339 ISBN 13: 9783800638338 Serie: Klausurenkurs - Examinatorium Erscheinungsjahr: ...

Preis: 24,90 EUR
Angebotsende: 23.03.2012, 02:48:42 Uhr

BUCH - Fälle mit Lösungen zum GmbH-, Aktien- und Konzernrecht - Markus Käpplinge kaufen bei eBay



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Werner Esser: Die 100 wichtigsten Fragen und Antworten zu Aktien und Aktienauswahl

Preis: 13.20 EUR

Werner Esser: Die 100 wichtigsten Fragen und Antworten zu Aktien und Aktienauswahl kaufen bei Libri.de

EAN: 9783593370675


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Tolle Aktien Bilder

Einige tolle aktien Bilder:

Confederate Monument – W shields – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011
aktien

Bild von dctim1
Detail of the shields on the west side of the Confederate Monument at Arlington National Cemtery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States.

American historians agree that many of the civic wounds created by the American Civil War were healed by the feelings of common cause generated during Spanish-American War. In June 1900, the U.S. Congress passed legislation setting aside Section 16 of the cemetery for the burial of Confederate States of America war dead. Many Confederate dead were already buried at the cemetery, and were memorialized by the Civil War Unknowns Monument. But the new area of the cemetery would allow for individual burial of those whose identities were known. By December 1901, 482 Confederate remains were disinterred at the cemeteries at Alexandria, Virginia; the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C.; and portions of Arlington National Cemetery and reinterred in concentric circles in Section 16. Their headstones were given a pointed top, to indicate that they were Confederate graves.

Shortly thereafter, the United Daughters of the Confederacy asked that a memorial to the Confederate dead be erected in Section 16. Secretary of War William Howard Taft granted the request on March 4, 1906. Confederate veteran and nationally-known sculptor Moses Ezekiel was commissioned to design and sculpt the monument. It was cast and manufactured by Aktien-Gesellschaft Gladenbeck of Berlin, Germany. The cornerstone of the massive memorial was laid on November 12, 1912. The monument was dedicated by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The memorial is 32 feet high. Atop the memorial is a life-size statue of a female representing "The South," crowned in victory with a wreath of olive leaves. She gestures toward the south with a laurel wreath to "crown" the sacrifice her "sons" made in war. In her right hand is a pruning hook and at her feet is a plow. The statue stands on a four-foot high circular pedestal. On the pedestal’s sides are four funerary urns in bas-relief, each urn inscribed with a different year of the war (1861-62, 1862-63, 1863-64, and 1864-65). Palm fronds decorate the space between the urns. The pedestal rests on a round base resembling intertwined, woven sheaves of wheat. This structure rests on a circular base on which is inscribed the Old Testament passage: "And they shall beat their swords into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks." Below the base is a plinth, decorated with 14 shields. Each shield depicts the coat of arms of one of the 13 Confederate states. Also included is the coat of arms of the state of Maryland, which was prevented from joining the Confederacy because it was invested with federal troops and martial law was declared in the state.

Below the plinth is another frieze of roughly half-sized figures. The front of the monument faces south. Each of the figures is in bas-relief, although deeply undercut. Portions of the work are free of the frieze. In the front of the frieze, Minerva, goddess of war and wisdom, holds a spear in her right hand and a gladiatorial net is draped across her right shoulder. She looks to her left, where a woman repreenting "The South" has half-fallen to the ground while clutching at a shield inscribed with the words "The Constitution." In the background behind Minerva are "spirits of war" sounding a trumpet call to arms. On either side of the central figures are four representations of the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces: Soldier, sailor, sapper, and miner. Beginning with the east face of the memorial are scenes depicting the people of the South going to war. They are: A young black male slave (in the uniform of the Confederate States of America) follows his white young master into battle; a weeping mammy holds a white baby up so that the child’s white father (an officer in the Confederate Army) can kiss the youth; a white blacksmith sets aside his tools while his white wife grieves; a young white woman ties a sword to the belt of her white male lover, who has joined the army; and a white officer looks into the distance.

The frieze is supported by an octagonal base with upward-curving pilasters. Plinths adorn the east and west sides, on which are set bronze tripods which hold bronze flames. The sides of the plinths are decorated with a wreath and a palm frond. The north, south, east, and west faces are all larger by half than the other faces of the base. On the south face is carved in bas-relief the Seal of the Confederate States of America and a memorial inscription by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Below this is the Latin phrase "Victrix Causa Diis Placuit Sed Victa Caton" ("The victor’s cause pleased the gods, but the vanquished pleased Cato"). This is a line from the Pharsalia, an epic Roman poem by the poet Lucan which tells the story of the civil war between Julius Caesar and the forces of the Roman Senate led by Pompey the Great. The line was a favorite of Confederate supporters. On the rear of the memorial is a short poem by Reverend Randolph Harrison McKim, a Confederate chaplain. Smaller inscriptions at the northwest and northeast sides of the base tell who designed and who manufactured the memorial.

The bronze portion of the memorial stands on 17 grey granite blocks. These granite blocks, in turn, rest on eight polished grey granite slabs.

Four graves are at the four points of the compass in front of the memorial. These are: Moses Ezekiel; Lt. Harry Marmaduke, Confederate Navy; Capt. John Hickey, Second Missouri Infantry; and Brigaider General Marcus Wright, Confederate Army.

Confederate Monument – N frieze detail – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011
aktien

Bild von dctim1
Detail of blacksmith’s face on the north frieze of the Confederate Monument at Arlington National Cemtery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States.

American historians agree that many of the civic wounds created by the American Civil War were healed by the feelings of common cause generated during Spanish-American War. In June 1900, the U.S. Congress passed legislation setting aside Section 16 of the cemetery for the burial of Confederate States of America war dead. Many Confederate dead were already buried at the cemetery, and were memorialized by the Civil War Unknowns Monument. But the new area of the cemetery would allow for individual burial of those whose identities were known. By December 1901, 482 Confederate remains were disinterred at the cemeteries at Alexandria, Virginia; the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C.; and portions of Arlington National Cemetery and reinterred in concentric circles in Section 16. Their headstones were given a pointed top, to indicate that they were Confederate graves.

Shortly thereafter, the United Daughters of the Confederacy asked that a memorial to the Confederate dead be erected in Section 16. Secretary of War William Howard Taft granted the request on March 4, 1906. Confederate veteran and nationally-known sculptor Moses Ezekiel was commissioned to design and sculpt the monument. It was cast and manufactured by Aktien-Gesellschaft Gladenbeck of Berlin, Germany. The cornerstone of the massive memorial was laid on November 12, 1912. The monument was dedicated by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The memorial is 32 feet high. Atop the memorial is a life-size statue of a female representing "The South," crowned in victory with a wreath of olive leaves. She gestures toward the south with a laurel wreath to "crown" the sacrifice her "sons" made in war. In her right hand is a pruning hook and at her feet is a plow. The statue stands on a four-foot high circular pedestal. On the pedestal’s sides are four funerary urns in bas-relief, each urn inscribed with a different year of the war (1861-62, 1862-63, 1863-64, and 1864-65). Palm fronds decorate the space between the urns. The pedestal rests on a round base resembling intertwined, woven sheaves of wheat. This structure rests on a circular base on which is inscribed the Old Testament passage: "And they shall beat their swords into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks." Below the base is a plinth, decorated with 14 shields. Each shield depicts the coat of arms of one of the 13 Confederate states. Also included is the coat of arms of the state of Maryland, which was prevented from joining the Confederacy because it was invested with federal troops and martial law was declared in the state.

Below the plinth is another frieze of roughly half-sized figures. The front of the monument faces south. Each of the figures is in bas-relief, although deeply undercut. Portions of the work are free of the frieze. In the front of the frieze, Minerva, goddess of war and wisdom, holds a spear in her right hand and a gladiatorial net is draped across her right shoulder. She looks to her left, where a woman repreenting "The South" has half-fallen to the ground while clutching at a shield inscribed with the words "The Constitution." In the background behind Minerva are "spirits of war" sounding a trumpet call to arms. On either side of the central figures are four representations of the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces: Soldier, sailor, sapper, and miner. Beginning with the east face of the memorial are scenes depicting the people of the South going to war. They are: A young black male slave (in the uniform of the Confederate States of America) follows his white young master into battle; a weeping mammy holds a white baby up so that the child’s white father (an officer in the Confederate Army) can kiss the youth; a white blacksmith sets aside his tools while his white wife grieves; a young white woman ties a sword to the belt of her white male lover, who has joined the army; and a white officer looks into the distance.

The frieze is supported by an octagonal base with upward-curving pilasters. Plinths adorn the east and west sides, on which are set bronze tripods which hold bronze flames. The sides of the plinths are decorated with a wreath and a palm frond. The north, south, east, and west faces are all larger by half than the other faces of the base. On the south face is carved in bas-relief the Seal of the Confederate States of America and a memorial inscription by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Below this is the Latin phrase "Victrix Causa Diis Placuit Sed Victa Caton" ("The victor’s cause pleased the gods, but the vanquished pleased Cato"). This is a line from the Pharsalia, an epic Roman poem by the poet Lucan which tells the story of the civil war between Julius Caesar and the forces of the Roman Senate led by Pompey the Great. The line was a favorite of Confederate supporters. On the rear of the memorial is a short poem by Reverend Randolph Harrison McKim, a Confederate chaplain. Smaller inscriptions at the northwest and northeast sides of the base tell who designed and who manufactured the memorial.

The bronze portion of the memorial stands on 17 grey granite blocks. These granite blocks, in turn, rest on eight polished grey granite slabs.

Four graves are at the four points of the compass in front of the memorial. These are: Moses Ezekiel; Lt. Harry Marmaduke, Confederate Navy; Capt. John Hickey, Second Missouri Infantry; and Brigaider General Marcus Wright, Confederate Army.

Confederate Monument – W base and lantern – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011
aktien

Bild von dctim1
Looking south at the west plinth, tripod and flame on the Confederate Monument at Arlington National Cemtery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States.

American historians agree that many of the civic wounds created by the American Civil War were healed by the feelings of common cause generated during Spanish-American War. In June 1900, the U.S. Congress passed legislation setting aside Section 16 of the cemetery for the burial of Confederate States of America war dead. Many Confederate dead were already buried at the cemetery, and were memorialized by the Civil War Unknowns Monument. But the new area of the cemetery would allow for individual burial of those whose identities were known. By December 1901, 482 Confederate remains were disinterred at the cemeteries at Alexandria, Virginia; the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C.; and portions of Arlington National Cemetery and reinterred in concentric circles in Section 16. Their headstones were given a pointed top, to indicate that they were Confederate graves.

Shortly thereafter, the United Daughters of the Confederacy asked that a memorial to the Confederate dead be erected in Section 16. Secretary of War William Howard Taft granted the request on March 4, 1906. Confederate veteran and nationally-known sculptor Moses Ezekiel was commissioned to design and sculpt the monument. It was cast and manufactured by Aktien-Gesellschaft Gladenbeck of Berlin, Germany. The cornerstone of the massive memorial was laid on November 12, 1912. The monument was dedicated by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The memorial is 32 feet high. Atop the memorial is a life-size statue of a female representing "The South," crowned in victory with a wreath of olive leaves. She gestures toward the south with a laurel wreath to "crown" the sacrifice her "sons" made in war. In her right hand is a pruning hook and at her feet is a plow. The statue stands on a four-foot high circular pedestal. On the pedestal’s sides are four funerary urns in bas-relief, each urn inscribed with a different year of the war (1861-62, 1862-63, 1863-64, and 1864-65). Palm fronds decorate the space between the urns. The pedestal rests on a round base resembling intertwined, woven sheaves of wheat. This structure rests on a circular base on which is inscribed the Old Testament passage: "And they shall beat their swords into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks." Below the base is a plinth, decorated with 14 shields. Each shield depicts the coat of arms of one of the 13 Confederate states. Also included is the coat of arms of the state of Maryland, which was prevented from joining the Confederacy because it was invested with federal troops and martial law was declared in the state.

Below the plinth is another frieze of roughly half-sized figures. The front of the monument faces south. Each of the figures is in bas-relief, although deeply undercut. Portions of the work are free of the frieze. In the front of the frieze, Minerva, goddess of war and wisdom, holds a spear in her right hand and a gladiatorial net is draped across her right shoulder. She looks to her left, where a woman repreenting "The South" has half-fallen to the ground while clutching at a shield inscribed with the words "The Constitution." In the background behind Minerva are "spirits of war" sounding a trumpet call to arms. On either side of the central figures are four representations of the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces: Soldier, sailor, sapper, and miner. Beginning with the east face of the memorial are scenes depicting the people of the South going to war. They are: A young black male slave (in the uniform of the Confederate States of America) follows his white young master into battle; a weeping mammy holds a white baby up so that the child’s white father (an officer in the Confederate Army) can kiss the youth; a white blacksmith sets aside his tools while his white wife grieves; a young white woman ties a sword to the belt of her white male lover, who has joined the army; and a white officer looks into the distance.

The frieze is supported by an octagonal base with upward-curving pilasters. Plinths adorn the east and west sides, on which are set bronze tripods which hold bronze flames. The sides of the plinths are decorated with a wreath and a palm frond. The north, south, east, and west faces are all larger by half than the other faces of the base. On the south face is carved in bas-relief the Seal of the Confederate States of America and a memorial inscription by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Below this is the Latin phrase "Victrix Causa Diis Placuit Sed Victa Caton" ("The victor’s cause pleased the gods, but the vanquished pleased Cato"). This is a line from the Pharsalia, an epic Roman poem by the poet Lucan which tells the story of the civil war between Julius Caesar and the forces of the Roman Senate led by Pompey the Great. The line was a favorite of Confederate supporters. On the rear of the memorial is a short poem by Reverend Randolph Harrison McKim, a Confederate chaplain. Smaller inscriptions at the northwest and northeast sides of the base tell who designed and who manufactured the memorial.

The bronze portion of the memorial stands on 17 grey granite blocks. These granite blocks, in turn, rest on eight polished grey granite slabs.

Four graves are at the four points of the compass in front of the memorial. These are: Moses Ezekiel; Lt. Harry Marmaduke, Confederate Navy; Capt. John Hickey, Second Missouri Infantry; and Brigaider General Marcus Wright, Confederate Army.


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Die besten Dividendenstrategien – simplified

Preis: 12.90 EUR

Die besten Dividendenstrategien – simplified kaufen bei Bol.de – Bücher

Kategorie: Buch

Artikelnummer: 6656111
Keywords: Aktien; Ratgeber Dividende
Manufacturer: Finanzbuch Verlag
EAN: 9783898791670


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DORTMUNDER HANSA-BRAUEREI 1951. Aktie über 1.000 DM

DORTMUNDER HANSA-BRAUEREI 1951. Aktie über 1.000 DM

Kategorie: Münzen > Historische Wertpapiere > Deutschland > Banken & Versicherungen

Artikelbeschreibun DORTMUNDER HANSA-BRAUEREI AG
Nennwert der Aktie: Inhaberaktie über 1.000 DM
Dortmund, im Dezember 1951
Sehr dekorativ mit Abbildung des Firmengebäudes.
Die laufende Nummer kann variieren.
Für meine "Freunde" bei der ebay-Kontrolle
Die Aktie ist durch Lochung entwertet.
Artikelbild(er)
Bezahlung Bitte bezahlen Sie bis spätestens 10 Tage nach Auktionsende (Geldeingang bei mir). Der Versand der Ware erfolgt ausschließlich gegen Vorkasse.
Geben Sie im Verwendungszweck bitte Ihren Ebay-Namen UND die Artikelnummer an.
Widerrufsbelehrung, Gewährleistung, Anbieterkennzeichnung, sonstiges

Preis: 29,90 EUR
Angebotsende: 20.03.2012, 08:50:04 Uhr

DORTMUNDER HANSA-BRAUEREI 1951. Aktie über 1.000 DM kaufen bei eBay



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Uwe Lang - Aktien ohne Stress UNGELESEN

Uwe Lang - Aktien ohne Stress UNGELESEN

Kategorie: Bücher > Sachbücher & Ratgeber > Gesundheit > Sonstige

Buchversand Walz
Ab 29,95 € Warenwert versandkostenfrei!*
*innerhalbDeutschlands
--->>> Mehr Angebote in unserem eBay-Shop!
Titel
Aktien ohne Stress Autor
Uwe Lang
--->>> Alle Titel dieses Autors
ISBN
3453181999
Zustand
Gut. Ungelesenes u. unbenutztes Mängelexemplar, leichte äußerliche Mängel (z.B. Kratzer am Buchrücken oder leichte Lagerspuren), am Buchschnitt markiert (Strich oder Stempel), inhaltlich vollkommen in Ordnung. Ehemaliger Ladenpreis 8.95 €
bei uns als M?ngelexemplar
nur 2.80 € *
Sie sparen 69%
*inkl.gesetzl. MwSt.
zuz?glich Versandkosten Zahlungsabwicklung und Versand
Nach Kauf erhalten Sie von uns eine e-Mail mit Informationen über die Zahlungsabwicklung. Bei der ...

Preis: 2,80 EUR
Angebotsende: 28.02.2012, 22:41:00 Uhr

Uwe Lang - Aktien ohne Stress UNGELESEN kaufen bei eBay



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Die abhängige Kommanditgesellschaft auf Aktien - Felix

Die abhängige Kommanditgesellschaft auf Aktien - Felix

Kategorie: Bücher > Studium & Wissen > Rechtswissenschaften > Sonstiges

- Colonizing the Realm of Words: The Transformation of Tamil Literature in Nineteenth-Century South India
ISBN: 1438431996
EAN: 9781438431994
Lope de Vega en la Invencion: El Drama Historico y la Formacion de la Conciencia Nacional
ISBN: 1855662027
EAN: 9781855662025
Engaging South Asian Religions: Boundaries, Appropriations, and Resistances
ISBN: 1438433239
EAN: 9781438433233
Diasporas and Ethnic Migrants: Germany, Israel and Russia in Comparative Perspective
ISBN: 0714652326
EAN: 9780714652320
Die abhängige Kommanditgesellschaft auf Aktien   von Felix Born ISBN 10: 3428114876 ISBN 13: 9783428114870 Untertitel: Diss. Serie: Schriften zum Wirtschaftsrecht Bd.175 Erscheinungsjahr: 2004 Erschienen bei: Duncker& Humblot Einband: ...

Preis: 74,00 EUR
Angebotsende: 19.03.2012, 12:30:39 Uhr

Die abhängige Kommanditgesellschaft auf Aktien - Felix kaufen bei eBay



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ecotext Schriftenreihe 1/86 - Die Aktie:Anlage- und ...

ecotext Schriftenreihe 1/86 - Die Aktie:Anlage- und ...

Kategorie: Bücher > Belletristik > Unterhaltungsliteratur > Sonstige

Shopsuche > Bücher finden: in Artikelbezeichnung und Beschreibung
ecotext Schriftenreihe 1/86 - Die Aktie
Anlage- und Finanzierungsinstrument
Reichard und Schneeweisz (Hrsg.)
64
ecotext
19.20 €
inkl. MwSt.
*Das hier angebotene Exemplar weist leichte Beschädigungen und Nutzungsspuren auf. Es handelt sich nicht um ein neuwertiges Exemplar.
Zustandsvermerk: Bibliotheksauflösung, Buchumschlag leicht angestoßen und abgegriffen, 1986.
Blick ins Buch: Reinschauen vor dem Kauf:
Register lesen | Autoren-Infos lesen -->
Register > zum Seitenanfang <sv.htm> Über die Autoren > zum Seitenanfang <au.htm> -->
Buchpark-Express ist Mitglied des ebay.de Powerseller Programms WIDERRUFSBELEHRUNG
...

Preis: 19,20 EUR
Angebotsende: 19.03.2012, 00:45:27 Uhr

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