5 products were found matching your search for Karlsbad in 1 shops:
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Mies at Home: From Am Karlsbad 24 to the Tugendhat House (Routledge Research in Architecture)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 61.88 $Book is in Used-VeryGood condition. Pages and cover are clean and intact. Used items may not include supplementary materials such as CDs or access codes. May show signs of minor shelf wear and contain very limited notes and highlighting. 0.88
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Mies at Home: From Am Karlsbad 24 to the Tugendhat House (Routledge Research in Architecture)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 65.66 $Book is in NEW condition. 0.88
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Das Zweite Internationale Schachturnier in Karlsbad 1911 2 teile in einem band
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 2.84 $Hb, 384pp. VG(-) with clean contents in VG dj. In German. Reprint of the work of 1911, combining two books in one volume. Includes introduction and 325 games with brief annotations of the 1911 chess tournament held in Carlsbad . Teichmann was the winner, ahead of Rubinstein and Schlecter in a large field of 26 chess masters which also included Nimzowitsch and Marshall.
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Carlsbad (Paperback)
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 24.79 $Once a small coastal community known for avocados and flower fields, Carlsbad has grown into a sprawling suburban city, with a small beach-town feel that still maintains ties to its roots. The discovery of its mineral wells in 1885, and the subsequent naming of the city after the famed European spa in Karlsbad, Bohemia, put Carlsbad on the map as a world-class resort destination. Miles of beautiful beaches, and three lagoons located within its boundaries, have shaped Carlsbad into a recreational destination as well. The Flower Fields, with vibrant rows of colorful ranunculus, now serves as a reminder of the past and a link to the future, as shopping and businesses have grown up around them, helping Carlsbad evolve into the diverse, progressive city it is today.
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Grand Spas of Central Europe : A History of Intrigue, Politics, Art, and Healing
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 38.68 $The Grand Spas of Central Europe leads readers on an irresistible tour through the grand spa towns of Central Europe—fabled places like Baden-Baden, Bad Ems, Bad Gastein, Karlsbad, and Marienbad. Noted historian David Clay Large follows the grand spa story from Greco-Roman antiquity to the present, focusing especially on the years between the French Revolution and World War II, a period in which the major Central European Kurorte (“cure-towns”) reached their peak of influence and then slipped into decline. Written with verve and affection, the book explores the grand spa towns, which in their prime were an equivalent of today’s major medical centers, rehab retreats, golf resorts, conference complexes, fashion shows, music festivals, and sexual hideaways—all rolled into one. Conventional medicine being quite primitive through most of this era, people went to the spas in hopes of curing everything from cancer to gout. But often as not “curists” also went to play, to be entertained, and to socialize. In their heyday the grand spas were hotbeds of cultural creativity, true meccas of the arts. High-level politics was another grand spa specialty, with statesmen descending on the Kurorte to negotiate treaties, craft alliances, and plan wars.This military scheming was just one aspect of a darker side to the grand spa story, one rife with nationalistic rivalries, ethnic hatred, and racial prejudice. The grand spas, it turns out, were microcosms of changing sociopolitical realities—not at all the “timeless” oases of harmony they often claimed to be. The Grand Spas of Central Europe holds up a gilt-framed but clear-eyed mirror to the ever-changing face of European society—dimples, warts, and all.
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