Milan$48991$ - translation to ολλανδικά
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Milan$48991$ - translation to ολλανδικά

GERMAN POLITICIAN
Milan Horacek; Milan Horá; Milan Hora; Milan Horácek

Milan      
n. Milaan (stad in Italië)
AC Milan         
  • ''Curva Sud'' of the San Siro
  • Milan captain [[Paolo Maldini]] lifting the European Cup after they won the [[2002–03 UEFA Champions League]]
  • ''Brigate Rossonere''
  • Piazza del Duomo]], [[Milan]]
  • Milan celebrates winning the [[2006–07 UEFA Champions League]].
  • AC Milan headquarter in [[Milan]]
  • Alfred Edwards]], the first chairman of the club in 1899–1909
  • European Cup Winners' Cup]] final in 1968
  • [[Herbert Kilpin]], the club's first captain and one of its founding members
  • Scene of a Derby della Madonnina in 1915
  • The AC Milan formation that won the Italian championship in 1901
  • [[Paolo Maldini]] made a record 902 appearances for Milan, including 647 in [[Serie A]].
  • 1993–94 edition]] of the tournament.
  • Entrance to ''[[Milanello]]'', the AC Milan training facility
  • [[Coat of arms]] of the city of Milan – has been the club badge worn on match kits from the origins to the mid 1940s
  • [[Nereo Rocco]], the most successful manager in the history of AC Milan with 10 trophies
  • A partial view of the club's trophy room at the Mondo Milan Museum
  • Jerseys of [[Paolo Maldini]] (number 3), [[Kaká]] (number 22) and [[Zlatan Ibrahimović]] (number 11) in the [[San Siro]] museum
  • Milan derby]]
  • View of the San Siro in 1934
  • [[Stefano Pioli]] is the current coach of the club.
  • 18px
ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL CLUB IN MILAN, ITALY
AC Milan; Milan A.C.; Ac milan; A. C. Milan; Rossoneri; Associazione Calcio Milan SpA; A C Milan; Milan AC; Ac Milan; Associazione Calcio Milan; Milanello (mascot); I Rossoneri; Milan F.C.; A.C. Milan Anthem; AC Milan Anthem
professioneel voetbalteam uit Milaan (Italië)
Inter Milan         
  • 1928–29 S.S. Ambrosiana in its white and red ''Crociata'' shirt
  • Inter won the [[2004–05 Coppa Italia]], beating [[A.S. Roma]].
  • Inter lining up before a Europa League match against [[FC Dnipro]] on 18 September 2014
  • Austria Salzburg]]
  • [[Giuseppe Meazza]] still holds the record for the most goals scored in a debut season in Serie A, with 31 goals in his first season (1929–30).
  • treble]] having also won the Serie A title and the Coppa Italia.
  • Intercontinental Cup in 1965]]
  • [[Sandro Mazzola]] played for the highly successful Inter team remembered by the name of "La Grande Inter", during the 1960s.
  • Scene of a Derby della Madonnina in 1915
  • Inter squad in 1910
  • [[Javier Zanetti]] made a record 858 appearances for Internazionale, including 618 in Serie A.
  • Figo]] (seven) in the San Siro museum
  • 2009–2010]] season
  • [[Simone Inzaghi]] is the current coach of the club.
  • San Siro during an Inter match
  • Milan derby]].
  • 18px
ASSOCIATION FOOTBALL CLUB IN MILAN, ITALY
Nerazzurri; Internazionale Milano; Internazionale F.C.; Internazionale; Internazionale Milano FC; Internazionale FC; Internazionale Milano F.C.; FC Internazionale Milano; Internazionale Football Club; Football Club Internazionale Milano; F. C. Internazionale Milano; F.C.I.M.; Inter Milano; FC Internazionale; Inter Milan FC; Grande Inter; F C Internazionale Milano; S.S. Ambrosiana; Internazionale Milan; History of F.C. Internazionale Milano (1960-1968); Ambrosiana-Inter; Inter milan; La Grande Inter; F.C. Internazionale; F.C Internazionale Milano; F.C Internazionale; Inter Milan F.C.; AS Ambrosiana Inter; Intermilan; FC Inter Milan; FC Inter Milano; Inter.it; F.C. Internazionale Milano; 2023–24 Inter Milan season; 2023-24 Inter Milan season
Inter Milaan (Italiaanse voetbalploeg)

Ορισμός

Ambrose
·noun A sweet-scented herb; ambrosia. ·see Ambrosia, 3.

Βικιπαίδεια

Milan Horáček

Milan Horáček (born 30 October 1946 in Velké Losiny, Czechoslovakia) is a Czech-born German politician, a founding member of the German Green Party, a former member of the Bundestag (1983–1985) and a former Member of the European Parliament (2004–2009).

From 1965 to 1967 his political activism got him into trouble with the Czechoslovak communist regime, and he was arrested several times. After the suppression of the Prague Spring in 1968, he fled from Czechoslovakia and settled in West Germany. There he worked in industry and for a trade union magazine. From 1976 to 1981 he studied political science in Frankfurt, and in 1979 was involved in the establishment of Die Grünen. In the 1980s he was active in Hesse for the party, was a municipal councillor in Frankfurt 1981–1983, and was elected to the Bundestag in 1983, serving until 1985, as a member of its Foreign Affairs Committee. His main interests there were foreign affairs and security, Central and Eastern Europe and human rights. From 1985 to 1990, he was a group specialist on foreign and security policy, human rights and Eastern Europe.

Besides his political work, Horáček engaged in Czechoslovakian exile activities. He was publisher of the Czech exile magazine Listy ("Sheets"). In 1990 his Czech citizenship was restored and president Václav Havel appointed him to the Council of Advisers. He was director of the Heinrich Böll Foundation's office in Prague from 1991 to 2004, and also worked at its Bonn office 1998–2000.

As a candidate of the Green Party federations of Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia he was elected to the European Parliament in June 2004. He also participates in activities of Green Party in the Czech Republic and was not reelected to European Parliament in June 2009.

In 2008, he co-organized (with Gisela Kallenbach) a public hearing in the European Parliament on totalitarian regimes in support of the Prague Declaration. He co-sponsored the European Parliament resolution of 2 April 2009 on European conscience and totalitarianism.