Peter$59731$ - traducción al griego
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Peter$59731$ - traducción al griego

HUNGARIAN-AMERICAN SYMPHONY AND OPERA CONDUCTOR
Peter eros; Peter Erös; Peter Eroes; Peter Eros; Erős, Peter

Peter      
n. πέτρος
at all         
  • Mortensen at the premiere of ''[[The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King]]'', December 1, 2003
  • Mortensen in 2010
  • The Road]]''
  • Mortensen interviewed by [[eTalk]] Daily at the 2005 [[Toronto International Film Festival]], for ''[[A History of Violence]]''
  • Mortensen at the [[32nd Genie Awards]] in March 2012
AMERICAN ACTOR
Viggo Peter Mortensen; Vigo mortensen; Viggo Mortenson; Viggo Mortesen; Intelligence Failure; One Less Thing to Worry About; Recent Forgeries; The Other Parade; One Man's Meat (Viggo Mortensen); Live at Beyond Baroque; Live at Beyond Baroque II; Please Tomorrow; This That and The Other; Live At Beyond Baroque; At All; This, That and the Other; Live At Beyond Baroque II; This, That, and The Other; This, That, and the Other; Viggo Peter Mortensen, Jr.; Viggo Peter Mortensen Jr.; Viggo Mortensen, Jr.; Viggo Mortensen Jr.; Reunion (Viggo Mortensen album); Reunion (Viggo Mortensen Album); Viggo Peter Mortenson, Jr.; Viggo Peter Mortenson Jr; Viggo Peter Mortensen Jr; Viggo P. Mortensen, Jr.; Viggo P. Mortenson, Jr.; Viggo P Mortenson Jr; Viggo P Mortensen Jr; Viggo Peter Mortensen, Junior; Viggo Peter Mortenson, Junior; Viggo Peter Mortenson Junior; Viggo Peter Mortensen Junior; Viggo P. Mortensen, Junior; Viggo P. Mortenson, Junior; Viggo P Mortensen Junior; Viggo P Mortenson Junior; Viggo Mortenson, Jr.; Viggo Mortensen Jr; Viggo Mortenson Jr; Viggo Mortensen Junior; Viggo Mortenson Junior; Viggo Mortenson, Junior; Viggo Mortensen, Junior; Viggo Peter Mortenson; Viggo P Mortenson; Viggo P Mortensen; Viggo P. Mortensen; Viggo P. Mortenson; Henry Mortensen
καθόλου
st. petersburg         
  • Panorama of stalls and boxes at the Main Mariinsky Theatre
  • Moyka River]], flowing through [[Central Saint Petersburg]]
  • [[Trolleybus]] on [[Nevsky Prospekt]]
  • The Admiralty building in St. Petersburg
  • Embankment of the [[Neva]] at 23:11, 22 June 2013
  • [[Admiralty Shipyard]]
  • The [[Amber Room]] in the [[Catherine Palace]]
  • The ''[[Bronze Horseman]]'', monument to Peter the Great
  • 50px
  • taking power]], 1918
  • Leningrad in 1935
  • Senate Square]], 26 December 1825
  • Fontanka River]], 1972
  • Kazan Cathedral]], an example of [[Neoclassical architecture]]
  • Map of fortifications, Sankt Petersburg, 1722
  • [[Griboedov Canal]] and the [[Church of the Saviour on Blood]], 1991
  • Life expectancy at birth in Saint Petersburg
  • Map of Saint Petersburg, 1744
  • [[Narvskaya]] station of the [[Saint Petersburg Metro]], opened in 1955
  • left
  • While not originally named for Tsar [[Peter the Great]], during World War I the city was changed from the Germanic "Petersburg" to "Petrograd" in his honour.
  • The city assembly meets in the [[Mariinsky Palace]].
  • Power Machines plant building on Sverdlovskaya embankment in Saint Petersburg
  • The main auditorium of the Mariinsky Theatre
  • siege]], in which more than one million civilians died, mostly from starvation. [[Nevsky Prospect]].
  • Field of Mars]]
  • Aerial view of [[Peter and Paul Fortress]]
  • Aerial view of [[Peterhof Palace]]
  • The [[Smolny Institute]], seat of the governor
  • Nevsky Prospekt from restaurant Legeune in the late 19th century
  • left
  • Gazprom Arena]] on [[Krestovsky Island]]
  • People walking on the main street of Saint Petersburg, [[Nevsky Prospekt]]
  • left
  • left
  • Satellite image of Saint Petersburg and its suburbs
  • center
  • Grand Peterhof Palace and the Grand Cascade
  • Neva River]]
  • [[Smolny Convent]], an example of [[Baroque architecture]]
  • Western High-Speed Diameter]]
  • The [[Pushkin House]]
  • View of the city from the [[Saint Isaac's Cathedral]]
  • Administrative divisions]] of the city of Saint Petersburg
  • [[Hydrofoil]] docking in Saint Petersburg upon arrival from [[Peterhof Palace]] (2008)
  • Population pyramid of St. Petersburg in the 2021 Russian Census
  • From 1924 to 1991 the city was known as 'Leningrad'. This is a picture of the Saint Petersburg port entrance with an old 'Ленинград' (Leningrad) sign.
  • The "Temple of Friendship" in [[Pavlovsk Park]]
  • left
  • Tram passing by Kronverksy Avenue
  • The Trinity Bridge]] is a landmark of Art Nouveau design.
  • The [[Alexandrinsky Theatre]]
  • Admiral]]'', is a native of Saint Petersburg.
  • [[Lakhta Center]], the tallest building in Europe
  • Pulkovo International Airport
  • Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum]] is a major Russian investment forum.
  • The [[Sapsan]] high-speed train runs between Saint Petersburg and Moscow.
  • [[Old Saint Petersburg Stock Exchange and Rostral Columns]]
FEDERAL CITY IN AND FORMER CAPITAL OF RUSSIA
Petrograd; St Petersburg; St. Petersburg; Sankt Petersburg; Sankt Peterburg; Leningrad, Russia; St.Petersburg; St Petersburg, Russia; Saint-Petersburg; Russia St. Petersburg; Sankt-Peterburg; Sankt-Peterburg Federal City, Russia; St. Petersberg; Saint Petersberg; UN/LOCODE:RULED; Ленинград; Art Pictures St. Petersburg; St. petersburg; St Petersberg; Peterburi; Sankt-Petersburg; Saint Peterburg; St. Petersburg, Russa; Peterburg; St. Peterburg; Leningrad; St. Petersburgh; Санкт-Петербург; St-Petersburg; Saint petersburg; Saint Petersburgh; Sankt Pieterburg; St petersburg; RU-SPE; St petersbourg; St. petersbourg; St. Petersburg, Russia; Peterpole; Peterpolis; Saint Petersburg, Russia (Federation); Saint Petersburg (Russia); Saint Petersburg, Russia; Saint Peterburg, Russia; Monuments of Saint Petersburg; Leningrad, USSR; Saint Petersburg City; St Petersb.; Pietarissa; Sankt Petrburg; Leningrad, Soviet Union; Landscrona; St. Petursburg; Lenningrad; Saint-Peterburg; Petersburg, Russia; Peter, Russia; Piter, Russia; Петроград; Петрогра́д; Ленингра́д; Санкт-Петербу́рг; Санкт Петербу́рг; Санкт Петербург; Culture of Saint Petersburg; Draft:Leningrad; St. Petersberg, Russia; Skt Peterburg; СПб; SPB (city); SPB (place); Saint Petesburg; St Petesburg; St. Petesburg; Piotrogrodzice
άγια πετρούπολη

Definición

Peter Chen
<person> The developer of the Entity-Relationship model. (1995-02-07)

Wikipedia

Peter Erős

Peter Sandor Erős (22 September 1932, Budapest - 12 September 2014, Seattle) was a Hungarian-American conductor.

Erős attended the Franz Liszt Academy of Music, where he studied composition with Zoltán Kodály, chamber music with Leó Weiner, and conducting with László Somogyi.

In 1956, during the Hungarian Revolution, he emigrated to The Netherlands. At age 27, he was named Associate Conductor of the Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra, a post he held for five years. While in Amsterdam, he assisted Otto Klemperer in opera productions for the Holland Festival. In the summers of 1960 and 1961, he served as a coach and assisted Hans Knappertsbusch at the Bayreuth Festival, and in 1961 was assistant conductor to Ferenc Fricsay for the Salzburg Festival production of Mozart’s "Idomeneo". He continued to assist Fricsay both in Salzburg and in Berlin with the RIAS Symphony Orchestra and Deutsche Grammophon through 1964. In 1965, Erős came to the United States for the first time at the invitation of George Szell to work with him and the Cleveland Orchestra as a Kulas Foundation Fellow.

His principal appointments were as Music Director and Conductor of the Malmö Symphony Orchestra (1966–69) in Sweden, the Australian Broadcasting Commission Orchestras (1967–69, Sydney and Melbourne; 1975–79, Perth), the San Diego Symphony and La Jolla Chamber Orchestra (1971–1980), and the Aalborg Symphony Orchestra (1982–89) in Denmark.

As a guest conductor, Peter Erős appeared regularly with major symphony orchestras and opera companies on five continents, including the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra, Orquestra Sinfônica Brasileira, National Symphony Orchestra, Seattle Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, Philharmoniker Hamburg, Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Royal Swedish Opera in Stockholm, Hamburg State Opera, the Hague Residentie Orchestra, and the Scottish National Orchestra, and made nine tours of South Africa. He received ASCAP awards in 1983 and 1985 for his programming of music by American composers.

Erős came to the University of Washington School of Music in Seattle, Washington in 1989 as the Morrison Endowed Professor of Conducting and Music Director and Conductor of the University Symphony and Opera, where he taught until his retirement in 2010; up until his death, he held the honorary title of Professor Emeritus. He also taught conducting from 1960–65 at the Amsterdam Conservatory, where his pupils included Hans Vonk, Edo de Waart, and Jan Stulen, and served as Director of Orchestral and Operatic Activities at the Peabody Conservatory of Music from 1982–85.

At the personal request of Richard Wagner's granddaughter Friedelind, Peter Erős led the first set of recordings of orchestral works by Friedelind's father, Siegfried Wagner. Two discs were released on the Delysé label, featuring the Aalborg Symphony Orchestra conducted by Erős: the Symphony in C and the tone poems Glück, Und wenn die Welt voll Teufel wär (Scherzo), Weltersteinspielung and Sehnsucht. He also conducted the first recording of the opera Jesus Before Herod by Hungarian composer Gabriel von Wayditch (1888–1969) with the San Diego Symphony.

He died in Seattle in 2014, aged 81, of a cerebral hemorrhage.