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Stolpe

Stolpe may refer to:

Stolpe (Berlin)

Stolpe is a historic village in the western suburbs of Berlin, the capital city of Germany. It is situated in the locality of Wannsee, in the borough of Steglitz-Zehlendorf. Stolpe has a documented history going back to 1299.

Usage examples of "stolpe".

He spied Heidi Stolpe coming toward them down the path near the statue.

Danube wind, Heidi Stolpe turned over the first spadeful of earth that had entombed for centuries the fabled Nibelungen Hoard.

Somehow Heidi Stolpe was the freakish sister to the hundreds of Aryan males mass-produced by IV more than thirty years before.

I was able to get up I was given a wheel chair, for I was still almost paralyzed, and Stolpe delighted in wheeling me about.

Stolpe and me in an improvised wheel chair race, on which occasion Stolpe was not in the chair but running with it down the street as hard as he could go.

We then stood in a line and bought a stamp, which Stolpe stuck on the forehead of a policeman farther back.

At Birka, in eastern Sweden, about 2,500 graves have been identified in various places round the town, and a thousand or so of these were examined by the archaeologist Stolpe in the 1870s and 1880s.

German geologist and geographer, a member of an ancient and noble Prussian family, was born at Stolpe in Pomerania on the 26th of April 1774.

Meanwhile, over a hundred miles to the north, near the town of Kyritz, Inspector Helmut Stolpe of the local Gestapo was standing in the charge room of the area Security Police Headquarters.

The major nodded to the lieutenant to carry on and led Stolpe back into the passage and along to one of the cells.

And that, Stolpe told himself, groaning beneath his breath would mean spending the rest of the day writing up a report am filling in forms about it.

For that reason, he, and no one else, should have been the one to narrate, whether briefly or at length, everything involving the ship: the circumstances of its naming, the purpose it fulfilled after the war began, and hence also its end off the Stolpe Bank.

German specifications could have brought the Soviets such success that day off the Stolpe Bank.

U-boatmen would have experienced a better death, even if these miracle vessels had been destroyed by depth charges, than proved their lot when they drowned wretchedly opposite the Stolpe Bank.

The four captains thought that having reached the Stolpe Bank, they had put the greatest danger behind them.