General Search
Multiple search words are automatically linked with "AND". Text enclosed in quotation marks (") returns only the pages in which this text occurs exactly. With the search filters next to the results you have the possibility to further limit your search.
-
In Alexander’s name A gold stater of Seleucus
The Macedonian king Alexander the Great is considered to this day to be a great general and conqueror. At the head of his army, he invaded the Persian Empire, the largest and most powerful of its time, which stretched from the eastern coast of the Mediterranean to the Indian subcontinent.
-
Symposium "A Franco-German Tandem? Insights from History and Future Challenges for the Banking Systems in France and Germany", Institute for Banking and Financial History, Center for Financial Studies and House of Finance, Goethe University in cooperation with Deutsch-Französische Gesellschaft Frankfurt am Main Panel discussion with Dr. Fritzi Köhler-Geib, title: “Two Banking Systems in a Single Market: Germany and France's Financial Institutions on the Road to the European Capital Markets Union“
Contact: Rainer Klump, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt,
tel: +49 69 798-13035, email: presse@uni-frankfurt.de -
Sign of the lily Gold florin of Florence
Constans was the youngest son of Constantin I the Great. He was only a boy when his father accorded him the rank of Caesar (emperor-designate). With the death of Constantin I in 337, his three sons Constantin II, Constantius II and Constans adopted the title of Augustus and divided the empire amongst themselves.
-
ECB publishes indicative operational calendars for 2025 19.07.2024 | ECB press release
15.09.2023 | Press release on tender calendar
-
6-months Bills of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) – Auction result
72 KB, PDF
-
Auction result – Reopening of two Federal bonds
71 KB, PDF
-
The victorious emperor A gold medallion of Constans
Constans was the youngest son of Constantin I the Great. He was only a boy when his father accorded him the rank of Caesar (emperor-designate). With the death of Constantin I in 337, his three sons Constantin II, Constantius II and Constans adopted the title of Augustus and divided the empire amongst themselves.
-
Rule of law The French 24-livres coin
When Parisians stormed the Bastille on 14 July 1789, the face of Europe was changed forever. At this time, France was ruled by Louis XVI, king by divine right. He reigned in the tradition of the Sun King Louis XIV and exercised almost absolute power. The country was in turmoil. Large swaths of the population were impoverished while the nobility enjoyed a life of excess. It was on that fateful day that tensions erupted.
-
-