「Petersburg」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| rer, art teacher, who live and work in Saint | Petersburg, a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of A |
| chmond as before, they definitely considered | Petersburg a prime objective, since it served as a mili |
| College-where he taught for 30 years-in St. | Petersburg, a city that became his home for life. |
| k is located on a plot of land that was once | Petersburg, a small town that thrived during the 1790s |
| al game on 18 February 2009 for FC Zenit St. | Petersburg a goal against VfB Stuttgart, after 1.53 min |
| Graphic artist, living and working in Saint | Petersburg, a member of the Saint Petersburg Union of A |
| attorney, and William Mahone (1827-1895), of | Petersburg, a former Confederate general who was presid |
| Antonina W. Bouis, St. | Petersburg: A Cultural History (New York: The Free Pres |
| on the one hand, as Vlangali wrote to Saint | Petersburg, a "complete refusal" would be bad for Russi |
| In 1996 he was invited to Lokomotiv Saint | Petersburg, a First Division team. |
| BC radio programme, The Snowy Streets of St. | Petersburg, about artists and writers who fled the form |
| ast cross-country, reaching Federal lines at | Petersburg about dark. |
| In | Petersburg about half the population was black of which |
| final bid of $400 by the former mayor of St. | Petersburg, Abraham C. Pheil. |
| St | Petersburg academic psychiatrist professor Yuri Nuller |
| St. | Petersburg Academic Symphony Orchestra (Russia) |
| een invited as a guest conductor for the St. | Petersburg Academic Symphony orchestra (St. |
| medal two years later, in 1863, from the St | Petersburg Academy for his Ulysses Slaying the Suitors. |
| alto Tyrannulet in the Memoires of The Saint | Petersburg Academy of Sciences |
| omist, statesman, and academician of the St. | Petersburg Academy of Sciences. |
| January 28 - The Saint | Petersburg Academy of Sciences is founded by Peter I of |
| 826 he was a corresponding member of the St. | Petersburg Academy of Science. |
| e received a diploma of admission to the St. | Petersburg Academy of Sciences. |
| In 1741 he was elected a member of the St. | Petersburg Academy of Sciences. |
| He went on to work at the newly opened St | Petersburg Academy of Sciences in 1725. |
| demy, the Royal Society in 1733, and the St. | Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1740). |
| Then he studied architecture at the St. | Petersburg Academy of Arts from 1902 - 1909. |
| er and began his artistic training at the St | Petersburg Academy under Alexander Sauerweid. |
| The former St. | Petersburg ACL Station is the only one in the city that |
| already dark for a couple of years when St. | Petersburg acquired the station in February 1995. |
| for insubordination, he was sent back to St | Petersburg after the battle, where he was awarded the O |
| planned to be erected in Petrograd (now St. | Petersburg) after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, as |
| A year later, Bulwer was due to go to St | Petersburg after accepting a new post there, but caught |
| She died in St. | Petersburg, aged 66. |
| From 1969 to 1981, she was stationed at | Petersburg, AK. |
| One major celebration occurs in | Petersburg, Alaska also known as "Little Norway". |
| of Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota and in | Petersburg, Alaska and Ketchikan, Alaska. |
| Petersburg, Alaska, United States | |
| USCGC Elderberry (WLI-65401); | Petersburg, Alaska, (commissioned, June 1954) |
| The film was shot in part in | Petersburg, Alaska. |
| St. | Petersburg also fielded a team in the league in 1920. |
| to be one of € 7.5 million from Zenit Saint | Petersburg, although head coach Dick Advocaat denied th |
| Assigned station code STP, the St. | Petersburg Amtrak Station was serviced by trains such a |
| When he was pastor at | Petersburg, an Irishman, named Timmy McLaughlin, regula |
| 1854: Toured in Warsaw, Saint | Petersburg and Moscow (January-April) |
| He moved to Saint | Petersburg and studied at the Technical Design School o |
| Petersburg) and run for several decades by Abram Fedoro | |
| sian Premier League 2007 champion, Zenit St. | Petersburg, and the winner of Russian Cup 2006-07, Loko |
| the James River, rising in Fort Lee east of | Petersburg and flowing northeast past the city of Hopew |
| gravine Karoline of Hesse-Darmstadt to Saint | Petersburg, and on his return was a guest of the duke C |
| Since 1991 the Historic Centre of Saint | Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments in Saint Pet |
| 1843, Adolf, Duke of Nassau was visiting St. | Petersburg and met Elizabeth for the first time. |
| He engaged in mercantile pursuits in | Petersburg and Portersville, Indiana. |
| ially joined the Admiralty Shipyard in Saint | Petersburg and worked as a constructor on the Battleshi |
| as a consultant to the Baltic Works in Saint | Petersburg and Noblesser in Reval. |
| part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site Saint | Petersburg and Related Groups of Monuments. |
| He graduated from Cadets Corps in Saint | Petersburg and served at the Baltic Fleet. |
| founded in 1986 by The Junior League of St. | Petersburg and Hands-On, Inc. |
| emoir of the late Charles Baird, esq., of St | Petersburg, and of his son, the late Francis Baird, esq |
| s of the war and serving during the Siege of | Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. |
| uburn of the New York - Penn League, and St. | Petersburg and Ft. |
| He had laid siege to | Petersburg, and the war was near its end. |
| out, under the auspices of the Academy of St | Petersburg and the Alexander University, on an explorat |
| fought along the siege lines at the Siege of | Petersburg and was slightly wounded at the Battle of th |
| United States, along U.S. Route 460 between | Petersburg and Blackstone. |
| ics and mathematics at the University of St. | Petersburg and medicine at the University of Kiev, grad |
| in prestigious concert halls in Moscow, St. | Petersburg, and other major cities in Russia, the U.S., |
| estates, one near the czar's capital of St. | Petersburg and another close to Moscow." |
| st Type XIV on its maiden flight between St. | Petersburg and Tampa. |
| a Principal Dancer at the Kirov Ballet, St. | Petersburg and the Dutch National Ballet, Amsterdam. |
| He continued to practice in | Petersburg and died in 1905. |
| courts, including those in Stockholm, Saint | Petersburg and Berlin, contributed to his increasing in |
| Francis M. Lyman in offering prayers in St. | Petersburg and Moscow which dedicated Russia for the pr |
| re being recalled to Virginia to help defend | Petersburg and Richmond. |
| particularly important for the city of Saint | Petersburg and its suburbs, where an overwhelming major |
| Since that time he has moved to St. | Petersburg and performed there and elsewhere in Russia |
| Novy Urengoy, Noyabrsk, Samara, Sochi, Saint | Petersburg and Ufa. |
| reek, running near the modern border between | Petersburg and Dinwiddie) and Matoks, on the opposite b |
| onfederates would be forced to evacuate both | Petersburg and Richmond because it represented a key po |
| Florida State Road 580A is both West Saint | Petersburg and East Saint Petersburg Drive, a former se |
| ation served SAL's Silver Star to Tampa, St. | Petersburg, and Miami, among other trains. |
| ts factory in Vsevolozhsk, Russia near Saint | Petersburg, and plans to increase manufacturing capacit |
| d concerts in Tokyo, Istanbul, London, Saint | Petersburg and Potsdam. |
| Gen. Benjamin Butler made a thrust toward | Petersburg and was met by Bushrod Johnson's Division at |
| A large portion of U.S. Route 460 between | Petersburg and Suffolk is named in his honor. |
| s opened in 1838, a 16 mile line between St. | Petersburg and the palace at Tsarskoye Selo. |
| ulpted by A. V. Baklanov and minted at Saint | Petersburg and Moscow. |
| ruary 1768 he was appointed ambassador at St | Petersburg and was well received by Catherine the Great |
| 1887 he became an associate professor in St. | Petersburg, and in 1895 became director of the herpetol |
| In 1870, he returned to St. | Petersburg and travelled to Dagestan, in the northern C |
| a mining engineer, Nalivkin was born in St. | Petersburg, and followed his father's footsteps by ente |
| Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, | Petersburg, and the first Battle of Weldon Railroad, no |
| e Army of Northern Virginia for the Siege of | Petersburg and the Appomattox Campaign. |
| at Ed Smith in 1991 -- before moving to St. | Petersburg and then Ft. |
| He played for the SKA St. | Petersburg and San Jose Sharks. |
| fect drawing technique led him to move to St | Petersburg and The Academy of Fine Art and, independent |
| This command took part in the defense of | Petersburg and saw action around Appomattox. |
| ce of Izhora and Neva, halfway between Saint | Petersburg and Schlisselburg. |
| ons on south side of James River and against | Petersburg and Richmond May 4-June 15. |
| joined General Baron Steuben at Petersburgh [ | Petersburg], and after the battle of Petersburgh, he wa |
| e academies of Brussels, Ghent, Antwerp, St. | Petersburg and Amsterdam. |
| he gave concerts with Leopold Auer in Saint | Petersburg and Ivan Grzhimali in Moscow. |
| ck Kronstadt, and from there to attack Saint | Petersburg and to depose the tsar. |
| residence for government officials of Saint | Petersburg, and still does today. |
| eld with U.S. Route 1/U.S. Route 301 between | Petersburg and Richmond. |
| e first worked at the Obukhov factory in St. | Petersburg and participated in the 1901 Obukhov strike. |
| Being prohibited from visiting both St. | Petersburg and Moscow, Yashvil spent next several years |
| at various times in Arkangelsk, Moscow, St. | Petersburg, and Kronstadt. |
| York City after the draft riot, the Siege of | Petersburg and the final pursuit and destruction of Gen |
| followed by other Interstates - I-85 between | Petersburg and Henderson, North Carolina, and I-20 betw |
| It is found in Russia from St. | Petersburg and Moscow to the Ural Mountains and across |
| viar, recorded in both New Orleans and Saint | Petersburg and featuring a guest appearance by Mick Tay |
| xamine Byzantine MSS., went in 1834 to Saint | Petersburg and Copenhagen for the same purpose, and in |
| d in The Wilderness Campaign, the defense of | Petersburg and Richmond, and the Appomattox operations. |
| ons on south side of James River and against | Petersburg and Richmond May 4-28. |
| In 1837 he was transferred to St. | Petersburg and made legation councillor. |
| ney datsan, the first Buddhist temple in St. | Petersburg and indeed in Europe. |
| l Gallery, London, the Hermitage Museum, St. | Petersburg and the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. |
| Its first performances were in St. | Petersburg and Moscow, with Pabst as soloist, and with |
| ons in the Shenandoah Valley, the defense of | Petersburg, and the Appomattox Campaign. |
| well as at providing gifted youths from St. | Petersburg and the Leningrad Region with the possibilit |
| n 1992, included performances in Moscow, St. | Petersburg and other cities. |
| In 1853 he went to St. | Petersburg and entered the University. |
| er and Ariza Makukula arrived from Zenit St. | Petersburg and Benfica respectively. |
| tory was found in the Imperial Museum in St. | Petersburg and there is no information about where it w |
| Mayor Abram C. Pheil of St. | Petersburg and Mae Peabody of Dubuque, Iowa, were the f |
| ssia started on November 24th, 2007 in Saint | Petersburg and Moscow. |
| Franz Moritz was born in St | Petersburg and was educated in Germany for a military c |
| the Tsar for the Alexander III Museum in St. | Petersburg, and Tsar Alexis and Archbishop Nikon Venera |
| Lipanov was born in Leningrad (now Saint | Petersburg) and began to skate when he was a young chil |
| hat same year, he estasblished a practice in | Petersburg and served later as a House of Delegates rep |
| f this work were found in the Library of St. | Petersburg and published by A. Harkavy. |
| 990s when Crist was a state senator from St. | Petersburg and LeMieux was working to expand the role o |
| lsborough Times moves from Clearwater to St. | Petersburg and is renamed The St. Petersburg Times. |
| iev resulted in intensive work in Moscow, St | Petersburg and throughout the southern USSR. |
| nk of full admiral in 1877; he died in Saint | Petersburg and was buried at the Smolenskoye Cemetery. |
| auss' Elektra at the Mariinsky Theatre in St | Petersburg and Benjamin Britten's The Turn of the Screw |
| ional four companies added in June were from | Petersburg and Fairfax, Gloucester, King and Queen, Mat |
| C Sibir Novosibirsk, HC Severstal, SKA Saint | Petersburg and HC Dynamo Minsk. |
| derate Gen. Robert E. Lee decided to abandon | Petersburg and head west and south in an attempt to joi |
| t and undertook concert tours in Riga, Saint | Petersburg and Moscow. |
| After diplomatic service in Saint | Petersburg and Copenhagen, he had a successful politica |
| ard of in the two towns in which he grew up, | Petersburg and Lewistown, Illinois. |
| y was founded in 1799 Delarov moved to Saint | Petersburg and served on the company's board of directo |
| The men were from | Petersburg and the counties of Southampton, Sussex, Pri |
| Skirmish on | Petersburg and Richmond Turnpike June 15-16. |
| She was built by Baltic Yard in St | Petersburg and designed by I.G. |
| r he played for clubs such as FC Zenit Saint | Petersburg and PFC CSKA Moscow. |
| He has returned to Russia to play for St. | Petersburg and remains the property of the Anaheim Duck |
| he south side of the James River and against | Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. |
| jing, then resident minister to Russia in St | Petersburg, and finally resident minister to Great Brit |
| le and Lawrenceville Railroad, the Richmond, | Petersburg and Carolina Railroad and the Pittsboro Rail |
| ng later stages of the siege of Richmond and | Petersburg and was mustered out with a brevet to major |
| ceeded with his friends in March 1792 to St. | Petersburg, and subsequently with the connivance of the |
| s owned by the Roman Catholic Diocese of St. | Petersburg and is primarily listener-supported through |
| decision to abandon his entrenchments around | Petersburg and begin the retreat that led to his surren |
| en with health problems, orphanages of Saint | Petersburg and the Beslan victims. |
| ade, as Consul General in Leningrad (now St. | Petersburg), and as Principal Officer of the U.S. Embas |
| the Pacific, was published in 1827 in Saint | Petersburg and won him an honorary membership in the Ru |
| Struve came from St. | Petersburg and joined the Volunteer Army in 1918. |
| of the Northwestern region of Russia (Saint | Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast). |
| This assault forced the fall of | Petersburg, and the ensuing pursuit of the Confederate |
| the Russian gauge Murmansk Railway to Saint | Petersburg and the rest of Europe. |
| oscow University and served as a judge in St | Petersburg and Warsaw. |
| ament was made at the Obukhov works in Saint | Petersburg and shipped to America for installation. |
| vania Court House, Cold Harbor, the Siege of | Petersburg, and the Appomattox Campaign. |
| th Century, Charles Roser came down from St. | Petersburg and partnered with him to form the Anna Mari |
| didn't pitch in 1981, he spent 1982 with St. | Petersburg and the Louisville Redbirds. |
| The streets of St. | Petersburg and the Long Beach circuit were added after |
| He was born in St. | Petersburg and was a member of the Academy of Sciences |
| This attempt is more successful than that at | Petersburg, and a massive crater is created, allowing t |
| its collection after The Hermitage in Saint | Petersburg and the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Mosco |
| as the Chief of the FSB Directorate of Saint | Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast and Deputy Director of |
| ri Sennikov was born in Leningrad (now Saint | Petersburg) and graduated from Zenit football school. |
| s a drawing teacher in some schools of Saint | Petersburg, and then became a vice-principal of the Shu |
| It was originally licensed to | Petersburg and was owned by Thomas Tinsley along with W |
| atyushin joined the Court Orchestra in Saint | Petersburg and played with it professionally until 1913 |
| ic Baltic German origin, he studied in Saint | Petersburg and spent most of his later professional lif |
| he south side of the James River and against | Petersburg and Richmond. |
| elivered drugs to the Russian court in Saint | Petersburg and sometimes accepted fresh ginger as payme |
| In 1908, he returned to Saint | Petersburg and wrote for the popular magazine Satirikon |
| ) is preserved in the Mining Museum in Saint | Petersburg, and parts of it can be found in other museu |
| ces at the White Nights Jazz Festival in St. | Petersburg, and at the CJW Jazz Lounge in Shanghai, whe |
| was ordered to man the trenches in front of | Petersburg, and the next day, they arrived to support t |
| t posts at embassies in Paris, Berlin, Saint | Petersburg and London. |
| ons in the Russian Super League with SKA St. | Petersburg and one season in Sweden's Elitserien with L |
| he taught at the Imperial Conservatory in St | Petersburg and then toured the USSR and Western Europe |
| ved word of the February Revolution in Saint | Petersburg, and several of the ship's officers were mur |
| It continues into northeast St. | Petersburg and its traffic merges with I-275. |
| Church, which later moved into the center of | Petersburg and built the Gillfield Baptist Church. |
| part of Richmond's defense until the fall of | Petersburg and Richmond. |
| this line-up they occasionally gigged in St | Petersburg and recorded "When A Stranger Calls", a cove |
| sian Premier League 2007 champion, Zenit St. | Petersburg, and the winner of Russian Cup 2006-07, Loko |
| , Chancellorsville, the Wilderness, Siege of | Petersburg, and most notably Gettysburg. |
| He then had short stays in St. | Petersburg and Copenhagen. |
| he storm surge damaged a fishing pier in St. | Petersburg and destroyed a casino in Gulfport. |
| tillery pieces were pulled from the siege of | Petersburg and sent, under the command of Brig. |
| was prohibited from visiting Moscow or Saint | Petersburg and settled in the city of Taganrog in 1843, |
| Siege operations against | Petersburg and Richmond June 16, 1864 to April 2, 1865. |
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