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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hans_NadererHans Naderer - Wikipedia

    Hans Naderer (10 January 1891 – 28 June 1971) was an Austrian writer. His work was part of the literature event in the art competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics. References

  2. Austrian Hans Naderer was a Catholic playwright and a journalist. Naderer was originally chamber stenographer and a Christian-Social union official. During his stay in Russian captivity in Siberia in World War I, he discovered his dramatic talent, but later was a full-time post-war parliamentary stenographer, and was deputy editor of the 1934 ...

  3. Austrian Hans Naderer was a Catholic playwright and a journalist. Naderer was originally chamber stenographer and a Christian-Social union official. During his stay in Russian captivity in Siberia in World War I, he discovered his dramatic talent, but later was a full-time post-war parliamentary stenographer, and was deputy editor of the 1934 ...

    • Johann "Hans"•Naderer
    • Male
    • Competed in Olympic Games
    • Hans•Naderer
  4. Hans Naderer (* 10. Januar 1891 in Oberstinkenbrunn, Niederösterreich; † 28. Juni 1971 in Wien) war ein österreichischer katholischer Bühnenschriftsteller und Journalist im Parlamentsdienst.

  5. Lebenslauf: Naderer wurde als Sohn eines Landwirtes geboren und absolvierte 1910 das Landstraßer Gymnasium in Wien. Anschließend studierte er an der Rechtswissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Universität Wien (Dr. iur. 1919), wo er der Rugia beitrat.

  6. Austrian Hans Naderer was a Catholic playwright and a journalist. Naderer was originally chamber stenographer and a Christian-Social union official. During his stay in Russian captivity in Siberia in World War I, he discovered his dramatic talent, but later was a full-time post-war parliamentary stenographer, and was deputy editor of the 1934 ...

  7. Hans Naderer was born on 10 January 1891 in Oberstinkenbrunn, Niederösterreich, Austria. He was a writer, known for The Laughing Third Party (1936), The Unholy Intruders (1952) and Das unheilige Haus (1957).