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In the 19th century, Protestants also came to Waldshut and Tiengen. Waldshut's Protestants were at first under Säckingen's care, but in 1870, Waldshut got its own minister, and in 1890, an affiliated parish was established. In 1921, the community became a full-fledged parish in its own right.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Waldshut may refer to: Waldshut (district), a county in Baden-Württemberg, Germany; Waldshut-Tiengen, a ...
Waldshut (German pronunciation: [ˌvalt͡sˈhuːt]) is a Landkreis in the south of Baden-Württemberg, Germany. Neighbouring districts are (clockwise from the west) Lörrach , Breisgau-Hochschwarzwald and Schwarzwald-Baar ; followed in the south by the Swiss cantons of Schaffhausen , Zürich and Aargau .
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Josef Raab (May 27, 1899 – January 28, 1971) was a German politician, military officer and member of the German resistance against Nazism. He served as commander of the Thälmann Battalion on two separate occasions and as mayor of Penzberg from 1945 to 1946.
Schlag den Raab (German pronunciation: [ʃlaːk deːn ʁaːp], German for Beat (the) Raab) was a live game show that was televised by German television channel ProSieben on Saturday evenings from September 2006 until December 2015.
The station lies on the High Rhine Railway, which connects Basel and Singen along the northern and, mostly, German bank of the Rhine.It is the junction point for the Turgi–Koblenz–Waldshut line, which crosses the Rhine from Switzerland on the Waldshut to Koblenz railway bridge just to the south of the station.
Raab's appearance consists of a rapid-fire hip-hop-inspired delivery of tongue twisters in an invented German dialect on the general theme of questions about what "he has there". After the opening lines, a female vocalists asks in broken English "I am so curious, I just wanna know what you there have" (a reference to German word order ).