
1) Airline of Germany 2) Charter airline 3) Crown of Aragon 4) German painting 5) Historical region 6) Opera by Alberto Franchetti 7) Painting in Nuremberg 8) Work by Tacitus
Found on
https://www.crosswordclues.com/clue/germania

Germania (ə; Greek: Γερμανία) was the Roman and Greek term for the geographical regions inhabited mainly by the Germanic peoples. It was most often used to refer especially to the east of the Rhine and north of the Danube. The areas west of the Rhine were mainly Celtic (specifically Gaulish) and had become part of the Roman Empire. Some G...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania
[Beethoven] Germania is a patriotic song by Ludwig van Beethoven written in order to celebrate the victory against Napoleon. == History == During and after the defeat of Napoleon during the Wars of Liberation, German patriotism flourished and spurred the production of poems, plays, and songs exalting the nation. Among these German artists w...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(Beethoven)
[airline] Germania Fluggesellschaft mbH, operating as Germania, is a privately owned German airline with its headquarters in Berlin. Germania operates scheduled and chartered flights and aircraft lease services. The airline carried 2.5 million passengers in 2009 and has around 600 employees (at January 2010). From its bases scheduled flight...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(airline)
[guild] ==Revolt== The germanies began to take power in Valencia in 1519 after an outbreak of the plague, and the situation degenerated to open warfare between the Germanies and the Crown by 1520. The previous king, Ferdinand of Aragon, had granted permission for the Germanies to take up arms shortly before his death, but the Valencian nobl...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(guild)
[opera] Germania is an operatic dramma lirico consisting of a prologue, two acts, an intermezzo and an epilogue by Alberto Franchetti to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. The opera premiered on March 11, 1902 at the Teatro alla Scala in Milan. Illica, known for penning the librettos for some of Giacomo Puccini`s best loved operas, origin...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(opera)
[painting] Germania is a painting by Philipp Veit created in March 1848 during the Revolutions of 1848. This allegorical figure is represented with the imperial Eagle, oak leaves (symbols of German strength), a hemp branch (as a sign of peace), and a banner. It was hung in the National Assembly in Frankfurt`s Paulskirche, where it concealed...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(painting)
[personification] Germania is the personification of the German nation or the Germans as a whole, most commonly associated with the Romantic Era and the Revolutions of 1848, though the figure was later used by Imperial Germany. == Description == Germania is usually shown as a robust woman with long, flowing, reddish-blonde hair and wearing ...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(personification)
[stamp] Germania stamps are definitive stamps that were issued by the German Empire and the Weimar Republic between 1900 and 1922, depicting Germania. They represent the longest running series in German philately and are in their many variations and derivations an essential part of German philatelic collections. ==Design== The initial issue...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(stamp)

Germanía is the Spanish term for the argot used by criminals or in jails in Spain during 15th and 16th centuries. Its purpose is to keep outsiders out of the conversation. The ultimate origin of the word is the Latin word germanus, through Catalan germà (brother). Some documentation for it occurs in picaresque works as early as the Spanish Golde...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanía

Officially Welthauptstadt (world-capitol-city) Germania (Latin term for Germany): the name Hitler wanted for his proposed world capitol city of Berlin --implying planned German dominance of much of the planet. Hitler began sketching grand buildings, memorials, and broad avenues in the 1920's. Architectural models, structural testing, forced evictio...
Found on
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_the_Third_Reich

(from the article `Tacitus`) In 98 Tacitus wrote two works: De vita Julii Agricolae and De origine et situ Germanorum (the Germania), both reflecting his personal interests. The ... ...Germans and their arguments from a common source, the works of Tacitus, a Roman historian born in the middle of the 1st century . At the end of ... [6...
Found on
http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/g/25

Germania 1. An ancient region of central Europe north of the Danube and east of the Rhine which was never under Roman control. 2. A part of the Roman Empire west of the Rhine River corresponding to present-day northeast France, sections of Belgium, and the Netherlands.
Found on
http://www.wordinfo.info/words/index/info/view_unit/1023/

(Latin) Germany also known in Latin as Alemannia; the territory located between the Rhone, Vistule, Danube and the sea; it was divided by the Romans into two sections â€` Upper and Lower Germania.
Found on
https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/10135
No exact match found.