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Aktien. Strategien für Einsteiger. Der leichte Weg an die Börse

320 Gramm.

Preis: 2.39 EUR

Aktien. Strategien für Einsteiger. Der leichte Weg an die Börse kaufen bei AbeBooks.de

EAN: 9783517062921

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KRAFTWERK ZUKUNFT AG Weisweiler Aktie 1927 Eschweiler Rheinbraun R W E

KRAFTWERK ZUKUNFT AG Weisweiler Aktie 1927 Eschweiler Rheinbraun R W E

Kategorie: Münzen > Historische Wertpapiere > Deutschland > Wasser & Energie

Kraftwerk Zukunft AG RM 1000 Original Aktie
Weisweiler ( heute Stadtteil von Eschweiler ) , den 1. Juni 1927 - lochentwertet
Gründung 1913 / GA Braunkohlen-Industrie Zukunft zählt heute über die Rheinische Braunkohle AG zum RWE Konzern , Kraftwerk Weisweiler weitere interessante Dokumente aus der Region Niederrhein und dem Energie - und Kohlebereich finden Sie in meinem Wir bieten historische Wertpapiere in großer Auswahl , dekorative Firmenrechnungen , Geburtstagszeitungen , Bücher und Grafik zum Thema Börse / Beim Kauf eines Angebotes erhalten Sie gratis einen kleinen Ratgeber / Erläuterung zu diesem faszinierenden Sammelgebiet / Hobby // Finden Sie Original Dokumente mit Garantie und 30 Tage Rückgaberecht
Ob exklusive Aktie ...

Preis: 18,00 EUR
Angebotsende: 22.03.2012, 21:42:55 Uhr

KRAFTWERK ZUKUNFT AG Weisweiler Aktie 1927 Eschweiler Rheinbraun R W E kaufen bei eBay


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Oscar Bio Rinderfond, 3er Pack (3 x 200 ml) – Bio

Oscar Bio Rinderfond, 3er Pack (3 x 200 ml) – Bio

  • Fond für Suppen und Saucen
  • flüssige Konzentrate
  • ergeben 6 Liter
  • Bio

Unverb. Preisempf.: EUR 21,76

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Confederate Monument – SE frieze – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011

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Confederate Monument – SE frieze – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011
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Bild von dctim1
Looking northeast detail of soldiers on the southeast corner of the Confederate Monument at Arlington National Cemtery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. In the upper left, a "spirit of war" summons the soldiers to combat. The "fallen woman" of "the South" kneels below them.

American historians agree that many of the civic wounds created by the American Civil War were healed by the feelings of common cause generated during Spanish-American War. In June 1900, the U.S. Congress passed legislation setting aside Section 16 of the cemetery for the burial of Confederate States of America war dead. Many Confederate dead were already buried at the cemetery, and were memorialized by the Civil War Unknowns Monument. But the new area of the cemetery would allow for individual burial of those whose identities were known. By December 1901, 482 Confederate remains were disinterred at the cemeteries at Alexandria, Virginia; the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C.; and portions of Arlington National Cemetery and reinterred in concentric circles in Section 16. Their headstones were given a pointed top, to indicate that they were Confederate graves.

Shortly thereafter, the United Daughters of the Confederacy asked that a memorial to the Confederate dead be erected in Section 16. Secretary of War William Howard Taft granted the request on March 4, 1906. Confederate veteran and nationally-known sculptor Moses Ezekiel was commissioned to design and sculpt the monument. It was cast and manufactured by Aktien-Gesellschaft Gladenbeck of Berlin, Germany. The cornerstone of the massive memorial was laid on November 12, 1912. The monument was dedicated by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The memorial is 32 feet high. Atop the memorial is a life-size statue of a female representing "The South," crowned in victory with a wreath of olive leaves. She gestures toward the south with a laurel wreath to "crown" the sacrifice her "sons" made in war. In her right hand is a pruning hook and at her feet is a plow. The statue stands on a four-foot high circular pedestal. On the pedestal’s sides are four funerary urns in bas-relief, each urn inscribed with a different year of the war (1861-62, 1862-63, 1863-64, and 1864-65). Palm fronds decorate the space between the urns. The pedestal rests on a round base resembling intertwined, woven sheaves of wheat. This structure rests on a circular base on which is inscribed the Old Testament passage: "And they shall beat their swords into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks." Below the base is a plinth, decorated with 14 shields. Each shield depicts the coat of arms of one of the 13 Confederate states. Also included is the coat of arms of the state of Maryland, which was prevented from joining the Confederacy because it was invested with federal troops and martial law was declared in the state.

Below the plinth is another frieze of roughly half-sized figures. The front of the monument faces south. Each of the figures is in bas-relief, although deeply undercut. Portions of the work are free of the frieze. In the front of the frieze, Minerva, goddess of war and wisdom, holds a spear in her right hand and a gladiatorial net is draped across her right shoulder. She looks to her left, where a woman repreenting "The South" has half-fallen to the ground while clutching at a shield inscribed with the words "The Constitution." In the background behind Minerva are "spirits of war" sounding a trumpet call to arms. On either side of the central figures are four representations of the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces: Soldier, sailor, sapper, and miner. Beginning with the east face of the memorial are scenes depicting the people of the South going to war. They are: A young black male slave (in the uniform of the Confederate States of America) follows his white young master into battle; a weeping mammy holds a white baby up so that the child’s white father (an officer in the Confederate Army) can kiss the youth; a white blacksmith sets aside his tools while his white wife grieves; a young white woman ties a sword to the belt of her white male lover, who has joined the army; and a white officer looks into the distance.

The frieze is supported by an octagonal base with upward-curving pilasters. Plinths adorn the east and west sides, on which are set bronze tripods which hold bronze flames. The sides of the plinths are decorated with a wreath and a palm frond. The north, south, east, and west faces are all larger by half than the other faces of the base. On the south face is carved in bas-relief the Seal of the Confederate States of America and a memorial inscription by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Below this is the Latin phrase "Victrix Causa Diis Placuit Sed Victa Caton" ("The victor’s cause pleased the gods, but the vanquished pleased Cato"). This is a line from the Pharsalia, an epic Roman poem by the poet Lucan which tells the story of the civil war between Julius Caesar and the forces of the Roman Senate led by Pompey the Great. The line was a favorite of Confederate supporters. On the rear of the memorial is a short poem by Reverend Randolph Harrison McKim, a Confederate chaplain. Smaller inscriptions at the northwest and northeast sides of the base tell who designed and who manufactured the memorial.

The bronze portion of the memorial stands on 17 grey granite blocks. These granite blocks, in turn, rest on eight polished grey granite slabs.

Four graves are at the four points of the compass in front of the memorial. These are: Moses Ezekiel; Lt. Harry Marmaduke, Confederate Navy; Capt. John Hickey, Second Missouri Infantry; and Brigaider General Marcus Wright, Confederate Army.

Confederate Monument – E frieze and Minerva – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011
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Bild von dctim1
Detail of the southeast corner of the frieze on the Confederate Monument at Arlington National Cemtery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. The goddess of war, Minerva (l), looks at the fallen "The South" while "spirits of war" trumpet for assistance. To the right, a sapper (with bag) and a soldier answer the call. An African American soldier answers the call to defend slavery with his white master.

American historians agree that many of the civic wounds created by the American Civil War were healed by the feelings of common cause generated during Spanish-American War. In June 1900, the U.S. Congress passed legislation setting aside Section 16 of the cemetery for the burial of Confederate States of America war dead. Many Confederate dead were already buried at the cemetery, and were memorialized by the Civil War Unknowns Monument. But the new area of the cemetery would allow for individual burial of those whose identities were known. By December 1901, 482 Confederate remains were disinterred at the cemeteries at Alexandria, Virginia; the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C.; and portions of Arlington National Cemetery and reinterred in concentric circles in Section 16. Their headstones were given a pointed top, to indicate that they were Confederate graves.

Shortly thereafter, the United Daughters of the Confederacy asked that a memorial to the Confederate dead be erected in Section 16. Secretary of War William Howard Taft granted the request on March 4, 1906. Confederate veteran and nationally-known sculptor Moses Ezekiel was commissioned to design and sculpt the monument. It was cast and manufactured by Aktien-Gesellschaft Gladenbeck of Berlin, Germany. The cornerstone of the massive memorial was laid on November 12, 1912. The monument was dedicated by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The memorial is 32 feet high. Atop the memorial is a life-size statue of a female representing "The South," crowned in victory with a wreath of olive leaves. She gestures toward the south with a laurel wreath to "crown" the sacrifice her "sons" made in war. In her right hand is a pruning hook and at her feet is a plow. The statue stands on a four-foot high circular pedestal. On the pedestal’s sides are four funerary urns in bas-relief, each urn inscribed with a different year of the war (1861-62, 1862-63, 1863-64, and 1864-65). Palm fronds decorate the space between the urns. The pedestal rests on a round base resembling intertwined, woven sheaves of wheat. This structure rests on a circular base on which is inscribed the Old Testament passage: "And they shall beat their swords into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks." Below the base is a plinth, decorated with 14 shields. Each shield depicts the coat of arms of one of the 13 Confederate states. Also included is the coat of arms of the state of Maryland, which was prevented from joining the Confederacy because it was invested with federal troops and martial law was declared in the state.

Below the plinth is another frieze of roughly half-sized figures. The front of the monument faces south. Each of the figures is in bas-relief, although deeply undercut. Portions of the work are free of the frieze. In the front of the frieze, Minerva, goddess of war and wisdom, holds a spear in her right hand and a gladiatorial net is draped across her right shoulder. She looks to her left, where a woman repreenting "The South" has half-fallen to the ground while clutching at a shield inscribed with the words "The Constitution." In the background behind Minerva are "spirits of war" sounding a trumpet call to arms. On either side of the central figures are four representations of the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces: Soldier, sailor, sapper, and miner. Beginning with the east face of the memorial are scenes depicting the people of the South going to war. They are: A young black male slave (in the uniform of the Confederate States of America) follows his white young master into battle; a weeping mammy holds a white baby up so that the child’s white father (an officer in the Confederate Army) can kiss the youth; a white blacksmith sets aside his tools while his white wife grieves; a young white woman ties a sword to the belt of her white male lover, who has joined the army; and a white officer looks into the distance.

The frieze is supported by an octagonal base with upward-curving pilasters. Plinths adorn the east and west sides, on which are set bronze tripods which hold bronze flames. The sides of the plinths are decorated with a wreath and a palm frond. The north, south, east, and west faces are all larger by half than the other faces of the base. On the south face is carved in bas-relief the Seal of the Confederate States of America and a memorial inscription by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Below this is the Latin phrase "Victrix Causa Diis Placuit Sed Victa Caton" ("The victor’s cause pleased the gods, but the vanquished pleased Cato"). This is a line from the Pharsalia, an epic Roman poem by the poet Lucan which tells the story of the civil war between Julius Caesar and the forces of the Roman Senate led by Pompey the Great. The line was a favorite of Confederate supporters. On the rear of the memorial is a short poem by Reverend Randolph Harrison McKim, a Confederate chaplain. Smaller inscriptions at the northwest and northeast sides of the base tell who designed and who manufactured the memorial.

The bronze portion of the memorial stands on 17 grey granite blocks. These granite blocks, in turn, rest on eight polished grey granite slabs.

Four graves are at the four points of the compass in front of the memorial. These are: Moses Ezekiel; Lt. Harry Marmaduke, Confederate Navy; Capt. John Hickey, Second Missouri Infantry; and Brigaider General Marcus Wright, Confederate Army.

Confederate Monument – S shields and Minerva – Arlington National Cemetery – 2011
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Bild von dctim1
Looking north at the south face of the Confederate Monument at Arlington National Cemtery in Arlington, Virginia, in the United States. At the top, the Biblical phrase is seen on the base of the statue of "The South." Shields representing the states of the Confederacy are below it. The goddess Minerva can be seen lower center, flanked by trumpeting "spirits of war" and figures representing the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces.

American historians agree that many of the civic wounds created by the American Civil War were healed by the feelings of common cause generated during Spanish-American War. In June 1900, the U.S. Congress passed legislation setting aside Section 16 of the cemetery for the burial of Confederate States of America war dead. Many Confederate dead were already buried at the cemetery, and were memorialized by the Civil War Unknowns Monument. But the new area of the cemetery would allow for individual burial of those whose identities were known. By December 1901, 482 Confederate remains were disinterred at the cemeteries at Alexandria, Virginia; the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C.; and portions of Arlington National Cemetery and reinterred in concentric circles in Section 16. Their headstones were given a pointed top, to indicate that they were Confederate graves.

Shortly thereafter, the United Daughters of the Confederacy asked that a memorial to the Confederate dead be erected in Section 16. Secretary of War William Howard Taft granted the request on March 4, 1906. Confederate veteran and nationally-known sculptor Moses Ezekiel was commissioned to design and sculpt the monument. It was cast and manufactured by Aktien-Gesellschaft Gladenbeck of Berlin, Germany. The cornerstone of the massive memorial was laid on November 12, 1912. The monument was dedicated by President Woodrow Wilson on June 4, 1914, the 106th anniversary of the birthday of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The memorial is 32 feet high. Atop the memorial is a life-size statue of a female representing "The South," crowned in victory with a wreath of olive leaves. She gestures toward the south with a laurel wreath to "crown" the sacrifice her "sons" made in war. In her right hand is a pruning hook and at her feet is a plow. The statue stands on a four-foot high circular pedestal. On the pedestal’s sides are four funerary urns in bas-relief, each urn inscribed with a different year of the war (1861-62, 1862-63, 1863-64, and 1864-65). Palm fronds decorate the space between the urns. The pedestal rests on a round base resembling intertwined, woven sheaves of wheat. This structure rests on a circular base on which is inscribed the Old Testament passage: "And they shall beat their swords into plow shares and their spears into pruning hooks." Below the base is a plinth, decorated with 14 shields. Each shield depicts the coat of arms of one of the 13 Confederate states. Also included is the coat of arms of the state of Maryland, which was prevented from joining the Confederacy because it was invested with federal troops and martial law was declared in the state.

Below the plinth is another frieze of roughly half-sized figures. The front of the monument faces south. Each of the figures is in bas-relief, although deeply undercut. Portions of the work are free of the frieze. In the front of the frieze, Minerva, goddess of war and wisdom, holds a spear in her right hand and a gladiatorial net is draped across her right shoulder. She looks to her left, where a woman repreenting "The South" has half-fallen to the ground while clutching at a shield inscribed with the words "The Constitution." In the background behind Minerva are "spirits of war" sounding a trumpet call to arms. On either side of the central figures are four representations of the branches of the Confederate Armed Forces: Soldier, sailor, sapper, and miner. Beginning with the east face of the memorial are scenes depicting the people of the South going to war. They are: A young black male slave (in the uniform of the Confederate States of America) follows his white young master into battle; a weeping mammy holds a white baby up so that the child’s white father (an officer in the Confederate Army) can kiss the youth; a white blacksmith sets aside his tools while his white wife grieves; a young white woman ties a sword to the belt of her white male lover, who has joined the army; and a white officer looks into the distance.

The frieze is supported by an octagonal base with upward-curving pilasters. Plinths adorn the east and west sides, on which are set bronze tripods which hold bronze flames. The sides of the plinths are decorated with a wreath and a palm frond. The north, south, east, and west faces are all larger by half than the other faces of the base. On the south face is carved in bas-relief the Seal of the Confederate States of America and a memorial inscription by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Below this is the Latin phrase "Victrix Causa Diis Placuit Sed Victa Caton" ("The victor’s cause pleased the gods, but the vanquished pleased Cato"). This is a line from the Pharsalia, an epic Roman poem by the poet Lucan which tells the story of the civil war between Julius Caesar and the forces of the Roman Senate led by Pompey the Great. The line was a favorite of Confederate supporters. On the rear of the memorial is a short poem by Reverend Randolph Harrison McKim, a Confederate chaplain. Smaller inscriptions at the northwest and northeast sides of the base tell who designed and who manufactured the memorial.

The bronze portion of the memorial stands on 17 grey granite blocks. These granite blocks, in turn, rest on eight polished grey granite slabs.

Four graves are at the four points of the compass in front of the memorial. These are: Moses Ezekiel; Lt. Harry Marmaduke, Confederate Navy; Capt. John Hickey, Second Missouri Infantry; and Brigaider General Marcus Wright, Confederate Army.

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Populärste Aktien Auktionen

Interessante aktien eBay Auktionen:

Düsseldorf Thon- und Ziegelwerke AG Aktie 1000 M
EUR 59,00
Angebotsende: Donnerstag Feb-23-2012 6:02:58 CET
Sofort kaufen für nur: EUR 59,00
Sofort kaufen | Zur Liste beobachteter Artikel hinzufügen

- Buch - Aktien Basics von Johanna von Rumohr - Ratgeber
EUR 1,00 (0 Gebot)
Angebotsende: Donnerstag Feb-23-2012 8:16:37 CET
Jetzt bieten | Zur Liste beobachteter Artikel hinzufügen

Aktie Norddeutsche Lloyd 1000 RM 1 Aug 1936 Schifffahrt
EUR 18,49
Angebotsende: Donnerstag Feb-23-2012 8:25:22 CET
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Telefonkarte BRD P170 P 11/96 gebraucht 1996 T-Aktie

Telefonkarte BRD P170 P 11/96 gebraucht 1996 T-Aktie

Kategorie: Sammeln & Seltenes > Telefonkarten > Chipkarten > P-Karten

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Briefmarken, Münzen, Banknoten, Kataloge, Zubehör und vieles mehr...
Willkommen in einem der weltweit größten Online-Shops für Sammler!
Unser Angebot:
BRD P170 P 11/96 gebraucht 1996 T-Aktie
Markenprodukt: Prophila
Artikel-Nr.: 165/202T1172 P 170 4043155945938
Unser Angebots-Preis:
statt € 2,00 (Katalogwert)
nur € 1,70
Der Preis enthält 19.00% MwSt.
Beschreibung:
BRD P170 P 11/96 gebraucht 1996 T-Aktie Produkt: Telefonkarten Gebiet: BRD Ausgabeanlass: T-Aktie Titel: 1996 T-Aktie Katalognummern: P 170 Ausgabejahr: 1996 Katalogwert laut MIchel-Telef.-Dt. 2005: 2 Euro Erhaltung: gebraucht Katalogwert: 2,00 Euro laut MIchel-Telef.-Dt. 2005
GRATIS erhalten Sie von uns mit jeder Bestellung das ...

Preis: 1,70 EUR
Angebotsende: 18.03.2012, 08:13:13 Uhr

Telefonkarte BRD P170 P 11/96 gebraucht 1996 T-Aktie kaufen bei eBay


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Der Aktien- und Börsenführerschein - Beate Sander

Der Aktien- und Börsenführerschein - Beate Sander

Kategorie: Bücher > Studium & Wissen > Gesellschaftswissenschaften > Sonstiges

- Überuns l Impressum l WIDERRUF l AGB Der Aktien- und Börsenführerschein von Beate Sander ISBN 10: 3898796582 ISBN 13: 9783898796583 Untertitel: Die Lizenz zum Geldanlegen Erschienen bei: Finanzbuch Verlag Gmbh Einband: Kartoniert/Broschiert Zusatz: 00263X00191X00019 Gewicht: 868 Sprache: Deutsch 29,99 € (inkl. 7% MwSt) NEUWARE - Portofrei innerhalb Deutschlands! Alle Artikel werden von uns in speziellen Buchverpackungen verschickt.Versand spätestens 1 Tag nach Zahlungseingang
Kontakt Lesen und Ambiente GbR
Im Seifer Hof 10
57520 Molzhain
Deutschland
fon: +49 (0) 2743-9328136
fax: +49 (0) 2743-9328310
E-Mail:
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Vertretungsberechtigte Gesellschafter:
Ingeborg Schlüter, Norbert Schlüter
Beschreibung Wer ...

Preis: 29,99 EUR
Angebotsende: 17.03.2012, 15:19:29 Uhr

Der Aktien- und Börsenführerschein - Beate Sander kaufen bei eBay


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BUCH - Der Rückerwerb eigener Aktien in der Weltwirtsch

BUCH - Der Rückerwerb eigener Aktien in der Weltwirtsch

Kategorie: Bücher > Studium & Wissen > Rechtswissenschaften > Sonstiges

- The Death of Common Sense: How Law is Suffocating America
ISBN: 0446672289
EAN: 9780446672283
Ludicrous Laws and Mindless Misdemeanors
ISBN: 0471138975
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A Guide to Asset Protection: How to Keep What's Legally Yours
ISBN: 0471148857
EAN: 9780471148852
The Complete Living Trusts Program
ISBN: 0471361054
EAN: 9780471361053
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Hinweis: Die hier gezeigte Abbildung kann von dem tatsächlichen Cover abweichen, es wird immer die aktuelle Auflage geliefert, das angegeben Datum ist das Ersterscheinungsdatum.
Reni Maltschew
Der Rückerwerb eigener Aktien in der Weltwirtschaftskrise 1929-1931
54,00 EUR (inkl. 7% MwSt) NEUWARE - Portofrei innerhalb Deutschlands! Weitere Bücher von diesem Autor von diesem ...

Preis: 54,00 EUR
Angebotsende: 17.03.2012, 03:20:50 Uhr

BUCH - Der Rückerwerb eigener Aktien in der Weltwirtsch kaufen bei eBay


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Schönefeld, Maik: Private Investments: Warrants und exotische Optionen auf Aktien

Preis: 49.90 EUR

Schönefeld, Maik: Private Investments: Warrants und exotische Optionen auf Aktien kaufen bei Libri.de

EAN: 9783638834575

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Pan American World Airways histor. Aktie 1967 Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika USA

Pan American World Airways histor. Aktie 1967 Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika USA

Kategorie: Münzen > Historische Wertpapiere > USA & Kanada > Luftfahrt

Pan Am dekorative Original Aktie , 21. September 1967
Dies ist kein gültiges Wertpapier / nur noch eine Sammler Urkunde / lochentwertet
In meinem finden Sie weitere dekorative amerikanische Aktien und Anleihen mit zentraler Grafik
Wir bieten historische Wertpapiere in großer Auswahl , dekorative Firmenrechnungen , Geburtstagszeitungen , Bücher und Grafik zum Thema Börse / Beim Kauf erhalten Sie gratis einen kleinen Ratgeber / Erläuterung zu diesem faszinierenden Sammelgebiet / Hobby
Ob exklusive Aktie oder preiswertes Geburtstagsgeschenk - Sie finden es in meinem shop :
www.stores.ebay.de/marktfuerhistorischewertpapiere
Geben Sie einfach in die shopsuche Ihr Interessengebiet ein, z.B. Stadt , Firma , Branche , Datum oder Namen
...

Preis: 6,90 EUR
Angebotsende: 15.03.2012, 18:19:04 Uhr

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