Top 10 similar words or synonyms for preissler

hellmer    0.850247

schabl    0.843043

blumauer    0.820885

ascherl    0.817994

laurenz    0.815391

oppitz    0.814573

bengsch    0.810631

schneidewind    0.809386

unterkircher    0.807624

nobiling    0.807225

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for preissler

Article Example
Alfred Preissler Preissler played in the Dortmund team which won back-to-back German championships in 1956 and 1957. He played two matches for the then West Germany national football team in 1951 against Austria and the Republic of Ireland.
Alfred Preissler Alfred Preissler (9 April 1921 – 15 July 2003) was a German footballer and manager who played as a forward for Borussia Dortmund.
Fritz Preissler Fritz Preissler (June 21, 1908 Hanichen near Reichenberg, Bohemia (now Liberec) - June 5, 1948 in Straubing) was a German-Bohemian luger who competed in the 1920s and 1930s. He won four medals at European luge championships with three golds in the men's singles event (1928, 1929, 1939) and a silver in the men's doubles event (1929).
Johann Daniel Preissler Most notable for his portraits, nudes and history paintings, he also produced drawings and frescoes. He was also known beyond Nuremberg for his "Die durch Theorie erfundene Practic" (full title: "Die durch Theorie erfundene Practic oder Gründlich verfasste Reguln deren man sich als einer Anleitung zu berühmter Künstlere Zeichen-Wercke bestens bedienen kann"), a sequence of works on art-theory – the individual works were translated into several other languages and served as textbooks for students such as the Swiss Salomon Gessner right up until the 19th century. By the time of his death in 1737, Johann Caspar Füssli spoke of Preissler and Jan Kupecky as the two most famous Nuremberg artists of the early 18th century.
Johann Daniel Preissler He received his first artistic training in his home town under his father, the history painter and portraitist Daniel Preissler (1627–1665), continuing his education in the studio of Johann Murrer. From 1688 to 1696 he stayed in Italy, including periods in Rome and Venice. In 1705 he became the director of Nuremberg's Academy of Fine Arts, which under his leadership turned into a city institution.