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Photo Credit: Gerardo Romo / NYC Council Media Unit

Accountancy & Finance Tradeshow, Business Dept, Unitec NZ - July 2009

FINANCE ALUMNI: Godfather / Godmother event

Photographer: Jonathan Heisler, Hofstra University Photographer

Downtown Toronto - Financial District

Accountancy & Finance Tradeshow, Business Dept, Unitec NZ - July 2009

Dr. Geeta Manek, Trustee, the Rotary Foundation at the Summit.

 

World leaders and education advocates come together to show their dedication and support to tackling the world’s education crisis by raising their hands and pledging at least $5 billion for the next five years to help GPE transform education in up to 90 countries and territories, which are home to more than 1 billion children.

London, July 29, 2021

Credit: GPE/Tom Whipps

 

Learn more: www.globalpartnership.org/financing-2025/case-for-investment

 

Property Finance Specialists of choice to evelopers & Investors Australia wide. Development Construction Loans, Commercial loans low docfull doc.

Professor Tony Mustune personal finance class on January 23, 2015. Photo by Breanne Pierce

This Special Session will focus on securing commitments from different stakeholders to diversify the humanitarian resource base and funding architecture to include new and emerging donors from faith-based funding, specifically from Islamic Social Finance.

Hall of Fame and Bavaria at the Theresienwiese

The Hall of Fame and Bavaria form the most famous landmarks on the edge of the Theresienwiese and are well worth a visit.

The Hall of Fame and Bavaria form on the Theresien height an ensemble in style of the ancient Acropolis in Athens, which was commissioned by King Ludwig I there. Together with his architect Leo von Klenze King Ludwig I shaped the cityscape of Munich like no other. He was a friend of the monasteries and the academic spirit, and he turned his attention to painting and poetry.

As crown prince Ludwig after the death of his father in 1825 took over the throne of Bavaria he was already dreaming of his "Athens on the Isar" with monumental squares and buildings. Whereas his childhood and youth was influenced by the French Revolution and the subsequent Napoleonic wars, as crown prince he longed for a "Bavarian of all tribes" and a "bigger German nation." In this phase, Ludwig was planning a patriotic monument in the capital city of Munich and for this purpose he already in 1809 by historian Lorenz Westenrieder he had made a list of famous Bavarian representatives of all classes and professions. Approximately 20 years later this list was on his behalf by his Interior Minister Eduard von Schenk - in the meantime Ludwig was King of Bavaria - renewed and expanded.

For the tender for a Hall of Fame above the Theresienwiese with space for 200 busts King Ludwig I invited the best and most prestigious builders of those times:

Friedrich von Gärtner,

Leo von Klenze,

Joseph Daniel Ohlmüller and

Georg Friedrich Ziebland.

Hall of Fame after the scetch of Leo von Klenze

Design by Leo von Klenze

As the court master builder of that time of the king, Leo von Klenze had significant advantages because he on the one hand with the wishes of his client was very familiar and on the other hand also could examine the designs of its competitors in detail. Therefore, it is not surprising that the design of Klenze won the tender of the Hall of Fame in March 1834. He planned the Hall of Fame with a Doric portico in the background and a colossal statue in the foreground.

The construction of the Hall of Fame in the years 1843-1853 actually took place according to the planning of Klenze. After completion of the Hall of Fame, in 1853 the busts of 74 especially venerable Bavarians were set up, in 1868 another 10 were added. The bust of King Ludwig I was only in 1888 in the Hall of Fame erected to commemorate his 100th birthday and supplemented with the following inscription:

"To King Ludwig I to celebrate his 100th birthday, the grateful Munich."

The Hall of Fame itself is 68 meters long, 32 meters wide and stands on a 4.3 meter high pedestal. The roof is supported by the back wall and 48 Doric columns that have a height of about 7 meters and a diameter of 1.25 meters.

Since the Hall of Fame and the in it set up busts in 1944 during an air raid in WW2 were severely damaged, it was not until 1966 when the Bavarian Council of Ministers decided the reconstruction of the Hall of Fame and the continuation of honouring of Bavarian personalities by setting up of their busts. The renovation was completed in 1972 and the Hall of Fame on 26 October 1972 with the preserved and renovated busts could be reopened.

For the selection of the personalities the Bavarian Council of Ministers is responsible, which is advised by a committee of experts from the Bavarian Ministry of Culture, the Bavarian Academy of Fine Arts, the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, the Bavarian Palace Department, the House of Bavarian History, the Bavarian Ministry of Finance and the LMU (Ludwig Maximilian University).

 

Bavaria © 2009 Bavaria

The colossal statue of Bavaria forms an artistic unity with the Hall of Fame in the background. The first sketches of Bavaria von Klenze already in his design of the whole ensemble on the model of ancient colossal statues of antiquity had produced. It was modeled after the Colossus of Rhodes, the statue of Zeus of Phidias and especially the Athena Parthenos. Theoretically, it is even possible that a part of the bronze for the Bavaria was once part of the Colossus of Rhodes. After Klenze was awarded the contract for the construction of the ensemble consisting of Hall of Fame and Bavaria, he made more sketches on the Greek model.

Since the statue should be cast according to both of Klenze`s ideas and Ludwig`s wishes in bronze, he included the sculptor Ludwig Schwanthaler, the ore caster Johann Baptist Stiglmaier as well as whose nephew Ferdinand von Miller in the further design and manufacture of the Bavaria statue. While Schwanthaler with his first sketches still held to the classical model in the sense of Klenze, he gave the statue in the further course of his designs increasingly a "Germanic" appearance with typical "German" character. The head and the raised hand he adorned with a wreath of oak and at her side appeared the drawn sword as a sign of her ability to defend herself. At her feet placed Schwanthaler a lion, that always have served as heraldic animal of the Wittelsbach.

The manufacturing of the final designs for the Bavaria statue followed in the years 1839 to 1843. Schwanthaler however the beginning of the foundry did not live because he shortly before that died in April 1844. As first thing, the head of Bavaria was cast in September 1844, in January and March 1845 followed the arms, on 11 October 1845, the breast piece. The last major casting for the bottom part took place on 1 December 1849. The erection and unveiling of Bavaria occurred during Oktoberfest (Munich Beer Festival) 1850. The cost for the production of the statue Ludwig after his abdication as king of Bavaria on 20 March 1848 largely paid from private sources. A special feature of Bavaria is the spiral staircase in its interior, where you can climb up into her head to enjoy from there an incomparable view of the Oktoberfest.

bavarianspaces.de/veranstaltungen/oktoberfest/ruhmeshalle code ...

A quantitative finance class with Professor Jing Jiang in the Financial Center at Sacred Heart University's Martire Business & Communications Center. Photo by Tracy Deer-Mirek 9/8/15

The Minister for Finance (Jamaica) came to Singapore recently.

 

I was tasked to take photos during his visit.

 

Location: NEWater Visitor Centre

The Chancellor Jeremy Hunt speaks with US Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen at G7 Finance Ministers in Niigata, Japan. Photo by Zara Farrar / HM Treasury

(Photo courtesy of the National Library of the Philippines.)

Financing healthcare reseach and innovation

 

Photo: Jennifer Jacquemart / (c) European Voice

Sheikh Ahmed bin Mohammed Al-Khalifa, Finance Minister of the Kingdom of Bahrain arriving at the Somalia Conference in London, 7 May 2013.

11 June 2018 - High-level event on Financing for SDGs - Breaking the Bottlenecks of Investment from Policy to Impact hosted by H.E. Mr. Miroslav Lajčák, President of the General Assembly.

As a leader in finance education, the Cutler Center hosted the 10th annual Babson Finance Conference, formerly known as the BIMA Conference, in Boston. Babson alums and local FinTech leaders discussed The Future of FinTech, including the latest in artificial intelligence, blockchain, and cryptocurrency.

Promoth Manghat, Chief Executive Officer, UAE Exchange Centre, United Arab Emirates during the Session: "Finance for Change " at World Economic Forum on the MENA Region, Jordan 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell

Financing healthcare reseach and innovation

 

Photo: Jennifer Jacquemart / (c) European Voice

FINANCE ALUMNI: Godfather / Godmother event

Green MEP Sandrine Belier addresses the conference on Financing and biopiracy:

 

The challenges of the next UN Biodiversity Summit (COP11, India)

  

In a few weeks time, in October 2012, the 11th UN Biodiversity Conference in Hyderabad (India) will have to look at the best way to implement the Access and Benefit Sharing Protocol and turn it into a successful and efficient tool against biopiracy.

 

Our conference Thursday afternoon looked at how the challenge of fighting against biopiracy will be tackled, and whether measures on resource mobilisation will live up to the high expectations.

 

Find out more on biopiracy, the conference and watch the recorded livestream here:

 

www.greens-efa.eu/financing-and-biopiracy-7631.html

 

Participants during the Session: "Finance for Change " at World Economic Forum on the MENA Region, Jordan 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell

Professor Tony Mustune personal finance class on January 23, 2015. Photo by Breanne Pierce

5 May 2014 - Forum 2014 Session: Focus on South East Asia. OECD, Headquarters, Paris, France.

 

Moderator: Hiroko Kuniya, Anchor, NHK

 

Scene Setting

- Angel Gurría, Secretary-General, OECD

 

Speakers

- Chatib Basri, Minister of Finance, Indonesia

- Sun Chanthol, Minister of Commerce, Cambodia

- Tim Groser, Minister of Trade, Minister for Climate Change Issues and Associate Minister Foreign Affairs, New

Zealand

- Chandran Nair, Founder and Chief Executive, Global Institute For Tomorrow (GIFT)

- Soichiro Sakuma, Executive Director, Nippon Steel Corporation; Member of Council for Regulatory Reform, Japan

- Thongloun Sisoulith, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Laos

- Kan Zaw, Minister for National Planning and Economic Development, Republic of the Union of Myanmar

 

For more information, visit: www.oecd.org/Forum

 

Photo: OECD/Hervé Cortinat

Financing healthcare reseach and innovation

 

Photo: Jennifer Jacquemart / (c) European Voice

Khalid Al Rumaihi, Chief Executive, Bahrain Economic Development Board, Bahrain during the Session: "Finance for Change " at World Economic Forum on the MENA Region, Jordan 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell

Personal Finance

 

Image by InvestmentZen | www.investmentzen.com

 

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Participants during the Session: "Finance for Change " at World Economic Forum on the MENA Region, Jordan 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell

Promoth Manghat, Chief Executive Officer, UAE Exchange Centre, United Arab Emirates during the Session: "Finance for Change " at World Economic Forum on the MENA Region, Jordan 2017. Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell

Close-up of businesswoman writing in appointment calendar.

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