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Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau

Commons category link is locally definedCompanies established in 1820Musical instrument manufacturing companies of GermanyPipe organ building companies
Orgelbauermarke von Alexander Schuke in (Potsdam)
Orgelbauermarke von Alexander Schuke in (Potsdam)

The Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau is a company to build pipe organs, founded in 1820 in Potsdam. It was taken over by Alexander Schuke in 1894, and by his sons Karl Schuke and Hans-Joachim Schuke in 1933. From 1950, Hans-Joachim Schuke ran the workshop, now in East Germany, from 1953. It became a VEB, Potsdamer Schuke-Orgelbau in 1972, but Matthias Schuke was able to reprivatise it in 1990 after German reunification, naming it after his grandfather Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau. He moved the workshop to Werder (Havel) in 2004 and passed leadership to his sons in 2018.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau
Otto-Lilienthal-Straße,

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N 52.398347 ° E 12.913452 °
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Alexander Schuke Potsdam Orgelbau GmbH

Otto-Lilienthal-Straße 33
14542 (Werder (Havel))
Brandenburg, Germany
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call+49332757110

Website
schuke.de

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Orgelbauermarke von Alexander Schuke in (Potsdam)
Orgelbauermarke von Alexander Schuke in (Potsdam)
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Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics
Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics

The Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute) is a Max Planck Institute whose research is aimed at investigating Einstein's theory of relativity and beyond: Mathematics, quantum gravity, astrophysical relativity, and gravitational-wave astronomy. The institute was founded in 1995 and is located in the Potsdam Science Park in Golm, Potsdam and in Hannover where it closely collaborates with the Leibniz University Hannover. Both the Potsdam and the Hannover parts of the institute are organized in three research departments and host a number of independent research groups. The institute conducts fundamental research in mathematics, data analysis, astrophysics and theoretical physics as well as research in laser physics, vacuum technology, vibration isolation and classical and quantum optics. When the LIGO Scientific Collaboration announced the first detection of gravitational waves, researchers of the institute were involved in modeling, detecting, analysing and characterising the signals. The institute is part of a number of collaborations and projects: it is a main partner in the gravitational-wave detector GEO600; institute scientists are developing waveform-models that are applied in the gravitational-wave detectors for detecting and characterising gravitational waves. They are developing detector technology and are also analyzing data from the detectors of the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration and the KAGRA Collaboration. They also play a leading role in planning and preparing the space-based detector LISA (planned launch date: 2034) and are involved in developing the third generation of earth-bound gravitational-wave detectors (Einstein Telescope, Cosmic Explorer). The institute is also a major player in the Einstein@Home and PyCBC projects. From 1998 to 2015, the institute has published the open access review journal Living Reviews in Relativity.