↑ Peter Ochsenbein : Review of In the Short is the Klaumauk, or: All the dusty dramas of Shakespeare, slightly shortened and appetizing, for people to think about in 2000. In the introduction to his Das Irrationalitätsproblem in der Ästhetik und Logik des 18.Jahrhunderts bis zur Kritik der Urteilskraft (1923 1967 2), Footnote 1 Alfred Baeumler links the origin of aesthetics in the eighteenth century with the idea of individuality.
Günther Drosdowski - Duden Lexicon of First Names: Origin, Meaning and Use of several thousand first names, Bibliographisches Institut (Dudenverlag), Mannheim / Vienna / Zurich 1974.
Margit Eberhard-Wabnitz & Horst Leisering - Knaur's first name book -, Droemersche Verlagsanstalt 1985, ISBN 9-8.
Notker Wolf (* 1940), Abbot Primate of the Benedictine order.
Notger Slenczka (* 1960), German Protestant theologian.
Notker Schweikhardt (* 1960), German politician (Alliance 90 / The Greens).
Las fuentes también guardan silencio sobre él excepto para llamarle abba benignus y alabar su sincera piedad.
Notker Hammerstein (* 1930), German historian No hay documentación sobre él hasta que fue nombrado abad de S.
Notker Füglister (1931–1996), Catholic theologian and Old Testament scholar.
Notker Becker (1883–1978), sacred artist and Benedictine.
Noker von Zwiefalten († after 1090), Benedictine, poet and abbot of Zwiefalten Monastery.
Notger von Lüttich († 1008), nephew of Emperor Otto I and Bishop of Lüttich.
Notker Heine (1697–1758), librarian at the St.
Labeo (the German around 952-1022), poet, scholar and translator Physicus (the doctor) or Piperisgranum (peppercorn) (937–975), doctor, painter and scholar Balbulus (around 840-912), poet and scholar, Notker the Stammerer called Gallen Monastery (also called the Notkere of St. The name was already rare in the late Middle Ages. The name is made up of the Old High German syllables "nôt" (distress in battle) and "gêr" (spear) means - like Shakespeare in English - 'one who averts the ger' ('savior in need').