münster in English

noun
1
a city in northwestern Germany; population 272,100 (est. 2006). It was formerly the capital of Westphalia; the Treaty of Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years War, was signed simultaneously here and at Osnabrück in 1648.
noun
1
a province of the Republic of Ireland, in the southwestern part of the country.

Use "münster" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "münster" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "münster", or refer to the context using the word "münster" in the English Dictionary.

1. In 1533 the Anabaptist movement spread in Warendorf and also in Münster.

2. This spelled disaster for the Anabaptist movement and for the medieval city of Münster.

3. The Treaty of Münster (30 January 1648) had confirmed Dutch independence from Spain.

4. In medieval times the region was part of the Prince-Bishopric of Münster.

5. Münster embraced the Reformation and in 1533 changed from a Catholic to a Lutheran city.

6. Münster suffered destruction the like of which the city did not see again until World War II.

7. One of the foremost reformist preachers in Münster was Bernhard Rothmann, a rather impetuous individual.

8. In addition, the Münster Bezirk Government offers follow-up training conferences on linguistic theory and practice.

9. Other communities looked on aghast as Münster became the first city in which Anabaptists were the strongest religious and political force.

10. As to extremes within the Anabaptist kingdom in Münster, adultery and fornication were punishable by death, whereas polygamy was tolerated, even encouraged.

11. We have investigated the monthly incidence figures in 638 cases of anencephaly born in the administrative area of Münster between 1950 and 1961.

12. He was appointed general in command of the VII Army Corps at Münster in Westphalia in 1907, but retired two years later and busied himself as a military writer.

13. When Johann von der Wieck was arrested in early 1534, he fled with a large number of other citizens to Münster, where his brother Bernhard Krechting already was an Anabaptist preacher.

14. Their most important representatives were Wigbold of Holte, Archbishop of Cologne and Arch-Chancellor of the Empire, the Essen prince-abbess, Beatrice of Holte, and the bishops of Münster, Burchard of Holte, William I of Holte and Ludolf of Holte.