Carl Ferdinand Fabritius

Carl Ferdinand Fabritius (1637 21 January 1673)[1] was a painter in the Bishopric of Paderborn (German: Fürstbistum Paderborn). Paderborn prince-bishop (German: Fürstbischof) Ferdinand of Fürstenberg commissioned Fabritius to paint 63 landscape paintings of the towns and villages in his diocese from 1664 to 1667. The paintings were commissioned for display at the prince-bishop's residence Neuhaus near Paderborn.[2]

Schieder-Schwalenberg (Lippe), view with the Schwalenberg, 1664.
Ambthaus, Lichtenau, 1665.

Carl Ferdinand Fabritius was born in Warsaw but lived in Vienna from 1659 to his death in 1673.[3]

List of works

gollark: It's entirely possible that the P = NP thing could be entirely irrelevant to breaking encryption, actually, as it might not provide a faster/more computationally efficient algorithm for key sizes which are in use.
gollark: Well, that would be inconvenient.
gollark: Increasing the key sizes a lot isn't very helpful if it doesn't increase the difficulty of breaking it by a similarly large factor.
gollark: I'm not sure what P = NP would mean for that. Apparently doing that is non-polynomial time, and a constructive P = NP proof would presumably let you construct a polynomial-time algorithm.
gollark: Asymmetric cryptography stuff relies on it being impractically hard to do some things, such as factor large semiprime numbers.

See also

References

  1. Schaeffer A, von Wartenegg W, Dollmayr H, Glück G. Die Gemäldegalerie: Alte Meister. Vienna: Adolf Holzhausen; 1907: p. 372.
  2. Pieper R. Carl Ferdinand Fabritius: Veduten und Altargemälde für den Paderborner Fürstbischof Ferdinand II. von Fürstenberg. Paderborn: Bonifatius, 2006.
  3. Schaeffer A, von Wartenegg W, Dollmayr H, Glück G. Die Gemäldegalerie: Alte Meister. Vienna: Adolf Holzhausen; 1907: p. 372.
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