The Mini Road Racing European Championship started on Friday the 02nd of August on the AMZS Center Varne Vozne in Vransko (Slovenia) with the free practice and the first qualifying and yesterday with the second qualifying and race one and race two All the event was held in extremely hot weather conditions The overall winners in the different categories are the following: (FIM Europe Press Release 112/2013) | Copyright 2025 FIM Europe | Terms of use - Privacy statement | The European SuperMoto Championship SM Junior for the fourth consecutive year on the circuit Vrana The third event of the series for the SM Junior class was marked by the big battle between the Bulgarian Hakan Halmi (KTM) and Austrian Maximilian Kofler (KTM) In the first race Maximilian won against Hakan with a difference of just 0,5 sec The second race for the juniors was won by Halmi following a mistake of Kofler in the offroad section Finally the podium in the SM Junior class was composed by Hakan Halmi as the winner Maximilian Kofler on the second place and Ivelin Manev third this time the winner was Dimitar Petrov from Bulgaria third finished Georgi Totev from Bulgaria with Kawasaki victory this time went to Austrian Andreas Buschberger (KTM) with two wins in both heats Bulgarian Borislav Stoimenov (KTM) saw the chequered flag two times on the second place Vlad Neaga from Romania(Suzuki) obtained enough points to step on the third place for the event The two heats of the OPEN class were won this time by Slovenian rider Uros Nastran (Honda) ahead of Bulgarian Angel Karanyotov also with Honda However Karanyotov is still leading the championship with 18 points a head of Georgiev third in the standings is Sorin Traistrau from Romania The final event of the championship will be on the 21st of July in Pleven which will be the last race on the circuit before the FIM SuperMoto of Nations 2013 event on the 6 of October (UEM Press Release 71/2013) Article 61 of the Slovenian archival act stipulates that Slovenian archival institutions may acquire their holdings in many different ways In 2018 the Archives of the Republic of Slovenia took the latter option and purchased from Mrs but extremely interesting collection of archival material Although the collection includes no more than eight pieces – all of them written on parchment and paper - the records themselves actually span over a longer period of time between 1239 and 1831 The purchased material was believed to have been kept at the Vransko Manor and taken from there at the end of World War II which at the time was more of an exception than the general rule Since such valuable material rarely becomes available for sale in Slovenia we were of course very keen to make the purchase So far not much is known about the Müller family which was later granted the baronial title of Müller-Hörnstein Judging from a short and undated document in the collection the family is believed to have originated in Tyrol and its family members to have moved to Brussels in 1588 when the Netherlands were ceded to the Austrian House of Habsburg Members of the family are believed to have been very active in imperial service for which they were eventually rewarded with a much desired climb up the social ladder and the bestowing of the baronial title in 1794 some of them also high ranking clerks in the Austrian Netherlands While life and trade led some of them to France one family branch found its new home in Styria Let us now take a closer look at some of the members of the Tyrolean branch of the family The earliest mentioning refers to the brothers Rupert and Adam Müller The former was a gardener of the Austrian Archduke Ferdinand of Tyrol (1564-1595) at the Ambras castle and the latter was a chamber horse messenger in Upper Austria the appointed Archduke awarded both brothers with a coat-of-arms diploma which was later destroyed in a fire that broke out at the Ruelust princely residence In 1637 Ferdinand III of Habsburg (1637-1657) and Claudia de Medici (1604-1648) the wife of his late cousin Leopold V of Habsburg (1586-1632) and the legal guardian Leopold’s heirs conferred a second coat-of-arms diploma upon Rupert’s son Andreas Michael Müller The record most revealing about what we so far know about the Müller family members is a charter written as a proof of ancestry (the so-called Ahnenprobe) It was written in Vienna in 1806 for the three brothers: Henrik Ignaz (*1781) Edward Joseph (*1784) and Christoph Julius (*1785) This charter is presented here as this month’s archivalia All three brothers were born in Brussels to father Henrik Ignaz von Müller and mother Theresia Eleonora the Baroness of Bartenstein The parents had since 1800 been the owners of the seigniories of Starbemberg-Piesting and Hörnstein The charter brings data for the four male descendants of the Müller family and for their wives Caspar von Müller is mentioned as the eldest of the four men The family tree continues with his son Johann Franz von Müller The last in line is the above mentioned Henrik Ignaz It is interesting to note that one of the people who authenticated the charter was Klemens Wenzel von Metternich-Winneburg who later went on to become the minister of the interior and the chancellor of the Austrian Empire (1821-1848) and was at the time of the issuing of the charter working as the Austrian ambassador at the French court is the already mentioned Henrik Ignaz von Müller who is also the person most deserving for the bestowing of the noble title upon his family Henrik earned his fortune through trade with the imperial army Over the years he acquired the title of the state councillor and in 1792 took up the post of the state and war minister in the Netherlands (Notre Conseiller d'Etat et Secretaire d'Etat et de Guerre actuel pour Notre Gouvernement Général des Pays-Bas) as well as for the more than 200-year long service to the crown of his family predecessors all of which is described in detail in the nobility diploma written in French and wrapped in red velvet covers on May 14 By means of this document Henrik was raised to the rank of State Barons and the noble title was to be inherited also by all of his legal offspring Simultaneously with the granting of the baronial title the Emperor also improved the family’s coat of arms which from that time on carried the image of the baronial crown with nine pearls The exact date of Henrik Ignaz’s death is yet unknown He was succeeded by his son of the same name The young Henrik was the knight of the Royal Hungarian Order of St the court and state councillor at the former Dutch court office in Vienna and the owner of the seigniories of Reitenau and Aichberg in Styria In 1831 he purchased the Aichberg castle north-east of Graz and his male successors also became members of the Styrian land estates Henrik died in 1843 and after his death his heirs started to gradually sell of the family estate and disperse across the territory of the monarchy Some of them also settled in Vransko surrounding area where the Baron Müller acted as the district governor The earliest document kept in the purchased collection is the 1236 parchment charter attached by red and yellow silk woven cord Although we are familiar with the content of the charter we have yet to find out when and how it came into the possession of the family The charter was commissioned by the Augustinian monastery of St Martin in Yper in Flanders (sancti Martini zu Ypra) It confirms that Adam Arbor from Yper (Adam Arbor bureensis de Ypra) donated two marks in money and land for the abbey and the nunnery of St Mary de Busco near Yper (beate Marie de Busco iuxta Ypram) Discover the online column Archivalia of the Month Did you find the information you were looking for Do you want to receive a response from the responsible institution Clicking on the link will open your default e-mail program and automatically draft a message that you can send to the institution responsible for the content of this website ask for a reply The importer presented the buyers on this side of the Alps with the most powerful series seat of all time The Leon Cupra surprises with its performance and price it came to the market in the company of the Leon Cup Racer and the rest of the Seat sports division program which the importer brought from Spain as part of the fourth Cupra Day The most powerful version of the current Leon and the most powerful serial seat of all time is marked by the distinct sports performance it provides two-liter turbopetrol TSI engine with 195- or 206 kilowatts powers it was awarded the title of the fastest front-wheel drive vehicle on the famous Nordschleife (the title was 'stolen' for a few seconds by a special version of the Megane RS a few weeks ago) a record that they intend to try to take back in the future The cupra equipment package is surprisingly rich as it contains: dynamic chassis control (DCC) electrohydraulic differential lock front axles system Cupra Drive Profile and serial LED headlights More than you get from most of the competition It is available in a three- or five-door version and at the end of the year there is even a wagon cupra The performance is suitable for the appearance and the rest of the technique The "weaker version" accelerates to 100 km/h in 5.9 seconds while the fastest version (205 kW with DSG gearbox) covers 100 km/h on the meter after 5.7 seconds The maximum speed is in all cases electronically limited to 250 km/h The two-liter engine complies with Euro 6 standards and You will have to pay more for the weaker cupro EUR 25,992 and around EUR 500 more for a five-door expert '280-horsepower' Leon Cupra is just under two thousand more expensive than the weaker one and both are of course available with a manual or automatic DSG gearbox From 2004 we research urban trends and inform our community of followers about the latest in lifestyle From year 2023 we offer content in major global languages From 2004 we 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