<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><!DOCTYPE Zthes SYSTEM "http://zthes.z3950.org/xml/zthes-05.dtd">  <Zthes><term><termId>31407092</termId><termName>Danube style</termName><termType>PT</termType><termNote><![CDATA[ Refers to a style of painting that developed in Regensburg, Germany, and elsewhere along the Danube river during the Renaissance and Reformation. It is characterized by a renewed interest in medieval piety, an expressive use of nature, the relationship of the human figure and events to nature, and the introduction of landscape as a primary theme in art. The term was coined by Theodor von Frimmel (1853-1928), who believed that painting in the Danube River region around Regensburg, Passau, and Linz possessed common characteristics; the style seems to exist even though leading artists did not form a school in the usual sense of the term, since they did not work in a single workshop or in a particular center. Major artists whose work represents the style include Lucas Cranach the elder and Albrecht Altdorfer. ]]></termNote><termCreatedDate>2026-03-30 20:49:26</termCreatedDate><relation><relationType>UF</relationType><termId>31407093</termId><termName>Danube School</termName><termType>ND</termType></relation><relation><relationType>UF</relationType><termId>31407094</termId><termName>Donaustil</termName><termType>ND</termType></relation><relation><relationType>UF</relationType><termId>31407095</termId><termName>Regensburg</termName><termType>ND</termType></relation><relation><relationType>BT</relationType><termId>31367443</termId><termName>German Renaissance-Baroque styles</termName><termType>PT</termType></relation></term>  </Zthes>