109 resultados para Georgenthal, Ger. (Cistercian monastery)
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Official German documents for Isaac Ottenberg, dated 1851, 1852, 1854. Also included is a handwritten letter to Herr Cronebold, June 1863.
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Newspaper clipping (1967) from Bruchsaler Rundschau about a memorial plaque at the site of the former synagogue in Philippsburg.
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Handwritten pagination includes 508, 508a, 508b and then later skips from page 574 to page 577.
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Honor thesis (Facharbeit) on Jews in Idar-Oberstein, circa 1602-1943.
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Handwritten purchase agreement for a barn in Merzbach, Franconia (photocopy of the original and typed transcript).
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The photograph album is part of the Hirschberg-Goldman Family Collection and contains captions written in German about various locations in Breslau, Germany, now Wrocław, Poland.
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Cloth covered, oversize album featuring photographs of a family home.
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Memorial book with the speeches by Leo Baeck and Hugo Jacobi.
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Admission letter from Westfalia Loge (1928); letter of refusal for hospital admission for non Aryans (1933).
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Most photographs with handwritten captions.
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Brochure on occasion of the 1986 exhibition ‘Heilen und Vernichten im Nationalsozialismus’ (Healing and destruction under the Nazis) in Aachen, Germany. It includes a list of Hirschfeld’s publications.
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Family history
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Three galley copies of a published work with corrections and edited indices.
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Description of the author’s family background. His paternal family owned a tobacco and cigarres business in Ulm, which was transferred to Munich in 1888. The maternal family in Frankfurt am Main had a textile export business. Recollections of his schooldays at the Catholic St. Anna Schule. Antisemitic encounters at the local Gymnasium. Description of life in the 19th century. Reverence for the local royalties. The family was involved in the Zionist movement, as were most of the members of their local synagoge.
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The memoir was written in New York between 1981 and 1983. Recollections of the Nazi take-over in Germany and their growing awareness of the upcoming danger. Closure of the cabaret of Friedrich Hollaender, where Lotte and her husband were working, due to its "subversive" political views. After the burning of the "Reichstag" (parliament) Lotte and Victor emigrated to France. Life of emigres in Paris. Lotte found work as a foreign language secretary. Victor worked with a film editor. Extradition from France due to their expired carte d'identite. Move to Amsterdam. In 1935 they went to friends in Spain, where Victor had a position as a film editor. They lived in Barcelona until outbreak of civil war. Escape to London via Prague. Exit visas for the United States. Arrival in New York in 1937. Victor was invited by Friedrich Hollaender to Hollywood, where Lotte joined him a few months later. Work as butler and cook in a family. Lotte found only a few engagements in theater and film. Divorce from her husband and remarriage with actor Wolfgang Zilzer (Paul Andor).