7,021 research outputs found
Jacob Jacobson Collection 1660-1958
Poetry, correspondence, notes, personal papers, clippings and other material from various individuals and communities, including memo by Max Bodenheimer about a meeting of Theodor Herzl with Kaiser Wilhelm II; papers of the bookdealer Julius Harrwitz; genealogical correspondence of Moritz Stern, librarian of the Jewish community of Berlin; eighteenth-century talmudic novellae written by members of the Fliess family; poetry of George Davidsohn, editor and parliamentary deputy for the Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands (SPD); and a manuscript and notes by Selma Stern-Täubler.The following individuals are named in this collection:Bodenheimer, Max,1865-1940 ; Brandenburg, Alexander ; Breslauer, Bernhard ; Crémieux, Adolphe, 1796-1880 ; Davidsohn, George ; Eliasson, rabbi ; Freudenthal, Max, 1868-1937 ; Harrwitz, Julius ; Hausdorff, Moritz. ; Herz, Abraham. ; Herz, Jacob, 1817-1871 ; Herz, Marcus,1 747-1803 ; Herzl, Theodor, 1860-1904 ; Hirsch, M. (Markus), 1833-1909 ; Hirsch, Samson Raphael, 1808-1888 ; Jacobson, Moses ; Jost, I. M. (Isaak Markus), 1793-1860 ; Landshuth, Eliezer,1817-1887 ; Lasker, Eduard, 1829-1884 ; Löw, Leopold, 1811-1875 ; Löw, Schwab ; Neumann, Salomon, 1819-1908 ; Pfahl, Adam ; Philippson, Ludwig,1811-1889 ; Schlegel, Dorothea ; Seligmann, Caesar, 1860-1950 ; Stern, M. A.(Moriz Abraham), 1807-1894 ; Stern, Selma,1890-1981 ; Warburg, Aby, 1866-1929 ; Warburg, Max M., 1867-1946 ; William II, German Emperor, 1859-1941The following families are mentioned in this collection:Fliess (Family) ; Fraenkel-Mirels (Family) ; Fränkels (Family) ; Gans (Family) ; Gomperz (Family) ; Haag (Family) ; Itzig (Family) ; Koppel (Family) ; Lowe (Family) ; Meyer (Family : Meyer, Ephraim) ; Milch (Family) ; Mirels-Heller-Fraenkel (Family) ; Neumark (Family) ; Plaut (Family) ; Seligmann (Family) ; Simonis (Family) ; Solms-Braunfels (Family) ; Steinthal-Herz (Family) ; Teutsch (Family : Teutsch, Aron) ; Treuenfels (Family) ; Wittelhöfer (Family) ; Zadig (Family)The following places are mentioned in this collection:Altstrelitz (Germany) ; Arnswalde (Choszczno, Poland) ; Aschaffenburg (Germany) ; Aurich (Germany : Landkreis) ; Austria ; Bad Zwesten (Germany) ; Bavaria (Germany) ; Berlin (Germany) ; Bleicherode (Germany) ; Breslau (Germany) ; Bunzlau (Bolesławiec, Województwo Dolnośląskie, Poland) ; Czechoslovakia ; Danzig (Germany) ; Dresden (Germany) ; Düsseldorf (Germany) ; Duisburg (Germany) ; Dyhernfurth (Niederschlesien, Germany) ; Ellrich (Germany) ; Flatow (Złotów, Poland) ; Frankfurt am Main (Germany) ; Frankfurt an der Oder (Germany) ; Fürth (Bavaria, Germany) ; Gleiwitz (Gliwice, Poland) ; Gnesen (Gniezno, Poland) ; Hague (Netherlands) ; Haigerloch (Germany) ; Halberstadt (Germany) ; Halle an der Saale (Germany) ; Hamburg-Altona (Hamburg, Germany) ; Hannover (Germany) ; Harburg (Schwaben, Germany) ; Hechingen (Germany) ; Hesse (Germany) ; Hesse-Kassel (Electorate) ; Hörstein (Germany) ; Hungary ; Hürben-Krumbach (Günzburg, Germany) ; Jastrow (Posen, Germany) ; Kassel (Germany) ; Königsberg (Kaliningrad, Russia) ; Köslin (Koszalin, Poland) ; Krotoschin (Krotoszyn, Poland) ; Landsberg an der Warthe (Germany) ; Lippe (Germany) ; Märkisch Friedland (Mirosławiec, Poland) ; Marburg (Germany) ; Mattenbuden (Danzig, Germany) ; Mecklenburg (Germany : Region) ; Meseritz (Międzyrzecz, Poland) ; Mönchengladbach (Germany) ; Nackel (Nakło nad Notecią, Poland) ; Netherlands ; Neumark (Nowa Marchia, Poland) ; Oberlangenstadt (Kronach, Germany) ; Ober-Seemen (Gedern, Germany) ; Ostrowo (Ostrów Wielkopolski, Poland) ; Pomerania (Poland and Germany) ; Posen (Germany) ; Potsdam (Germany) ; Prague (Czech Republic) ; Prenzlau (Germany) ; Prussia (Germany) ; Ravensburg (Germany) ; Reichensachsen (Germany) ; Rendsburg (Germany) ; Rimpar (Würzburg, Germany) ; Sandersleben (Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany) ; Saxe-Meiningen ; Schermeisel (Trzemeszno Lubuskie, Poland) ; Schildberg (Ostrzeszów, Poland) ;Schleswig-Holstein (Germany) ; Schrimm (Śrem, Poland) ; Schwerin an der Warthe (Skwierzyna, Poland) ; Silesia (Czech Republic) ; Spangenberg (Germany) ; Stettin (Szczecin, Poland) ; Tütz (Tuczno, Piła, Poland) ; Unruhstadt (Posen, Prussia) ; Vienna (Austria) ; Wallerstein (Germany) ; Wandsbek (Germany) ; Prussia, West (Poland) ; Westphalia (Germany) ; Wolfenbüttel (Germany) ; Züllichau (Sulechów, Zielona Góra, Poland)digitize
Bruchstücke 1939-1945.
Last phase of Jewish organizational life in Berlin as director of the "Gesamtarchiv der Juden in Deutschland", which after 1939 became a department of the "Reichssippenamt"; activities of "Reichsvereinigung der Juden in Deutschland"; contacts with Leo Baeck and Eugen Taeubler; deportation and life in Theresienstadt, 1943-1945; comments on role of Leo Baeck and Paul Eppstein.See also the extensive Jacob Jacobson Collection, AR 7002; Jacob Jacobson’s report on “daily life” in Thersienstadt, DM 83; and numerous books.Jacob Jacobson was born in 1888 in Schrimm (Posen) as son of a rabbi; . From 1920 to 1939 he was the director of the "Gesamtarchiv der Juden in Deutschland". In 1943 he was deported to Theresienstadt. After his liberation in 1945 he emigrated to England. Jacob Jacobson died on a trip to Germany in 1968.Brief summary in Max Kreutzberger: "Leo Baeck Institute New York, Bibliothek und Archiv; Katalog":, C 195Published in Monika Richarz: "Juedisches Leben in Deutschland": Vol. III C 3
Jacob Jacobson - deutscher Jude und Archivar (1888-1968). /
Off-print of an appraisal of Jacob Jacobson, published in "Archive und Gedaechtnis. Festschrift fuer Botho Brachmann", Verlag fuer Berlin-Brandenburg, Potsdam, 2005, pages 547-585
Jacob Jacobson family collection; circa 1917-2015 1917
Photographs and correspondence pertaining primarily to (Gotthard) Hardy Jacobson, the younger brother of Jacob Jacobson. Also included is an oversized genealogical table of the extended Jacobson family.Digital ImageThe Jacobson brothers and their sisters were the children of Rabbi Moses Jacobson (1853-1931) in Gnesen, Posen (today Gniezno, Poland)
Jacob of Sarug's Homily on Tamar (Gen 38)
This small volume contains an edition (from Vatican ms. 117) of Jacob of Sarug’s homily on Tamar (420 lines long). The full title is “On Tamar and on the Mystery of the Church.” The biblical narrative on which the poem is based (Gen 38) gives Jacob the opportunity to discuss various women in the early part of biblical history and in Jesus’ lineage, as well as the fact that a woman who is called a prostitute is in that lineage. Jacob explains how Scripture’s language is used in this regard
Jacob Wassermann.
One of several renderings of the German author Jacob Wassermann by the painter and illustrator Suzanne Carvallo-Schülein.Digital ImageArtwork
Ehren-Bürger-Diplom für den praktizierenden Arzt ... Jacob Jacobson.
Four pages of richly illustrated parchment, embossed with the seal of the City of Braunsberg, East Prussia (today Braniewo, Poland): On March 8, 1853 the obstetrician and surgeon, Dr. Jacob Jacobson became an honored citizen for his unceasing and professional efforts to stem the spread of a health crisis which had gripped that city.The parchments are encased in a velvet cloth folder with ornate metal emblems attached to the front; the encasement measures 14.75” x 21” x 1.0”.Also included is an official copy of Jacob Jacobson’s doctoral diploma from the Academia Regiomontana (University in Koenigsberg), 1835.digitizedDr. Jacobson was the maternal grandfather of Herbert Spiegelberg, the son of the German Egyptologist Wilhelm Spiegelberg (1870-1930). Herbert Spiegelberg passed on the family heirloom, to his descendents in the United States
Jacob of Serugh's Homilies on the Spectacles of the Theatre
This fascinating volume contains excerpts from four otherwise unedited (and untranslated) homilies from Jacob of Sarug on the theatre. These homilies, extant only in a single manuscript (BM Add. 17158), which is unfortunately poorly preserved, are unique for the light they cast on the Greek theatre in the Byzantine period. In this article, originally published in Le Muséon 48 (1935), Moss gives a substantive introduction to the selections presented from these homilies, and then presents the texts in Syriac and in English translation. Scholars and readers interested in Syriac literature, and in Jacob of Sarug in particular, as well as students of the history of the theatre, will find this work of great interest.Translated into English from the Syriac text
Wikipedia-Artikel: Jacob Jacobsohn
Link: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob_Jacobson Als Quelle wurde nicht benutzt: Stefi Jersch-Wenzel u. Thomas Jersch: Jacob Jacobson - deutscher Jude und Archivar (1888-1968), in: Archive und Gedächtnis - Festschrift für Botho Brachmann. – hrsg. von Friedrich Beck / Eckhart Henning / Joachim-Felix Leonhard / Susanne Paulukat / Olaf B. Rader. – Potsdam: Verlag für Berlin-Brandenburg GmbH, 2005, (Potsdamer Studien, Bd. 18), S. 547-585 s.: http://archiv.twoday.net/stories/4995852 und http://ar..
Alien Registration- Jacobson, Jacob (South Thomaston, Knox County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/13071/thumbnail.jp
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