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    Johann Jacoby Collection 1849-1860

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    The collection continas a handwritten and signed letter from Johann Jacoby to author and politician A. Bernstein with notes on a petition to be presented to the Preußischer Landtag. The letter ends with a note stating that something must be done about a memorial in Berlin for the exiled politician Heinrich Simon.The collection also contains a page dated April 1849 and signed by Jacoby, on which he wrote the lines : "Der Sturm bricht los! Der Sieg ist uns gewiss! Auf Wiedersehn in einem freien Lande!"The Prussian-Jewish physician and writer Johann Jacoby was born May 1, 1805, in Königsberg. He strongly believed in equal civil rights for Jews and Gentiles alike, and voiced these believes at the Prussian and then at the all-German National Assembly. He was a member of the German Progress Party, and he joined the German Social Democratic Party after the creation of the new German Empire in 1870. Johann Jacoby died in Königsberg on March 6, 1877.The original German-language inventory is available in the folderProcessed for digitizatio

    Margarete Jacoby Collection 1938-1962

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    Various documents including reference letters, speech about Bertha Falkenberg and eulogy for Gertrud Mosse given by Jacoby, a manuscript regarding the Olga Stern Haus (Jewish retirement home) and a letter to Mrs. Levinger from Jacoby.Margarete JacobsMargarete Jacoby directed the Olga Stern Haus, a Jewish retirement home in Berln, from 1930-1938.processed for digitizationSent for digitizationReturned from digitizationLinked to online manifestationdigitize

    Arthur Jacoby Collection 1947

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    Certificate for Arthur Jacoby as a honorary member of the Guild of Craftsmen in Shanghai; business cardsMargit Hirschdigitize

    Frank Jacoby-Nelson Collection 2004-2006

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    The collection containins documents pertaining to Frank Jacoby-Nelson's receipt of the Verdienstmedaille des Verdienstordens der Bundesrepublik Deutschland for his work with the Gesellschaft für Christlich-Jüdische Begegnung. Included are a curriculum vitae of Frank Jacoby-Nelson; letter informing him of his award of the medal; award certificate; letter nominating him for the award; speeches given on the occassion of the award of the medal to Jacoby-Nelson; clipping; and pamphlet of the Gesellschaft für Christlich-Jüdische Begegnung in Oberschwaben e.V.Frank Jacoby-Nelson was born Frank A. Jacoby on June 2, 1930, in Berlin to Walter (Werner) Jacoby and Julia Jacoby née Simon. His brother Pedro (Peter) Jacoby was born in 1926. In 1933, the family emigrated from Germany to Buenos Aires. Jacoby-Nelson began acting at the age of 12 with the Freie Deutsche Bühne. He worked as an actor until the early 1960s under the stage name Frank Nelson. In 1963, Jacoby-Nelson returned to Germany. From 1965 to 1973, he worked at the Schroedel Verlag. From 1973 until his retirement in 1995, he worked at the Ravensburger Buchverlag. In 1981, he became involved with the Gesellschaft für Christlich-Jüdische Begegnung in Ravensburg; he became Jewish Chariman in 1988 and First Chairman in 1994. In 2005, he was honored with the Verdienstmedaille des Verdienstordens der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in recognization of his 25 years of work for inter-religious understanding with the society.An inventory is available in the folder.Processed for digitizatio

    [Die Schicksale der Brüder Jacoby aus Havelberg, Kreis Westprignitz].

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    Manuscript written by the wife of Fritz Jacoby, sent to the Wehrgeschichtliches Museum of Rastatt, regarding the World War I service and World War II and post-war experiences of the brothers Fritz, Curt, and Franz Jacoby. Mrs. Jacoby (née Ungar) stemmed from an Aryan family and her husband and his brother (also in a mixed marriage) survived the war primarily as a result of this status. The manuscript details the three brothers' military experiences serving in the Germany army in World War I, their various fates during World War II, and the family's efforts to reestablish themself, returning to Germany, after World War II.processed for digitizationSent for digitizationReturned from digitizationdigitize

    Alfred Jacoby Collection 1916

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    Song composed by Alfred Jacoby in honor of Rabbi Dr. Julius Galliner for a Bar Mitzvah in Charlottenburg.processed for digitizationLinked to online manifestationdigitize

    Bilistiche

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    Pubblicazione di un articolo inedito di F. Jacoby redatto tra il 1944 e il 1945. La questione dell'identità di Bilistiche, favorita di Tolemeo II, con analisi onomastica e attribuzione del raro nome a una facies macedone propria e con rassegna storica e individuazione prosopografica delle donne con questo nome descritte nelle fonti: l'A. rifiuta l'identificazione con la Bilistiche argiva, etèra, proprio per la sua etnicità

    Hans Jacoby Collection 1900-1984 bulk: 1938-1947

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    The collection documents the life of the painter Hans Jacoby, who immigrated to the United States via Holland and Shanghai.Documents include some family papers, as well as administrative documents and personal writings. The newspaper clippings in the collection reflect his interests within political history. The photographs and autographs (see Series V) give insight into his surroundings in Shanghai. Other photographic material relates to his artworks, especially to his paintings of Chinese people and Native Americans in Florida (Seminole). Brochures demonstrate his creative work.The art collection of the Leo Baeck Institute contains several artworks by Jacoby relating to his experiences.Hans Jacoby, born on September 6, 1900 in Dresden and married to Emma Jacoby, was educated as an artist (painter). As an illegal refugee Jacoby left Germany for Holland in 1938 and was interned in the Hoek van Holland camp, an internment location for refugees that were considered illegal by the Dutch government. On April 28, 1940, he immigrated to Shanghai, where he took courses at the Juedische Gemeinde Shanghai and at the Asia Seminar. The latter, founded in 1943, was a seminar of academic lectures. The courses were dealing with languages, Chinese philosophy and law. The Asia Seminar continued until 1948. Jacoby moved to the United States in 1947. He has lived mostly in Miami. One of his pictures of Golda Meir was displayed at The Miami Jewish Federation.digitize

    Letter from Ludwig S. Jacoby to James B. Finley

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    Ludwig S. Jacoby, MEC missionary to Germany (Bremen), sends a letter of support to Finley. Jacoby tells Finley -- We are still going on in the good war against the world and the Devil. Abstract Number - 499https://digitalcommons.owu.edu/finley-letters/1697/thumbnail.jp

    Images from Learning from Entrepreneurs with Adam Jacoby, 2018

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    Complete set of images from the 'Learning from Entrepreneurs with Adam Jacoby' event held 25th October 2018. The Australian Graduate School of Entrepreneurship welcomes back Swinburne Alum, Adam Jacoby to discuss his entrepreneurial journey with information platform MiVote. Adam is a serial innovator with a twenty year global history of starting fast growth businesses in sport, information and media
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