282,134 research outputs found
Strauss-Album
STRAUSS-ALBUM
Strauss-Album (1)
Titelseite (1)
Joh. Strauss. Der lustige Krieg. Kusswalzer. (Pl.-Nr.: 325) (2)
Das Spitzentuch der Königin. Walzer. (Pl.-Nr.: 325) (10)
Prinz Methusalem. Walzer. (Pl.-Nr.: 325) (18)
Die Fledermaus. Walzer. (Pl.-Nr.: 325) (28)
Der lustige Krieg. Marsch I. (Pl.-Nr.: 325) (36)
Der lustige Krieg. Marsch II. (Pl.-Nr.: 325) (42
Leopold Strauss Family Collection undated, 1915-1942
The collection contains a letter to Leopold Strauss regarding the death of Hermann Strauss in the field during World
War I; certificate regarding Irma Hett's work for the Jewish community in Frankfurt am Main; and notes on family members
killed in concentration camps.The original German-language inventory is available in the folderProcessed for digitizatio
Die schweigsame Frau als Politikum: Stafan Zweig, Richard Strauss und der Nationalsozialismus
IL saggio presenta il ruolo ambiguo che ha tenuto R. Strauss nei confronti del nazismo dal punto di vista di Stefan Zweig, inoltre viene commentata la pièce teatrale di Ronald Harwood dedicata alla collaborazione tra i due artisti
Il metodo di Strauss
Nel saggio si analizza il metodo interpretativo di Strauss rispetto ai dialoghi platonici, e al Simposio in particolare. Ci si sofferma sul ruolo di Platone nei corsi tenuti da Strauss alla University of Chicago, e il contributo che essi offrono alla filosofia politica. Si analizza la metafora della caverna, usata da Strauss a proposito del rapporto fra filosofia e politica, e la rilevanza della struttura drammatica dei dialoghi per chiarire questo punto. Ci si sofferma poi su alcuni aspetti significativi dell'interpretazione che Strauss offre del Simposio: il rapporto che i vari personaggi intrattengono con l'idea che Eos sia una divinità, la funzione dell'idea di bellezza, il rapporto fra filosofia e poesia (nella sua duplice forma di commedia e di tragedia)
Gustav Mahler - Richard Strauss. Carteggio
Carteggio completo tra i due compositori Gustav Mahler e Richard Strauss (+ saggio esplicativo)
Margaret Strauss Berman Family Collection 1898-2005
The papers contained in this collection document part of the lives of several family members of Margaret Strauss Berman. In addition to biographical summaries written by herself, held in Series I, there are photographs, correspondence, newspaper articles, book pages, a diary and further personal documents related to different parts of Margaret Strauss Berman's family.Series II is mainly composed of copies of Ludwig Strauss's papers including personal documents along with newspaper articles on him. Further documents related to the family of Margaret Strauss Berman's mother are held in Series III. Included are papers and photographs of Siegmund Weinberger, Isidor Behr and Alma and Jacob Simon together with a diary of Aron Weiler.Margaret Berman, June 2005Margaret Strauss Berman was born as a daughter of Flora Behr and Karl Strauss in Speyer, Germany in 1922. In later years the family moved to Neustadt an der Weinstraβe, where Karl Strauss taught mathematics and physics at the local school. After 1935 he had to leave school because of a new Nazi legal measure. In 1938, when Margaret was no longer allowed to attend school, her parents sent her to Newark, New Jersey. In the very same year her father Karl Strauss was arrested during the Kristallnacht and sent to Dachau. After his release the family moved to Mannheim. In 1941, they were deported to Gurs and in 1942 to Auschwitz, where they perished.Margaret Strauss Berman's paternal grandparents Klara and Ludwig Strauss lived in Bad Dürkheim. Her grandfather, a teacher at a Jewish school, was president of the Jewish community in the Palatinate, president of the synagogue in his hometown and the conductor of a local chorus. He also was the head of the local Democratic Party and a member of the city council but in 1933 he was forced to renounce his public offices at the instigation of the regional Gauleiter. After Kristallnacht he and his wife Klara moved to Mannheim from where they were deported to Gurs, where they died in 1942.Erna Behr, a sister of Margaret Strauss Berman's mother, was married to Sigmund Weinberger. He had a medical practice in Heidelberg for 30 years, before he immigrated to the United States. One of Margaret Strauss Berman's other relatives, Alma Behr, married Jacob Simon who was wounded in World War I. The couple lived in Homburg until they immigrated to New York. Alma's brother, Isidor Behr, also served in World War I. He perished with his wife and three children in Auschwitz.In the United States Margaret Strauss Berman became a microbiologist. She married and had three children: Charles, Eve and Anne Berman.ProcesseddigitizedBerman, Margaret (nee Strauss), 1922- ; Strauss, Karl, b 1883 ; Simon, Jakob ; Behr famil
Max Strauss Collection 1911-1935
Documents, medals, and photographs pertaining to Max Strauss' service in the German Army before and during World War I.Documents include Fuehrungszeugnis, 1911 ; Service book ("Soldbuch"), 1917-1918 ; Commission certificates for medals 1916-1918 and 1935 ; Certificate about his service in the army from 1910 to 1918, issued 1933. Also included is a richly illustrated testimonial from fellow soldiers upon his promotion to "Vize-Wachtmeister".Max Strauss was born on December 10, 1890 in Baiersdorf (Mittelfranken).Medals have been removed to the LBI Art and Objects Collection. These include "Bayerisches Verdienstkreuz mit Schwertern, Merenti 1866, accession number 99.23 ; Ehrenkreuz fuer Frontkaempfer mit Schwertern am schwarz-weissem Band, accession number 99.24 ; Eisernes Kreuz 2. Klasse, 1914, accession number 99.25 ; four lapel ribbons in a tube, accession number 99.26 ; Verwundetenabzeichen, 1918 and two other pins, accession number 99.27.18 photographs of Max Strauss in the army before and during World War I (1911-1918) have been removed to the LBI Photograph Collection.digitize
[World war I notebook of Arthur Assur Strauss].
A small notebook with sloppily penciled diary entries and other notes during World War I.A more formally written diary, "Erlebnisse im Osten", may be found in the Arthur Assur Strauss collection, AR 5983
Il moderno incompiuto (sullo Strauss di Spinoza)
La Prefazione precede la prima traduzione in italiano (dal tedesco) di tre saggi straussiani su Spinoza, pubblicati a cavallo tra gli anni '20 e '30 del secolo scorso. Vi si ricostruisce il ruolo che Spinoza svolge nella complessiva riflessione di Leo Strauss, tra i più originali ed enigmatici filosofi del Novecento
Eduard Strauss Collection 1854-1988
The bulk of this collection consists of manuscripts, published articles and correspondence with friends and colleagues.Series I: This series contains personal items, e.g. diaries, notes, certificates of degree, and testimonials. Eduard Strauss's correspondence during World War I is also included. Another part is formed by material of activities in the lodges. The subseries 2 and 3 deal with items related to Eduard Strauss's relatives.Series II: Consists of correspondence. In subseries 1, individual correspondents are listed alphabetically. The content of the letters is twofold, personal and professional. The letters which are job-related deal mostly with manuscripts and their editing, proof-reading, and their ideas, etc. Unidentified letters are to be found at the very end (listed as Zz-Others). Subseries 2 is formed by the letters of congratulations which Eduard Strauss received for special birthdays.Series III: This series contains Eduard Strauss's writings, which are divided into manuscripts and published articles. The manuscripts comprise almost three linear feet, including a lot of materials and fragments, typewritten and handwritten. Some of them are drafts of published articles, some are notes on certain topics, some are outlines of lectures held at the Freies Juedisches Lehrhaus in Frankfurt or elsewhere.Series IV: This series is named after Franz Rosenzweig. It includes writings by Eduard Strauss concerning Rosenzweig's ideas, obituaries for Rosenzweig and writings by Rosenzweig himself. There are two short letters by Franz Rosenzweig to Eduard Strauss.Series V: Consists of writings by persons other than Eduard Strauss or Franz Rosenzweig or Strauss's family members. Erich Kahler's and Stephen S. Schwarzschild's writings deal with Jewish topics. A printed article by Martin Buber is also included.Born in Kreuznach on February 18, 1876, Eduard Strauss was a chemist and philosopher. His parents were Heinrich Strauss and Viktoria Strauss (née Nathan). At the age of 16 Eduard Strauss moved to Frankfurt/Main where he obtained his university-entrance diploma in 1895. He studied chemistry, physics and botany at the universities of Bonn, Munich and Berlin. After receiving his doctorate in chemistry at the University of Berlin in 1899, he worked in Munich with Karl A. Hofmann (who discovered radioactive lead in 1900) and others. He also continued his studies and took classes in medicine. He passed a public examination as a nutritional chemist and became assistant to Professor Hilger at the Institute of Applied Chemistry in Munich. In 1905, he returned to Berlin, but soon moved to Frankfurt/Main, where he married Beatrice Rosenberg in 1907. They had two children, Elizabeth (born 1908?) and Carola (born 1913). In Frankfurt he worked in several clinical institutions as a chemist.His professional career was interrupted by his service in World War I. From the beginnings in 1920 to the early end in 1938, Eduard Strauss taught at the Freies Juedisches Lehrhaus in Frankfurt/Main, which was established by Franz Rosenzweig in 1920. Eduard Strauss was member of the directorate and as an institution for adult education and beyond, his weekly lectures on the Holy Scripture were highly appreciated.In the year 1935, Eduard Strauss's research was suspended when he was dismissed due to the racial laws from the Georg-Speyer-Haus, a chemotherapeutical institute. He continued performing his duties in the Jewish congregation, which consisted mostly of writing articles for their newspaper, and stayed in Frankfurt am Main until 1938. In June of this year, he immigrated with his family to Italy. In December, he had to leave Italy and immigrated to the United States via Havana, Cuba, which was facilitated by the fact that his wife was an American citizen. Eduard Strauss obtained American citizenship in 1943.Upon his arrival in New York he immediately started working at Beth David Hospital. Later he worked at the Coster Research Laboratories, at Crown Heights Hospital and the Chemistry Department of New York University.Eduard Strauss was well known especially in the Jewish communities of Frankfurt and later New York for his dedication to teaching Jews and non-Jews in philosophical, biblical, theological and Jewish questions. He was an active member of the Jewish congregation of Frankfurt and later of the Jewish congregation Habonim of New York. He helped establishing a new "Lehrhaus" in New York, which was founded as Lehrhaus Franz Rosenzweig in 1939.Besides his teaching activities, Eduard Strauss wrote many newspaper articles, some for the Frankfurter Zeitung, but mostly for Jewish papers like the Frankfurter Israelitisches Gemeindeblatt, the Morgen, and later in New York for the Aufbau and the Bulletin Habonim. Most of his articles consist of written forms of his lectures, for example in Martin Buber's monthly Der Jude. He also published scientific works as a chemist.Eduard Strauss died in New York City on August 23, 1952.digitize
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