Commons has media related to Wrocław Old Jewish Cemetery. "Spacer dla seniorów po Starym Cmentarzu Żydowskim". VisitWroclaw.eu. "Stary Cmentarz Żydowski...
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Old Jewish Cemetery may refer to: Old Jewish Cemetery, Chernihiv Old Jewish cemetery, Cieszyn Old Jewish Cemetery, Cincinnati Old Jewish Cemetery, Frankfurt...
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Institute in Wrocław; British Council in Wrocław; Dante Alighieri Society in Wrocław and Grotowski Institute in Wrocław. The Old Town of Wrocław is listed...
190 KB (15,845 words) - 09:05, 1 November 2024
Ferdinand Lassalle (category Lawyers from Wrocław)
about". Ferdinand Lassalle is buried in Breslau (now Wrocław, Poland), in the Old Jewish Cemetery. Lassalle and Marx became friends during the Revolutions...
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Jewish cemeteries in Ostrów Wielkopolski Junikowo in Poznań Miłostowo in Poznań Osobowice Cemetery in Wrocław Old Jewish Cemetery, Wrocław Jewish Cemetery...
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Friederike Kempner (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia)
blindness. She died at her Friederikenhof manor and is buried in the Old Jewish Cemetery, Wrocław. Gedichte, 2d ed., Breslau, 1852 (frequently republished) Novellen...
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During much of the Middle Ages Wrocław was ruled by Dukes of the Piast dynasty. In 1335 the last Piast Duke of Wrocław, Henry VI the Good died. As a result...
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the history of the city of Wrocław, Poland. around 550 - At the end of the Migration Period in the present areas of Wrocław, the Slavic tribe of the Lechitic/Polish...
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Emily Plater - Bracka - Górnicza and the then western wall of the Jewish cemetery at Bracka street (now a fragment of Zagajnikowa street). The main and...
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Ernst Steinitz (category German people of Jewish descent)
Śląskie), Silesia, Germany (now in Poland), the son of Sigismund Steinitz, a Jewish coal merchant, and his wife Auguste Cohen; he had two brothers. He studied...
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Moritz Abraham Levy (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia)
Levy died on 22 February 1872 in Breslau. He was buried in the Old Jewish Cemetery of Wrocław. Hebräisches Lesebuch, Auswahl historischer, poetischer und...
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Berthold Oppenheim (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia)
universities in Berlin and Wrocław. Oppenheim came to Olomouc in 1892 from Miroslav, South Moravia, where there was a strong Jewish community and where Oppenheim...
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History of the Jews in Poland (redirect from Polish-Jewish)
Wrocław in 1273–90, Henryk III of Głogów in 1274 and 1299, Henryk V the Fat of Legnica in 1290–95, and Bolko III the Generous of Legnica and Wrocław in...
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Janowski), with many working class graves and the adjacent New Jewish Cemetery. Lychakivskiy Cemetery was used by all Christian sects in the city: in addition...
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Kresy (category Articles containing Old East Slavic-language text)
Heritage of Eastern Borderlands are awarded in Wrocław. The 2011 recipient was emeritus Archbishop of Wrocław, Henryk Gulbinowicz. Participants of annual...
92 KB (7,536 words) - 04:49, 31 October 2024
Heinrich Graetz (category Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia)
principal of the Jewish Orthodox school of the Breslau community, and later taught history at the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau (now Wrocław, Poland)...
27 KB (3,839 words) - 13:45, 20 August 2024
I. L. Peretz (category Jewish writers)
displaced Jewish children. Peretz died in the city of Warsaw, Congress Poland, in 1915. He was buried at the Okopowa Street Jewish Cemetery with a huge...
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north-east of the regional capital Wrocław. As of 2019, the town has a population of 6,692. It is part of the larger Wrocław metropolitan area. The beginnings...
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Gdańsk and Wrocław. 2006 – Jewish population in Poland is approximately 25,000. (Jewish population) Many Polish Jews are of mixed background (Jewish and Catholic)...
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History of the Jews in Germany (redirect from German-Jewish)
CE) and High Middle Ages (circa 1000–1299 CE) when Jewish immigrants founded the Ashkenazi Jewish community. The community survived under Charlemagne...
125 KB (15,281 words) - 08:52, 30 October 2024
1912 Department store in Junkernstrasse, Wrocław (now ul. Ofiar Oświęcimskich) 1913 Four Domes Pavilion, Wrocław (now part of UNESCO World Heritage Site...
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that the Jewish cemetery had been vandalized. Nineteen tombstones, some of which date back to the early 19th century, were damaged in the old part of the...
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Arthur Löwenstamm (category Burials at Golders Green Jewish Cemetery)
studied theology and trained for the rabbinate at the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau (now Wrocław in western Poland). After passing his rabbinical...
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Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe (category Jewish German history)
bodies of Jews and any of their body parts can be buried only in a Jewish cemetery. The memorial has also come under fire for perpetuating what some critics...
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Mikołów (category Historic Jewish communities in Poland)
Germans. Glory to them" In Mikołów there was also located another-older Jewish cemetery (1682) but during the Second World War it was completely ruined...
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in Opole in 1816. The first railway connection between Opole, Brzeg and Wrocław was opened in 1843 and the first manufacturing plants were constructed...
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Brzeg Dolny (category Historic Jewish communities in Poland)
Old Polish name Brzege in a 1353 deed as a part of the Duchy of Wrocław, then within the Bohemian (Czech) Crown Lands. The Warzyń district is older,...
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Karaite Judaism (redirect from Karaite Jewish)
Karaism is a non-Rabbinical Jewish sect characterized by the recognition of the written Tanakh alone as its supreme authority in halakha (religious law)...
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Łódź – 348 km (216 mi), Kraków – 84 km (52 mi), Gdańsk – 690 km (429 mi), Wrocław – 346 km (215 mi), Katowice – 157 km (98 mi), Kielce – 200 km (124 mi)...
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the city — in the suburb of Winniki, the Kortumówka hills and the Jewish Cemetery. Many of those killed were prominent leaders of Polish society: politicians...
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