World War I, also known as the First World War, the Great War, or the War to End All Wars, was a global war originating in Europe that lasted from July 28, 1914 to November 11, 1918.
Mentioned in
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A Contest as an Attempt to Revive Jewish Tradition
(Helga Krohn)
- Agathe Lasch’s Curriculum Vitae, 1921
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Antisemitism and Persecution
(Werner Bergmann)
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Appeal to Create a Jewish Memorial Cemetery in Ohlsdorf
(Ina Lorenz)
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Between Threat and Hope. Migration to the New World. Mary Antin’s Account
(Monica Rüthers)
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Beyond Role Clichés – Motorcycle Sportswoman and Journalist Hertha Herrmann
(Frauke Steinhäuser)
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Cheskel Zwi Klötzel, Moses Pipenbrink's Adventures. A Young Adult Novel between Urban Adventure and Zionist Utopia
(Michael Nagel)
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Demographics and Social Structure
(Miriam Rürup)
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Economy and Occupational Patterns
(Uffa Jensen)
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Eugen Fraenkel: Hamburg’s most important pathologist
(Benjamin Kuntz)
- Flyer by the Hamburg Chapter of the Centralverein deutscher Staatsbüger jüdischen Glaubens [Central Association of German Citizens of the Jewish Faith ], April 1932
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Founding of the Jewish Sports Club Bar Kochba, 1910
(Ivonne Meybohm)
- German-Jewish War Veterans’ Association [Vaterländischer Bund jüdischer Frontsoldaten]. From the Advertising Committee: Call for a Jewish Memorial Cemetery, Hamburg 1921
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Helen Rosenau, Aspiring Art Historian and Archaeologist
(Jannik Sachweh)
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Ida Ehre and Hamburg’s Kammerspiele Theater
(Michaela Giesing)
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In Search of Belonging. Jacob Sonderling’s “This is my Life”
(Sarah Panter)
- Jacob Sonderling, This is my Life (Memoirs), Los Angeles, 1961-1964 [Excerpt], p. 3-5.
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Jewish Art? Anita Rée and “New Objectivity”
(Maike Bruhns)
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Jewish Martial Arts. Hamburg’s Sports Club “Schild”
(Erik Petry)
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Law and Politics
(Uffa Jensen)
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Leisure and Sports
(Kirsten Heinsohn)
- Letter from Jacob H. Schiff (New York) to Max Warburg (Hamburg), January 28, 1915
- Letter of Recommendation for Siegfried Landshut, New York, March 5, 1936
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Memory and Remembrance
(Beate Meyer)
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Migration
(Tobias Brinkmann)
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Organizations and Institutions
(Rainer Liedtke)
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Paul Dessau’s “Hagadah.” A Passover Oratorio Reflecting Contemporary History
(Daniela Reinhold)
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Persecution and Marginalization of So-Called “Mixed-bloods”. The Case of Friedrich Wilhelm Lübbert
(Beate-Christine Fiedler)
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Radio Appeal for an Anti-Jewish Boycott
(Michael Grüttner)
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Return in Uniform. Walter Albert Eberstadt and the Beginning of Radio Hamburg
(Hans-Ulrich Wagner)
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Scientific Networks – Arabist Hedwig Klein’s Attempt to Emigrate
(Elke-Vera Kotowski)
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Social Issues and Welfare
(Stefanie Schüler-Springorum)
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State Funding for Jewish Prison Chaplains
(Robert Richter)
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The Disenfranchisement of Jewish Physicians in Hamburg during National Socialism
(Anna von Villiez)
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The Kaiser, Dignitaries, and the Press as Guests of Albert Ballin
(Johannes Gerhardt)
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The Local Chapter Hamburg-Altona as Part of the Zionist Movement in Germany
(Sabrina Schütz)
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The physician Rahel Liebeschütz-Plaut: The involuntary end of a scientific career
(Doris Fischer-Radizi)
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The Role of the Hamburg-Bergedorf Tax Office [Finanzamt Hamburg-Bergedorf] and the Hamburg Exchange Control Office [Hamburger Devisenstelle] in the Twofold Plundering of the Jewish Lavy Family in 1938 and 1947–1951
(Bernhard Nette)
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The Stolpersteine of Brahmsallee 13: The Stories behind the Names and the Obstacles to Commemorating Them
(Beate Meyer)
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The Zinnowitz Song: A Symbol of Resort Antisemitism
(Frank Bajohr)
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Transnational Networks and Questions of Belonging. An Exchange of Letters Between Jacob Schiff and Max Warburg During World War I.
(Sarah Panter)
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“Folk Life in Palestine.” Otto Eberhard and the Christian Friends of Zionism
(Fabian Weber)
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“I know few people who seem so qualified to do so…” A Letter of Recommendation for Siegfried Landshut
(Lisa Gerlach)
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“It Cost Me 20 Years to Defeat Hitler.” Hamburg Shipping Company Owner Arnold Bernstein in the USA
(Björn Siegel)
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“Mother Borchardt” – a Jewish Shipping Company Owner
(Rebekka Großmann)
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“tear down outdated […] views”. Agathe Lasch, an academic revolutionary
(Inge Stephan)
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“The Jews in the Army”—On the Origins and Pervasiveness of a Prejudice
(Uwe Lohalm)