8 research outputs found
Altneuland : Roman /
Digital imag
Theodor Herzl Collection 1888-1912
The collection contains correspondence of Theodor Herzl, including letters to Adolf Pollak regarding management of the Zionist weekly publication Die Welt, which Herzl founded. Also included are biographical sketches of Herzl, Nachum Sokolow, and Chaim Weizman, and picture postcards with photographs pertaining to Die Welt and the Zionist Congress.digitizedBorn in Budapest in 1860, Theodor Herzl was the founder of modern political Zionism and the World Zionist Organization. He came from a family of German-speaking assimilated Jews. He moved with his family to Vienna in 1878. Here he studied law and eventually became a journalist, writing for the Neue Freie Presse in Paris. In 1896, he published "Der Judenstaat," which outlined his proposal for the establishment of a Jewish state. In 1897; he organized the First Zionist Congress in Basel. The rest of his life was devoted to the Zionist movement, and he met with multiple heads of state with the hope of advancing negotiations for a territory. He died in 1904 in Austria and is buried in Jerusalem.The original German-language inventory is available in the folde
Theodor Herzls tagebücher, 1895-1904.
Mode of access: Internet
Theodor Herzls tagebücher, 1895-1904.
Erven Dr. Rudof Roels (1902-1966), weerstander en politiek gevangene WOII, Onafhankelijkheidsfront-Patriotische Militie
Worte Theodor Herzls.
The 50 page typescript contains citations by Theodor Herzl:Part I: Herzl’s historic mission (about Judaism; Diaspora; assimilation and anti-Semitism; the ‘Jewish question’; the Jewish people; Zionism; the Zionist congress; Zionist politics; acquaintances; the Land of Israel; and aspects of building the Jewish nation).Part II: Herzl as an artist and a citizen of the world (about literature and the arts; the world; humanity; history).Part III: Autobiographical thoughts.digitize
Gezamelá¹e shrifá¹n /
T.p. partially vocalized.In Yiddish.Mode of access: Internet
Cyrus Adler papers, undated, 1883-1937.
Primarily correspondence relating to the Dropsie College for Hebrew and Cognate Learning, the Jewish encyclopedia, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, the Smithsonian Institution and the American Jewish Historical Society. Contains also correspondence arranged alphabetically including letters from the staff of the American Hebrew, the American Jewish Committee, Theodor Herzl, the Jewish Agricultural and Industrial Aid Society, the Jewish Publication Society of America, Max J. Kohler, Louis Marshall, Jacob H. Schiff, Oscar S. Straus, Henrietta Szold, Stephen S. Wise and Israel Zangwill. Contains also material on the structure of the Jewish calendar, correspondence relating to the publication of the Jefferson Bible, correspondence and research material concerning Jewish servicemen in the Spanish-American War (published in the American Jewish year book, 1900-1901), a list of ... of the U.S. Congress, material ... immigration, the Jews in Rus ... cript proof articles from the Jewish quarterly review, numerous published articles by and ... Adler, and a large quantity of manuscript notes and material on Jewish history in general and American Jewish history in particular. Includes also David Sulzberger's collected data pertaining to the Jewish population in the United States-1900.Gift, in part, of the Elsie O. and Philip D. Sang Foundation,far031