ID: 64224340
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Vintage Germany Poster Stamp Subscribe To My Sunday Paper Neutitschein
$4.80
$6.00
Seller:
Oldbrooklynguy (4750)
Vintage Germany Poster Stamp Subscribe To My Sunday Paper Neutitschein Additional Fee One Crown Quarterly Unused Hinge Mark No Gum. A Newspaper From Neutitschein, A Historical Name For The Town Now Called Nový Jičín ... Read More
Vintage Germany Poster Stamp Subscribe To My Sunday Paper Neutitschein Additional Fee One Crown Quarterly Unused Hinge Mark No Gum. A Newspaper From Neutitschein, A Historical Name For The Town Now Called Nový Jičín, Located In The Czech Republic (Formerly Part Of The Austro-Hungarian Empire). Around 1900, Neutitschein Was Predominantly German-Speaking And Part Of The Moravian Region. More Information Found: NEUTITSCHEIN: By: Gotthard Deutsch, S. Mandl
City in the province of Moravia, Austria. It had a Jewish congregation in the Middle Ages, which was expelled Aug. 30, 1563. The cemetery was deeded by the Jews to the city under the condition that it should be preserved. It has, however, entirely disappeared. The new settlement did not begin until after 1848, when the law permitted Jews to settle in all parts of the empire. In 1893 there was organized a congregation, which now comprises the Jews living in the districts of Neutitschein, Fulnek, Frankstadt, and Freiberg, and which numbers about 600 persons. It has various charitable societies, but as yet (1904) no synagogue. The first rabbi was Dr. S. Mandl, elected 1899, who still holds office. David Kaufmann was descended on the maternal side from a Neutitschein family.
Bibliography: D'Elvert, Gesch. der Juden in Māhren, p. 112, Brünn, 1895.
City in the province of Moravia, Austria. It had a Jewish congregation in the Middle Ages, which was expelled Aug. 30, 1563. The cemetery was deeded by the Jews to the city under the condition that it should be preserved. It has, however, entirely disappeared. The new settlement did not begin until after 1848, when the law permitted Jews to settle in all parts of the empire. In 1893 there was organized a congregation, which now comprises the Jews living in the districts of Neutitschein, Fulnek, Frankstadt, and Freiberg, and which numbers about 600 persons. It has various charitable societies, but as yet (1904) no synagogue. The first rabbi was Dr. S. Mandl, elected 1899, who still holds office. David Kaufmann was descended on the maternal side from a Neutitschein family.
Bibliography: D'Elvert, Gesch. der Juden in Māhren, p. 112, Brünn, 1895.
Seller Information
- Seller
- Oldbrooklynguy (4750)
- Registered Since
- 03/01/2022
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- New York Stamps and Ephemera
- Item Location
- Florida, United States
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- Worldwide
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