| | This article does not cite any references or sources. (January 2007) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. | | This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2007) | Austria first became a center of Jewish learning during the 13th century. However, increasing anti-semitism led to the expulsion of the Jews in 1669. Following formal readmission in 1848, a sizable Jewish community developed once again, contributing strongly to Austrian culture. By the 1930s, some 300,000 Jews lived in Austria, most of them in Vienna. Following the Anschluss with Nazi Germany, most of the community emigrated or were killed in the Holocaust. The current Austrian Jewish population is around 10,000.[citation needed] The following is a list of some prominent Austrian Jews. Here German speaking Jews from the whole Habsburg Empire are listed. Image File history File links Question_book-3. ...
Main article: List of Jews. ...
Main article: List of Jews. ...
This page is a list of Jews. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Many of the Jews expelled from the Iberian Peninsula during the Spanish Inquisition settled in the Ottoman Empire, leaving large Sephardic communities in South-East Europe: mainly in Bulgaria, Turkey, Greece and Bosnia and Herzegovina (though the latter in particular also had a large Ashkenazi population). ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This page is a list of Jews. ...
Here is a list of some prominent (non Latin-) Caribbean Jews, arranged by country of origin. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This page is a list of Jews. ...
This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
Since Antiquity, a number of Jewish communities have been established in many parts of Asia migrating or fleeing eastward from their place of origin in Mesopotamia. ...
For other uses, see Jew (disambiguation). ...
(12th century - 13th century - 14th century - other centuries) As a means of recording the passage of time, the 13th century was that century which lasted from 1201 to 1300. ...
The Eternal Jew: 1937 German poster. ...
// Events Samuel Pepys stopped writing his diary. ...
The 1930s (years from 1930â1939) were described as an abrupt shift to more radical and conservative lifestyles, as countries were struggling to find a solution to the Great Depression, also known as the World Depression. ...
For other uses, see Vienna (disambiguation). ...
German troops march into Austria on 12 March 1938. ...
Nazi Germany, or the Third Reich, commonly refers to Germany in the years 1933–1945, when it was under the firm control of the totalitarian and fascist ideology of the Nazi Party, with the Führer Adolf Hitler as dictator. ...
âShoahâ redirects here. ...
Habsburg (sometimes spelled Hapsburg, but never so in official use) was one of the major ruling houses of Europe. ...
Historical figures Politicians - Max Adler (1873–1937), Austrian social-marxist philosopher
- Viktor Adler, Austrian Socialist leader
- Otto Bauer, Austrian Socialist leader Republikanischer Schutzbund
- Julius Deutsch, Founder and chairman of the paramilitary organization "Republikanischer Schutzbund"
- Rudolf Hilferding, German Finance Minister
- Walter Hollitscher, Austrian Marxist philosopher (1911-1988)
- Teddy Kollek, Mayor of Jerusalem (1965-1993)
- Bruno Kreisky, Austrian Chancellor (1970-1983)
- Ignaz Kuranda, politician [1]
- Dorrit Moussaieff, First Lady of Iceland (Austrian Jewish mother)
Max Adler (January 15, 1873, Vienna - June 28, 1937, Vienna) was an Austrian legal scholar, politician and philosopher. ...
Victor Adler (June 24, 1852 Prague - November 11, 1918 Vienna) was an Austrian Social Democratic leader. ...
Otto Bauer (1881 - July 4, 1938) was an Austrian Social Democrat who is considered one of the leading thinkers of the Austro-Marxist movement. ...
Julius Deutsch (born February 2, 1884 in Lackenbach; died January 17, 1968) was an Austrian social democratic politician. ...
Rudolf Hilferding (1877 - 1941) was an Austrian Marxist economist and a popularizer of the economic reading of Karl Marx. ...
Teddy Kollek in Vienna in 2003 Theodor Teddy Kollek (May 27, 1911 â January 2, 2007) was an Israeli politician and Mayor of Jerusalem from 1965 until 1993. ...
Bruno Kreisky Bruno Kreisky (January 22, 1911âJuly 29, 1990) was a jewish -Austrian politician. ...
Ignaz Kuranda (May 1, 1812, Prague-April 3, 1884, Vienna) was an Austrian deputy and political writer. ...
Dorrit Moussaieff on her way to a royal wedding in Copenhagen Dorrit Moussaieff (Hebrew: ××ר×ת ××ס××××£), (born 12 January 1950) is an Israeli-born British-Icelandic First Lady of Iceland, jewelery designer, editor, and businesswoman. ...
Other - Friedrich Adler (1879-1960), son of Viktor Adler assassin of Count Karl von Stürgkh
- Nathan Birnbaum, early Zionist
- David Josef Bach, important and influential figure in the cultural life
- Adolf Fischhof, leader in Viennese revolution of 1848
- Felix Frankfurter, US judge & civil rights activist
- Alfred Fried, pacifist, Nobel Peace Prize (1911)
- Theodor Herzl, Zionist leader
- Emil Jellinek, automobile entrepreneur
- Joachim Edler von Popper, court Jew
- Samuel Oppenheimer, court Jew
- Felix G. Rohatyn, New York financer
- Felix Weltsch, 1884-1964, Zionist, journalist, philosopher
- Samson Wertheimer, court Jew
- Simon Wiesenthal, Nazi-hunter
Friedrich Adler refers to: Friedrich Adler (1857-1938), Czech-Austrian politician, see also German article Friedrich Adler, (1879-1960), Austrian politician, son of Viktor Adler, see also German article Friedrich Adler (1827-1908), German architect, arcaeologist, see also German article Friedrich Adler (1878-1943), artist and designer, see also German...
Victor Adler (June 24, 1852 Prague - November 11, 1918 Vienna) was an Austrian Social Democratic leader. ...
Karl Graf Stürgkh (or Count Karl von Sturgkh) (1859 - 1916) was an Austrian political figure during the late years of the Austria-Hungarian monarchy. ...
Nathan Birnbaum. ...
David Josef Bach (b. ...
Adolf Fischhof (Hungarian: Fischhof Adolf) (December 8, 1816, Alt-Ofen/Ãbuda, Hungary - March 23, 1893, Emmersdorf, near Klagenfurth, Carinthia) was a Hungarian-Austrian writer and politician. ...
Felix Frankfurter (November 15, 1882 â February 22, 1965) was an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. ...
Alfred Hermann Fried (1864-1921) was an Austrian pacifist, publicist, co-founder of the German peace movement, and co-winner (with Tobias Asser) of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1911. ...
Theodor Herzl, in his middle age. ...
Emil Jellinek Emil Jellinek, known after 1903 as Emil Jellinek-Mercedes (6 April 1853 â 1 January 1918) was a wealthy European entrepreneur who sat on the board of Daimler Motoren Gesellschaft (DMG) between 1900 and 1909. ...
Joachim Edler von Popper (20 October 1722 - 11 May 1795) Court Jew to the Habsburgs. ...
Samuel Oppenheimer (1635 - 1703) was a military supplier for the Holy Roman Emperor. ...
Felix G. Rohatyn (b. ...
Felix Weltsch (born Oct. ...
Samson Wertheimer (1658 - 1724) was an Austrian financier, chief rabbi of Hungary and Moravia, and rabbi of Eisenstadt. ...
Simon Wiesenthal, KBE, (Buczacz, December 31, 1908 â Vienna, September 20, 2005) was an Austrian-Jewish architectural engineer who hunted down Nazi war criminals, after surviving the Holocaust. ...
Academic figures Scientists - Robert Adler, physicist
- Hermann Bondi, cosmologist
- Eugene Braunwald, cardiologist
- Erwin Chargaff, chemist
- Carl Djerassi, chemist: first oral contraceptive pill
- Paul Ehrenfest, physicist
- Albert Einhorn, biochemist: Novocaine
- Walter Feit, mathematician
- Sir Otto Frankel, geneticist [14]
- Otto Frisch, physicist
- Thomas Gold, cosmologist (Jewish father)
- Hans Hahn, mathematician
- Kurt J. Isselbacher, physician, oncologist
- Eric Kandel, neuroscientist, Nobel Prize (2000)
- Martin Karplus, chemist
- Walter Kohn, physicist, Nobel Prize (1998)
- Karl Koller, ophthalmologist; first to use cocaine as an anaesthetic [15]
- Rudolf Kompfner, invented traveling wave tube
- Hans Kronberger (physicist), nuclear physicist[2]
- Karl Landsteiner, biologist: blood groups, Nobel Prize (1930)
- Adolf Lieben, chemist
- Robert von Lieben, physicist (Jewish father) [16]
- Herman F. Mark, chemist: polymers (Jewish father)
- Lise Meitner, physicist: nuclear fission
- Gustav Nossal, immunologist (Jewish father)
- Friedrich Paneth, chemist
- Wolfgang Pauli, physicist, Nobel Prize (1945) (three-fourths Jewish)
- Max Perutz, molecular biologist, Nobel Prize (1962)
- Isidor Isaac Rabi, physicist, Nobel Prize (1944)
- Victor Frederick Weisskopf (1908 - 2002) physicist. During World War II, he worked at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb, and later campaigned against the proliferation of nuclear weapons[3]
Robert Adler Robert Adler (December 4, 1913 - February 15, 2007) was an Austrian-American inventor who held numerous patents. ...
Professor Sir Hermann Bondi, KCB , FRS (1 November 1919â10 September 2005) was a British (formerly Austrian) mathematician and cosmologist. ...
Eugen Braunwald, Eugene Braunwald (born August 15, 1929) was a Austria-born American physician. ...
// Erwin Chargaff (Czernowitz, August 11, 1905 â New York City, USA, June 20, 2002) was an Austrian biochemist who emigrated to the United States during the Nazi era. ...
This article or section is not written in the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. ...
The Pill redirects here. ...
Paul Ehrenfest Paul Ehrenfest (Vienna, January 18, 1880 â Amsterdam, September 25, 1933) was an Austrian physicist and mathematician, who obtained Dutch citizenship on March 24, 1922. ...
Alfred Einhorn (1856 â 1917) was a German chemist most notable for first synthesizing procaine in 1905 which he patented under the name Novocain. ...
Procaine hydrochloride is a local anesthetic used primarily in dentistry. ...
Walter Feit (October 26, 1930 - July 29, 2004) was a mathematician who worked in finite group theory and representation theory. ...
Sir Otto Frankel (4 November 1900, Vienna-21 November 1998, Canberra) was an Austrian-born Australian geneticist. ...
Thomas Gold (May 22, 1920 â June 22, 2004) was an Austrian astrophysicist, a professor of astronomy at Cornell University, and a member of the US National Academy of Sciences. ...
Hans Hahn (1879 - 1934) was an Austrian mathematician who made many contributions to functional analysis, topology, set theory, the calculus of variations, real analysis, and order theory. ...
Eric Richard Kandel (born November 7, 1929) is a neuroscientist who won a Nobel Prize in the year 2000 for his research on the physiological basis of memory storage in neurons. ...
Martin Karplus (born March 15, 1930, Vienna, Austria) is an Austrian-born U.S. chemist. ...
A banner on a light pole in the University of California, Santa Barbara, commemorating that Walter Kohn won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1998. ...
Karl Koller (1857-1944} was an Austrian ophthalmologist who began his medical career as a surgeon at the Vienna General Hospital, and was a colleague of Sigmund Freud. ...
Cocaine is a crystalline tropane alkaloid that is obtained from the leaves of the coca plant. ...
Rudolf Kompfner (1909 â 1977) was an Austrian-born engineer and physicist, best known as the inventor of the traveling wave tube (TWT). ...
A traveling wave tube (TWT) is an electronic device used to produce high-power radio frequency signals. ...
Hans Kronberger CBE, FRS (28 July 1920, Linz, Austria - 29 September 1970) was a British physicist. ...
Karl Landsteiner Karl Landsteiner (June 14, 1868 â June 26, 1943), was an Austrian biologist and physician. ...
A blood type is a description an individuals characteristics of red blood cells due to substances (carbohydrates and proteins) on the cell membrane. ...
â¹ The template below (Expand) is being considered for deletion. ...
Robert von Lieben (September 5, 1878 in Vienna â February 20, 1913 in Vienna) was a notable Austrian physicist. ...
Herman Francis Mark (May 3, 1895 - April 6, 1992) was an Austrian-American chemist regarded for his contributions to the development of polymer science. ...
A polymer (from Greek: ÏολÏ
, polu, many; and μÎÏοÏ, meros, part) is a substance composed of molecules with large molecular mass composed of repeating structural units, or monomers, connected by covalent chemical bonds. ...
Lise Meitner ca. ...
For the generation of electrical power by fission, see Nuclear power plant. ...
Professor Sir Gustav Joseph Victor Nossal, AC, CBE, FRS, FAA (born June 4, 1931) is a distinguished Australian research biologist and brilliant communicator. ...
Friedrich Adolf Paneth (1887 - 1958) was an Austrian-British chemist and a Fellow of the Royal Society. ...
This article is about the Austrian-Swiss physicist. ...
Max Ferdinand Perutz, OM (May 19, 1914 â February 6, 2002) was an Austrian-British molecular biologist. ...
Isidor Isaac Rabi (July 29, 1898 - January 11, 1988) was an American physicist of Austro-Hungarian origin. ...
Weisskopf redirects here. ...
Psychologists and psychiatrists - Alexandra Adler, post-traumatic stress
- Alfred Adler, founder of individual psychology
- Leo Alexander, medical expert at the Nuremberg Trials
- Ernst Angel, psychology and writer
- Bruno Bettelheim, child psychology
- Josef Breuer, forerunner of psychoanalysis
- Anna Freud, child psychoanalysis
- Sigmund Freud, founder of psychoanalysis
- Viktor Frankl, founder of logotherapy
- Marie Jahoda, psychologist [17]
- Leo Kanner, child psychiatry
- Melanie Klein, psychotherapy [4]
- Heinz Kohut, psychoanalysis
- Sophie Lazarsfeld individualpsychologist, student of Alfred Adler, mother of Paul Felix Lazarsfeld
- Walter Mischel, experimental psychology
- Jacob L. Moreno, developer of psychodrama
- Otto Rank, psychoanalysis
- Wilhelm Reich, psychiatry and psychoanalysis [5]
- Theodor Reik, psychoanalysis
- Max Wertheimer, one of the founders of Gestalt psychology, born in Prague.
Alexandra Adler (September 24, 1901 _ January 4, 2001) was a neurologist and the daughter of psychoanalyst Alfred Adler. ...
Alfred Adler (February 7, 1870 â May 28, 1937) was an Austrian medical doctor and psychologist, founder of the school of individual psychology. ...
The term individual psychology can be used to refer to what is more commonly known as differential psychology or the psychology of individual differences. ...
Dr. Leo Alexander (October 11, 1905 â July 20, 1985) was an American psychiatrist, neurologist, educator, and author, of Austrian-Jewish origin. ...
For the 1947 Soviet film about the trials, see Nuremberg Trials (film). ...
Ernst Angel (11 August 1894, Vienna, Austria - 10 January 1986, [[Newark, New Jersey) was an Austrian born poet, theatre and film critic, screen play author, film director and publisher who later became a psychologist. ...
Bruno Bettelheim (August 28, 1903 - March 13, 1990) was an Austrian-born American writer and child psychologist. ...
Josef Breuer (January 15, 1842- June 20, 1925) was an Austrian psychologist whose works symbolised the foundation of psychoanalysis. ...
Anna Freud and Sadie Burkard (December 3, 1895 - October 9, 1982) was the sixth and last child of Sigmund and Julia. ...
Sigmund Freud (IPA: ), born Sigismund Schlomo Freud (May 6, 1856 â September 23, 1939), was an Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist who founded the psychoanalytic school of psychology. ...
Today psychoanalysis comprises several interlocking theories concerning the functioning of the mind. ...
Viktor Emil Frankl, M.D., Ph. ...
Developed by neurologist and psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, Logotherapy is considered the third Viennese school of psychotherapy after Freuds psychoanalysis and Adlers individual psychology. ...
Marie Jahoda (January 26, 1907 - April 28, 2001) was a British social psychologist of Austrian descent. ...
Dr Leo Kanner MD Leo Kanner (June 13, 1894 - April 4, 1981) was an Austrian-American physician known for his work related to autism. ...
Melanie Klein Melanie Klein (March 30, 1882 â September 22, 1960) was an Austrian-born British psychoanalyst, who devised therapeutic techniques for children with great impact on contemporary methods of child care and rearing. ...
Best known for his development of Self Psychology, a school of thought within psychodynamic/psychoanalytic theory, psychiatrist Heinz Kohuts contributions transformed the modern practice of analytic and dynamic treatment approaches. ...
Alfred Adler (February 7, 1870 â May 28, 1937) was an Austrian medical doctor and psychologist, founder of the school of individual psychology. ...
Image needed Paul Felix Lazarsfeld (1901-1976) was one of the major figures in 20th century American Sociology. ...
Walter Mischel (b. ...
Dr. Jacob (Jakob) Levy Moreno (18 May 1889 - 14 May 1974) was a leading psychiatrist, theorist and educator. ...
Psychodrama is a method of psychotherapy which explores, through action, the problems of people. ...
Otto Rank (April 22, 1884 â October 31, 1939) was an Austrian psychologist. ...
Wilhelm Reich (March 24, 1897 â November 3, 1957) was an Austrian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. ...
Theodor Reik (1888-1969) was a prominent psychoanalyst who trained as one of Freuds first students in Vienna, Austria. ...
Max Wertheimer (Prague, April 15, 1880 - New York, October 12, 1943) was one of the founders of Gestalt psychology. ...
Social and political scientists - Samuel Bergman, philosopher [6]
- Gustav Bergmann, philosopher
- Peter Blau, sociologist
- Paul Edwards, philosopher [18]
- Eugen Ehrlich, sociology of law
- Herbert Feigl, philosopher
- Philipp Frank, philosopher
- Paul Frankl, art historian
- Heinrich Friedjung, Moravian historian and politician. ([19]; Encyclopedia Judaica, article "Historians", list of "Prominent Jewish General Historians".)
- Heinrich Gomperz, philosopher
- Theodor Gomperz, philosopher
- Theodor Hertzka, writer of Freiland
- Raul Hilberg (1926-2007), Holocaust historian
- Ivan Illich, polymath (Jewish mother)
- Norbert Jokl, founder of Albanology[7]
- Hans Kelsen, legal philosopher
- Nachman Krochmal, Jewish philosopher
- Otto Kurz, historian (Jewish Year Book 1975 p214)
- Paul Felix Lazarsfeld, sociologist
- Emil Lederer, economist [8]
- Gerda Lerner, American feminist historian
- Robert Lowie, anthropologist
- Ludwig von Mises, economist (converted to Catholicism)
- Otto Neurath, sociologist (Jewish father)
- Julius Pokorny, scholar of Irish Gaelic
- Karl Popper, philosopher of science
- Egon Ranshofen-Wertheimer, diplomat, journalist, political scientist
- Alfred Schutz, sociologist
- Otto Weininger, anti-Semitic philosopher
- Felix Weltsch, Jewish writer, philosopher, journalist, Zionist
- Ludwig Wittgenstein, philosopher [9][10] (born and raised Catholic)
- Eric Wolf, anthropologist
Samuel(Schmuel) Hugo Bergman(n), or Samuel Bergman (December 25, 1883, Prague - â June 18, 1975, Jerusalem) is the Czech-born German and Israeli Jewish philosopher. ...
Gustav Bergmann (1906-1987) was a Jewish ontologist born in Vienna, Austria. ...
Peter Blau Peter Michael Blau was a sociologist, born February 7, 1918 in Vienna, Austria. ...
Paul Edwards, born Paul Eisenstein, (September 2, 1923-December 9, 2004) was an Austrian-American moral philosopher. ...
Eugen Ehrlich (1862 - 1922) was an Austrian legal scholar. ...
Herbert Feigl (December 14, 1902 - June 1, 1988) was an Austrian philosopher and a member of the Vienna Circle. ...
Philipp Frank was an influential philosopher during the first half of the 20th century. ...
Paul Frankl (2 January 1878, Prague â 22 April 1962, Princeton, New Jersey) was a German art historian. ...
Heinrich Gomperz (January 18, 1873, Vienna, Austria - December 27, 1942, Los Angeles, California) was an Austrian philosopher. ...
Theodor Gomperz (March 29, 1832 - August 29, 1912), German philosopher and classical scholar, was born at Brünn. ...
Theodor Hertzka, or Hertzka Tivadar (July 13, 1845, Budapest - 1924, Wiesbaden) was a Hungarian-Austrian economist and journalist. ...
Dr. Raul Hilberg Raul Hilberg (June 2, 1926 - August 4, 2007 in Williston, Vermont) was one of the best-known and most distinguished of Holocaust historians. ...
For other uses, see Holocaust (disambiguation) and Shoah (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the Austrian philosopher. ...
Norbert Jokl (February 25, 1877 â probably May 1942) was an Austrian albanologist of Jewish descent who has been called the father of albanology. ...
Hans Kelsen Hans Kelsen (Prague, October 11, 1881 â April 19, 1973) was an Austrian -American jurist of Jewish descent. ...
Nachman Kohen Krochmal (born in Brody, Galicia, on February 17, 1785; died at Tarnopol on July 31, 1840) was an Austrian philosopher, theologian, and historian. ...
Otto Kurz FBA (26 May 1908, Vienna - 3 September 1975, Jerusalem) was a historin and Slade Professor of Fine Arts, University of Oxford. ...
The Jewish Year Book is an almanac targetted at the Jewish community in the United Kingdom. ...
Image needed Paul Felix Lazarsfeld (1901-1976) was one of the major figures in 20th century American Sociology. ...
Emil Lederer (July 22, 1882, Pilsen - May 29, 1939 in New York City) was a Bohemia-born German economist. ...
This article does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
Robert Henry Lowie (1883 â 1957) was an Austrian-born American anthropologist. ...
Ludwig Heinrich Edler von Mises (September 29, 1881 â October 10, 1973) (pronounced was a notable economist and a major influence on the modern libertarian movement. ...
Otto Neurath (December 10, 1882-December 22, 1945) was an Austrian sociologist, political economist, and an unorthodox Marxist. ...
Julius Pokorny (1887–1970) was born in Prague and studied at Vienna university. ...
Sir Karl Raimund Popper CH FRS FBA (July 28, 1902 â September 17, 1994) was an Austrian and British[1] philosopher and a professor at the London School of Economics. ...
Egon Ranshofen-Wertheimer (born September 4, 1894, in Ranshofen/Braunau am Inn; died December 27, 1957, in New York) was a diplomat, journalist, doctor of laws and state. ...
Alfred Schütz (1899-1959, aka Alfred Schutz) was a philosopher and Austria and studied law in Vienna, but moved to the United States in 1939, where he became a member of the faculty of the New School for Social Research. ...
Otto Weininger (April 3, 1880 â October 4, 1903) was an Austrian philosopher. ...
Felix Weltsch (born Oct. ...
Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein (IPA: ) (April 26, 1889 in Vienna, Austria â April 29, 1951 in Cambridge, England) was an Austrian philosopher who contributed several ground-breaking ideas to philosophy, primarily in the foundations of logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of language, and the philosophy of mind. ...
Eric Wolf (1923-1999) was an anthropologist best known for his studies of Latin America and his advocacy of Marxist perspectives within anthropology. ...
Cultural figures Film and stage - Leon Askin, actor
- John Banner, actor
- Theodore Bikel, actor
- Elisabeth Bergner, stage actress
- Rudolph Bing (1902 - 1997) opera impresario, General Manager of the Metropolitan Opera in New York from 1950 to 1972[11]
- Gerhard Bronner, cabaret artist
- George Burns, actor (Austrian parents)
- Heinrich Conried, theatre owner & manager
- Ricardo Cortez, actor
- Max Fleischer, animator
- William Fox, film producer
- Grete Forst, opera singer
- Fritz Grünbaum & Karl Farkas, caberet artists
- Fritz Kortner, director
- Georg Kreisler, cabaret artist
- Hedy Lamarr, actress & inventor
- Hermann Leopoldi, cabaret artist
- Herbert Lom (1917 - ) international film actor[12]
- Fritzi Massary, singer
- Paul Muni, actor
- Luise Rainer, actress
- Max Reinhardt, director
- Joseph Schildkraut, actor
- Sam Spiegel, producer
- Josef von Sternberg, director
- Erich von Stroheim, director & actor
- Edgar G. Ulmer, director
- Helene Weigel, stage actress
- Billy Wilder, director
- Fred Zinnemann, director
Leon Askin (left) and Paulus Manker in a café in Vienna. ...
John Banner (January 28, 1910âJanuary 28, 1973) was a Jewish Austrian actor. ...
Theodore Bikel. ...
Elisabeth Bergner was born Elisabeth Ettel on August 22, 1897, in Drohobycz, Austro-Hungarian Empire (now Drogobych, Ukraine). ...
Sir Rudolph Bing Sir Rudolph Bing (January 9, 1902 – September 2, 1997) was an Austrian-born operatic impresario. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, the lead section of this article may need to be expanded. ...
Gerhard Bronner (b. ...
George Burns[1], born Nathan Birnbaum (January 20, 1896 â March 9, 1996), was an American comedian and actor. ...
Heinrich Conried (1855-1909) was a theatrical manager, born in Bielitz (Austria). ...
Ricardo Cortez, born Jacob Krantz (September 18, 1899 - April 28, 1977), was a film actor from Vienna, Austria. ...
Max Fleischer (July 19, 1883âSeptember 11, 1972) was an important pioneer in the development of the animated cartoon. ...
William Fox (born Wilhelm Fried in January 1, 1879–May 8, 1952) was the founder of Fox Film Corporation, now 20th Century Fox. ...
Fritz Grünbaum (born April 7, 1880 in Brünn, Moravia as Franz Friedrich Grünbaum; died January 14, 1941 at the Dachau concentration camp, Germany) was an Austrian cabaret artist, operetta and pop song writer, director, actor and master of ceremonies. ...
Karl Farkas (born October 28 1893 in Vienna; died May 16, 1971 in Vienna) was an austrian actor and cabaret performer. ...
Fritz Kortner (May 12, 1892, Vienna - July 22, 1970, Munich) was an Austrian-born stage and film actor. ...
Georg Kreisler (born 18 July 1922, in Vienna, Austria) is an Austrian-American German-language cabarettist, satirist, composer, and author. ...
Hedy Lamarr (November 9, 1913 â January 19, 2000) was an Austrian/Jewish-American actress and communications technology innovator. ...
Herbert Lom [Czech IPA: ] is an international film actor. ...
Fritzi Massary was an Austrian-American soprano, 21 March 1882 – 3 January 1969. ...
Paul Muni (September 22, 1895 â August 25, 1967) was an Academy Award-winning and Tony Award-winning American stage and film actor. ...
Luise Rainer in The Great Ziegfeld (1936) Luise Rainer (born January 12, 1910 in either Düsseldorf, Germany or Vienna, Austria) is a two-time Academy Award-winning film actress. ...
Max Reinhardt Max Reinhardt (born September 9, 1873 in Baden bei Wien; died October 31, 1943 in New York City) was an influential Austrian director and actor. ...
Joseph Schildkraut (March 22, 1896 â January 21, 1964) was a stage and film actor. ...
Sam Spiegel (11 November 1901 - 31 December 1985) was a successful independent film producer. ...
Josef von Sternberg (29 May 1894 â 22 December 1969) was an Austrian-American film director. ...
Erich von Stroheim (September 22, 1885 â May 12, 1957) was an Austrian - American star of the silent film age, lauded for his directional work in which he was a proto-auteur. ...
Edgar G. Ulmer - Wikipedia /**/ @import /w/skins-1. ...
Born in Vienna in 1900 the daughter of a Jewish Lawyer, she was one of the most outstanding German actors of her generation, a Communist Party member from 1930 and Artistic Director of The Berliner Ensemble after her husband Bertholt Brechts death in 1956. ...
Billy Wilder (June 22, 1906 â March 27, 2002) was an Austrian-born, Jewish-American journalist, screenwriter, film director, and producer whose career spanned more than 50 years and 60 films. ...
Fred Zinnemann (April 29, 1907âMarch 14, 1997) was an Austrian-American film director. ...
Musicians - Kurt Adler, conductor
- Norbert Brainin, violinist
- Ignaz Brüll, composer and pianist [13]
- Emanuel Feuermann, cellist
- Felix Galimir, violinist
- Heinrich Grünfeld, cellist
- Alfred Grünfeld, pianist
- Joseph Joachim, violinist (born in Kittsee, Austria, at that time Hungary)[20]
- Hans Keller, musicologist [14]
- Julius Korngold, music critic
- Fritz Kreisler (1875 - 1962) violinist and composer, one of the most famous of his day[15]
- Josef Krips, conductor (Jewish father)
- Erich Leinsdorf, conductor
- Erica Morini, violinist [21]
- David Popper, cellist
- Julius Rudel, conductor
- Erwin Schulhoff (1894 - 1942) composer and pianist[16]
- Julius Schulhoff (1825 - 1898) pianist and composer [17]
- Rudolf Schwarz, conductor [18]
- Rudolf Serkin, pianist
- Fritz Spiegl, broadcaster
- Fritz Stiedry, conductor
- Salomon Sulzer, cantor
- Walter Susskind (1913 - 1980) conductor[19]
- Richard Tauber, singer and composer[20]
- Georg Tintner, conductor
- Egon Wellesz, composer [22]
- Paul Wittgenstein, pianist
- Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler, pianist
Kurt Herbert Adler (2 April 1905 - 9 February 1988 in Marin County, California) was an American conductor born in Austria. ...
Norbert Brainin, (March 12, 1923 – April 10, 2005), was the first violinist of the Amadeus Quartet, one of the worlds most highly regarded string quartets. ...
Ignaz Brüll (November 7, 1846 - September 17, 1907) was an Austrian pianist and composer. ...
Emanuel Feuermann (November 22, 1902, Kolomea, Austria Galicia - May 25, 1942, New York City) was a celebrated Polish-Austrian-Jewish cellist. ...
Felix Galimir (12 May 1910, Viennaâ10 November 1999, New York) was an Austrian Jewish violinist and music teacher. ...
Heinrich Grünfeld (April 21, 1855, Prague - August 26, 1931, Berlin) was a Bohemian-Austrian violoncellist; a brother of Alfred Grünfeld. ...
Alfred Grünfeld (born at Prague July 4, 1852 - ) was an Austrian pianis. ...
Joseph Joachim Joseph Joachim (June 28, 1831 â August 15, 1907) (pronounced YO-a-chim) was a violinist, conductor, composer and teacher. ...
Hans Keller (1919-1985) was an Austrian-born British musician and writer who made significant contributions to musicology and music criticism, and invented the method of Wordless Functional Analysis (in which a work is analysed in musical sound alone, without any words being heard or read). ...
Julius Korngold was a noted music critic. ...
Fritz Kreisler (February 2, 1875 â January 29, 1962) was an Austria-born American violinist and composer; one of the most famous violinists of his day. ...
Josef Alois Krips (born 8 April 1902 in Vienna, died 13 October 1974 in Geneva) was an Austrian conductor and violinist. ...
Erich Leinsdorf (February 4, 1912 - September 11, 1993) was a conductor. ...
Erika Morini (January 6, 1906- November 1995 ) was an Austrian violinist, born in Vienna. ...
David Popper (June 18, 1846 â August 7, 1913) was a Bohemian cellist and composer. ...
Julius Rudel (6 March 1921, Vienna -) is a major American orchestra conductor who emigrated to the US from Austria at the age of 17 to study at the Mannes College of Music in New York City. ...
Erwin Schulhoff (Prague, June 8, 1894; Wülzburg concentration camp, near WeiÃenburg, Bavaria, August 18, 1942) was a Czech composer and pianist of German-Jewish origin. ...
Julius Schulhoff, Julius Å ulhov (August 22, 1825 in Prague - March 15, 1898 in Berlin) was a Czech-Austrian pianist and composer. ...
Rudolf Schwarz (1905-1984) was an Austrian conductor. ...
Rudolf Serkin (March 28, 1903 â May 8, 1991) was an Austrian pianist. ...
Fritz Spiegl (27 January 1926 - 23 March 2003) was was born at Zurndorf, Austria, the son of an agricultural merchant and his Jewish wife. ...
Fritz Stiedry (born [October 11th 1883 in Vienna, died August 8, 1968 in Zurich) was an Austrian conductor. ...
Salomon Sulzer (March 30, 1804, Hohenems, Tyrol - January 17, 1890, Vienna) is an Austrian cantor and composer. ...
Jan Walter Susskind (May 1, 1913 - March 25, 1980) was a Czech-born British conductor. ...
Richard Tauber (16 May 1891 â 8 January 1948) was an Austrian tenor acclaimed as one of the greatest singers of the 20th century. ...
Georg Tintner (May 22, 1917 - October 2, 1999) was a Viennese-born conductor. ...
Egon Wellesz, Composer Egon Joseph Wellesz (October 21, 1885 â November 9, 1974) Austrian composer, teacher and musicologist, pupil of Arnold Schoenberg and student of Byzantine music. ...
Paul Wittgenstein (May 11, 1887 â March 3, 1961) was an Austrian-born pianist. ...
Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler (July 16, 1863 - August 20, 1927) was an Austrian-born U.S. pianist. ...
Composers - Guido Adler, musicologist (born in Bohemia)
- Max Brand, pioneer of electronic music
- Edmund Eysler, composer
- Leo Fall, composer
- Wilhelm Grosz, composer
- Walter Jurmann, popular composer
- Erich Wolfgang Korngold, composer (born in Bohemia) [21]
- Fritz Kreisler (1875 - 1962) violinist and composer, one of the most famous of his day[15]
- Frederick Loewe, Broadway composer (Jewish father)
- Gustav Mahler, composer (born in Bohemia)
- Ignaz Moscheles, composer and pianist
- Arnold Schoenberg, composer
- Robert Starer, composer
- Max Steiner, film composer
- Oscar Straus, composer
- Ernst Toch, composer
- Viktor Ullmann, composer and pianist
- Erich Zeisl, composer
- Alexander von Zemlinsky, composer
Guido Adler (November 1, 1855, Eibenschütz(Ivančice), Moravia - February 15, 1941, Vienna) was the Austrian musicologist, writer on music. ...
Edmund Samuel Eysler (born 12 March 1874; died 4 October 1949) was an Austrian composer // Edmund Eysler was born in Vienna to a merchant family. ...
Leo Fall (born Olomouc, 2 February 1873 - died Vienna, 16 September 1925) was an Austrian composer of operettas. ...
Please wikify (format) this article or section as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style. ...
Walter Jurmann (October 12, 1903 - June 17, 1971) was an Austrian-born composer of popular music renowned for his versatility who, after emigrating to the United States, specialized in film scores and soundtracks. ...
Korngold conducting the Warner Brothers studio orchestra (Rhino Records) Erich Wolfgang Korngold (May 29, 1897 â November 29, 1957) was a 20th century romantic composer. ...
Fritz Kreisler (February 2, 1875 â January 29, 1962) was an Austria-born American violinist and composer; one of the most famous violinists of his day. ...
Frederic Loewe, an Austrian-American composer (June 10, 1901 - February 14, 1988) worked with lyricist Alan J. Lerner in musical theater. ...
âMahlerâ redirects here. ...
Ignaz Moscheles, from a portrait by his son Felix. ...
Arnold Schoenberg, Los Angeles, 1948 Arnold Schoenberg (the anglicized form of Schönberg â Schoenberg changed the spelling officially when he left Germany and re-converted to Judaism in 1933; September 13, 1874 â July 13, 1951) was an Austrian and later American composer. ...
Robert Starer (1924–2001 ) was an Austrian composer born in Vienna. ...
Maximilian Raoul Walter Steiner (born May 10, 1888 in Vienna, Austria-Hungary; died December 28, 1971 in Hollywood, California) was an Austrian-American composer of music for theater production shows and films. ...
Oscar Straus (6 March 1870 - 11 January 1954) was a Viennese composer of operettas. ...
Ernst Toch (pronounced similar to talk) (7 December 1887 - 1 October 1964) was a composer of classical music and film scores. ...
Viktor Ullmann (b. ...
Erich Zeisl was an Austrian Jewish composer, (Vienna 18 May 1905 - Los Angeles 18 February 1959). ...
Alexander von Zemlinsky Alexander Zemlinsky or Alexander von Zemlinsky, (October 14, 1871 â March 15, 1942) was an Austrian composer of classical music, conductor, and teacher. ...
Artists - Harry Seidler, Architect
- Hattie Carnegie, jewelry designer
- Josef Frank, architect & designer
- Ernst Fuchs, painter (Jewish father)
- Rudi Gernreich, fashion designer
- Ernst Gombrich, art historian
- Chaim Gross, sculptor
- Victor Gruen, architect of the modern American shopping mall
- André Heller, multimedia artist
- Friedensreich Hundertwasser, artist & architect (Jewish mother)
- Lisette Model, photographer (Jewish father)
- Richard Neutra, architect
- Weegee, photographer
- Berta Zuckerkandl, art critic & salon host, see Salon of Berta Zuckerkandl
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
Hattie Carnegie (1889-1956) was a clothing and jewelry designer based in the United States during the 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s. ...
Ernst Fuchs (b. ...
Rudi Gernreich (1922-1985) was a fashion designer and gay activist. ...
Sir Ernst Hans Josef Gombrich, OM, CBE (30 March 1909 â 3 November 2001) was an Austrian-born art historian, who spent most of his working life in the United Kingdom. ...
Chaim Gross (March 17, 1904 - 1991) was an Austrian born American sculptor. ...
Victor Gruen was an Austrian-born commercial architect who emigrated to the United States. ...
André Heller in 2006 André Heller (born March 22, 1947) is an Austrian artist and former journalist, singer and actor. ...
Hundertwasser (left) 1965 in Hannover Hundertwasser 1998 in New Zealand Friedensreich Regentag Dunkelbunt Hundertwasser (born Friedrich Stowasser, December 15, 1928 â February 19, 2000) was an Austrian painter, and sculptor. ...
Lisette Model (November 10, 1901 in Wien as Elise Amelie Felicie Stern - March 30, 1983 in New York City) was an Austrian-born American photographer Lisette Model was born Elise Felic Amelie Stern in Vienna, Austria. ...
Kaufmann House, Palm Springs, California. ...
Weegee photograph, The Critic, November 22, 1943, first published in LIFE Magazine, December 6, 1943. ...
Berta Zuckerkandl-Szeps (April 13, 1864 - October 16, 1945) was an Austrian writer, journalist, and critic. ...
Writers - Walter Abish, writer
- Ilse Aichinger, writer (Jewish mother)
- Peter Altenberg, writer
- Ernst Angel, writer and psychology
- Raphael Basch (1813-?), journalist & politician [22]
- Abraham Benisch (1814-1878) Hebraist and journalist; born Bohemia[23]
- Vicki Baum, writer
- Henri Blowitz, journalist [24]
- Hermann Broch, writer
- Max Brod, writer
- Otto Maria Carpeaux, literary critic (converted to Catholicism)
- Erich Fried, poet
- Egon Friedell, historian & writer
- Elfriede Jelinek, author, Nobel Prize (2004) (Jewish father)
- Franz Kafka, writer, (Bohemian born)
- Leopold Kompert, writer
- Paul Kornfeld (1889 - 1942) writer, author of many expressionist plays[25]
- Karl Kraus, author[26]
- Heinrich Landesmann, poet [23]
- Robert Menasse, writer
- Frederic Morton, writer
- Alfred Polgar, poet & essayist
- Leo Perutz, writer
- Joseph Roth, writer (converted to Catholicism)
- Felix Salten, Hungarian-born Austrian writer[27][28][29][30]
- Otto Soyka, writer
- Franz Werfel, playwright
- Hugo Sonnenschein, Bohemian-born writer [24]
- Arthur Schnitzler, writer
- Manès Sperber, writer, philosopher
- Friedrich Torberg, writer
- Schlomo Winninger, biographer (born in Austrian Bukovina, lived in Vienna)
- Stefan Zweig, writer
Walter Abish (born December 24, 1931) is a famous Jewish-American author. ...
Ilse Aichinger is (or was) an Austrian Jewish poet. ...
Peter Altenberg (1859 - 1919) was a writer and poet from Vienna, Austria. ...
Ernst Angel (11 August 1894, Vienna, Austria - 10 January 1986, [[Newark, New Jersey) was an Austrian born poet, theatre and film critic, screen play author, film director and publisher who later became a psychologist. ...
Raphael Basch (born 1813, Prague, Bohemia - ) was a Bohemian-Austrian writer and politician. ...
Abraham Benisch (1811, Drosau, Bohemia-1878, London) was a Hebraist and journalist. ...
Hedwig (Vicki) Baum (January 24, 1888 - August 29, 1960) was an Austrian writer. ...
Henri Georges Stephane Adolphe Opper de Blowitz (28 December 1825-18 January 1903) was a Bohemian journalist. ...
Hermann Broch (November 1, 1886 - May 30, 1951) was a 20th century Austrian writer, considered one of the major Modernists. ...
Max Brod Max Brod (May 27, 1884 â December 20, 1968) was a German-speaking Jewish author, composer, and journalist. ...
Erich Fried (6 May 1921 â November 22, 1988) was a poet known for his political-minded poetry. ...
Egon Friedell born Egon Friedmann 21 January 1878 in Vienna, died 16 March 1938 in Vienna, was a prominent Austrian philosopher, historian, journalist, actor, cabaret performer and theatre critic. ...
Elfriede Jelinek (born 20 October 1946) is an Austrian feminist playwright and novelist. ...
Kafka redirects here. ...
Leopold Kompert (May 15, 1822 - November 23, 1886) was a Bohemian Jewish writer. ...
Paul Kornfield (December 11, 1889 - April 25, 1942) was a Czech writer, author of many expressionist plays. ...
Karl Kraus (April 28, 1874 - June 12, 1936) was an eminent Austrian writer and journalist, known as a satirist, essayist, aphorist, playwright and poet. ...
Heinrich Landesmann, Hieronymus Lorm (August 9, 1821, Nikolsburg - December 4, 1902, at Brünn) was the Austrian poet and philosophical writer From his earliest childhood he was very sickly; at the age of fifteen his sight and hearing were almost completely destroyed; and later in life he became totally blind. ...
Robert Menasse Robert Menasse (born June 21, 1954 in Vienna) is an Austrian writer. ...
Frederic Morton (right) is honoured by Austrian Federal President Thomas Klestil (â ) on 25 June 2003 Frederic Morton (born October 5, 1924) is a Jewish Austrian writer who fled to the United States in 1940. ...
Leo Perutz (November 2, 1882 â August 25, 1957) was a German language novelist and mathematician. ...
Joseph Roth (September 2, 1894 in Brody - May 27, 1939 in Paris) was an Austrian Jewish novelist who converted to Catholicism and is best known for his family saga The Radetzky March (1932), and for his novel of Jewish life Job (1930). ...
Felix Salten (September 6, 1869 – October 8, 1945) was an Austrian writer. ...
Franz Werfel, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1940 Werfels grave in the Zentralfriedhof, Vienna Franz Werfel (September 10, 1890 â August 26, 1945) was an Austrian-Bohemian novelist, playwright, and poet who wrote in German. ...
Hugo Sonnenschein (Pseudonym: Sonka, Hugo Sonka) (May 25, 1890, Gaya bei Brünn (now Kyjov) - July 20, 1953, MÃrov, near Prague) was a Austrian writer from Bohemia. ...
Arthur Schnitzler Arthur Schnitzler (May 15, 1862 - October 21, 1931) was an Austrian writer and doctor. ...
Manès Sperber (* December 12, 1905 in ZabÅotów near Kolomea, Austrian Galicia (today Zabolotiv, Ukraine); â February 05, 1984 in Paris) was an austrian-french novelist, essayist and psychologist. ...
Friedrich Torberg (September 16, 1908 - November 10, 1979) is the pen-name of Friedrich Kantor-Berg, an Austrian writer. ...
Schlomo Winninger â(1877, Gura Humora, Bukovinaâ1968, in Israel) was an Austrian-Jewish biographer. ...
Stefan Zweig Stefan Zweig (November 28, 1881, Vienna, Austria â February 23, 1942, Petrópolis, Brazil) was an Austrian novelist, playwright, journalist and biographer. ...
Sport figures Hakoah Vienna football team, 1925 Sport Club Hakoah Wien or Hakoah Vienna is a Viennese athletic club which was the largest of its time in the early 20th century. ...
Sport Club Maccabi Wien is an Austrian football club, and is based in Vienna As of September 30, 2006 Official Maccabi Wien Categories: | | ...
Richard Bergmann (born in 1920 in Vienna, Austria, died in 1970) was an Austrian and British table tennis player. ...
Judith Deutsch (born September 18, 1918 in Vienna) was a swimming champion who held every Austrian womens middle and long distance freestyle record in 1935. ...
Otto Herschmann (4 January 1877 â 14 June 1942) was an Austrian swimmer. ...
Hugo Meisl (November 16, 1881 (Maleschau, Bohemia) - February 17, 1937), brother of the journalist Willy Meisl, was the multi-lingual football coach of the famous Austrian Wunderteam of the early 1930s, as well as a referee. ...
Paul Neumann (13 June 1875 â 9 February 1932) was an Austrian swimmer. ...
Ellen Müller-Preis (née Preis, May 6, 1912 - November 18, 2007) was a retired Austrian foil fencer. ...
Rudolf Spielmann (5 May 1883 - 20 August 1942) was an Austrian-Jewish chess player of the romantic school. ...
Miscellaneous - Martin Buber, Jewish philosopher
- Alfred Edersheim, Bible scholar [31]
- Eduard Glaser, Arabist explorer
- Ignaz Glaser, Entrepreneur
- Maurice de Hirsch, banker [32]
- Robert Kronfeld, gliding pioneer
- Wilhelm Jerusalem, rabbi
- Hermann Wassertrilling, rabbi
- Isaak Löw Hofmann, Edler von Hofmannsthal, merchant [33]
- Rixi Markus, contract bridge player (born in Austrian Bukovina, lived in Vienna)
- Marcel Prawy, opera guru
- Jakob Rosenfeld, Chinese doctor & general
- Chaim Sheba, Israeli physician (born in Austrian Bukovina, lived in Vienna)
- Martin Schlaf, millionaire businessman
- Hedi Stadlen musicologist, philosopher and British/Sri Lankan Communist.
- Moritz Steinschneider, Bibliographer and Orientalist[34]
- George Weidenfeld, publisher [25]
Martin Buber (8 February 1878 â 13 June 1965) was an Austrian-Israeli-Jewish philosopher, translator, and educator, whose work centered on theistic ideals of religious consciousness, interpersonal relations, and community. ...
Alfred Edersheim (March 7, 1825 â March 16, 1889) was a Jewish convert to Christianity and a biblical scholar, known especially for his book The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah (1883). ...
Ignaz Glaser (* May 5th 1853 in Bohemia; â August 11th 1916) was a businessman from Prague and the founder of one of the biggest sheet glass factories in the k. ...
Maurice de Hirsch, Baron Moritz von Hirsch auf Gereuth, in the baronage of Bavaria (December 9, 1831 - April 21, 1896), capitalist and philanthropist (German by birth, Austro-Hungarian by domicile), was born in Munich. ...
Robert Kronfeld (May 5, 1904 - February 12, 1948) was an Austrian gliding champion and sailplane designer of the 1920s and 30s. ...
Wilhelm Jerusalem (October 11, 1854, Drenitz/Drenic (DÅenice u Chrudimi), Bohemia - July 15, 1923, Vienna) was a Austrian Jewish philosopher. ...
Hermann Wassertrilling, or Hebrew: áºebi-Hirsch ben Nathan Wassertrilling, (Zwi-)Hirsch Wassertrilling (b. ...
Isaak Löw Hofmann, Edler von Hofmannsthal (born June 10, 1759, at Prostiebor (now ProstiboÅ), near Kladrau, in the district of Pilsen, Bohemia; died at Vienna December 12, 1849) was an Austrian merchant. ...
Rixi Markus (June 27, 1910 â 1992) was a British bridge player. ...
Marcel Horace Frydman, Ritter von Prawy (born December 29, 1911 in Vienna - February 23, 2003 in Vienna) was an Austrian dramaturg, opera connoisseur and opera critic. ...
Jacob Rosenfeld (1903-1952) is a Jew who was born in Austria Lambeck. ...
Chaim Sheba (1908, Frasin, near Gura Humora, Romaniaâ1971) was an Israeli physician. ...
Hedi Stadlen, (6 January 1916 â 21 January 2004), better known in Sri Lanka as Hedi Keuneman, was an Austrian Jewish philosopher, political activist and musicologist. ...
Moritz Steinschneider ( March 30, 1816, Prostějov (Prossnitz), Moravia - 1907) was the Austrian bibliographer and Orientalist. ...
Sir Arthur George Weidenfeld, Baron Weidenfeld of Chelsea (born September 13, 1919 in Vienna) is a British publisher, philanthropist, and newspaper columnist. ...
Others - Jean Améry, an ethnic Jew, noted for having written one of the central texts on the Nazi death camps
- Viktor Aptowitzer (July 16, 1871, Tarnopol, Galizien, - December 5, 1942, Jerusalem), Jewish theologian, Talmudist;[26] "two Austrian Jewish scholars - Samuel Krauss and Viktor Aptowitzer"
- Rudolf Auspitz (July 7, 1837, Vienna - March 8, 1906, Vienna), Austrian politician, entrepreneur (Unternehmer) [27]
- Friedrich Austerlitz (April 25, 1862, Hochlieben, Bohemia - July 5, 1931, Vienna), Austrian journalist, politician
- Joseph Samuel Bloch (November 20, 1850, Dukla, Galizien - October 1, 1923, Vienna), Austrian publicist, politician [28]
- Ludo Moritz Hartmann, Austrian Jewish historian and statesman [29] " two lay Jews Ludo Moritz Hartmann"
- Paul Hatvani, exactly Paul Hirsch (August 16, 1892, Vienna - November 9, 1975, Kew, near Melbourne), Austrian Jewish writer, chemist [30] "Paul Hatvani, a German Jewish refugee"
Else/Elsa Bernstein-Porges (born Else Porges, pseudonym: Ernst Rosmer; October 28, 1866, Wien - July 2, 1949, Hamburg-Eimsbüttel) was an Austrian-German writer, dramatist. ...
// Porges von Portheim is the prrominent Bohemian family of which the following members won particular distinction: House Members This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. ...
Heinrich Porges (November 25, 1837, Prague - November 17, 1900, München) was a Czech-Austrian German choirmaster (Chorleiter), music-critic. ...
Henikstein is a Jewish (later Christian) nobility Alfred Freiherr von Henikstein Joseph von Henikstein See also Hönig, Hönigstein Categories: | | | ...
Gomperz, Gompertz, Gompers, Gumperz, Gumpertz famous Jewish Gomperz family of Vienna was originated from Brno: Philipp Gomperz (1782-1857), banker in Brno, married with Henriette Auspitz (1792-1881) Josephine Gomperz (Josephine von Wertheimstein) (1820-1894), married with Leopold von Wertheimstein (1801-1883) Max Gomperz, Max Ritter von Gomperz (about 1822...
Eskeles This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. ...
Jean Améry (October 31, 1912 - October 17, 1978) was an Austrian of Jewish descent, noted for having written At the Minds Limits, one of the central texts on the Nazi death camps. ...
is the 197th day of the year (198th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
1871 (MDCCCLXXI) was a common year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar). ...
Ternopil (Тернопіль in Ukrainian, Tarnopol in Polish, Ternopol in Russian) is a city in Western Ukraine, located at the banks of the Seret river. ...
is the 339th day of the year (340th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1942 (MCMXLII) was a common year starting on Thursday (the link will display the full 1942 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
For other uses, see Jerusalem (disambiguation). ...
is the 188th day of the year (189th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Queen Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom (1837 - 1901) 1837 (MDCCCXXXVII) was a common year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar). ...
is the 67th day of the year (68th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
1906 (MCMVI) was a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar). ...
is the 115th day of the year (116th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
This article is about 1862 . ...
is the 186th day of the year (187th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1931 (MCMXXXI) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display full 1931 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Josef Samuel Bloch (born at Dukla, Galicia, November 20, 1850, d. ...
is the 324th day of the year (325th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
For the game, see: 1850 (board game) 1850 (MDCCCL) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Sunday [1] of the 12-day-slower Julian calendar). ...
Dukla is a village and an eponymous municipality in southeastern Poland, in the Subcarpathian Voivodship. ...
is the 274th day of the year (275th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1923 (MCMXXIII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
is the 228th day of the year (229th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1892 (MDCCCXCII) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian Calendar (or a leap year starting on Wednesday of the 12-day slower Julian calendar). ...
is the 313th day of the year (314th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1975 (MCMLXXV) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Kew is a place in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames in South West London. ...
Footnotes - ^ [1] Accessed 8 Feb 2007.
- ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born in Linz, Austria, of Jewish parents"
- ^ [2] "Growing up in Vienna in a well-to-do Jewish family..." [3] "One of the most brilliant Jewish scientists to be driven from Germany by Nazi persecution..."
- ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born in Vienna of Jewish parentage"
- ^ Gay, Miriam. "Reich, Wilhelm." Encyclopaedia Judaica. Eds. Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik. Vol. 17. 2nd ed. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2007. 198-199. 22 vols. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Thomson Gale.
- ^ Jewish Agency for Israel; The Hugo Bergmann family Papers; both accessed 11 March 2007
- ^ Biography of Ernest Koliqi, Shkoder.net Authors from Shkodra: "Norbert Jokl (1877-1942), the renowned Austrian Albanologist of Jewish origin" Accessed 8 Dec 2006.
- ^ JInfo list of economists accessed 17 May 2007
- ^ Jewish Chronicle, April 27, 2001 p.34: "he believed that, as a Jew, he was capable of only derivative thought."
- ^ Evening Standard (London), 24/5/2004, p15: "Born less than a week apart, Adolf Hitler and the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein attended the institution together. There is a haunting school photograph of the young, complex, Jewish philosopher just one row away from the most evil tyrant of the 20th century."
- ^ Bing - [4] Rudolf Bing... had been born a Jew in Vienna"
- ^ According to the Encyclopaedia Judaica, CD-ROM ed, art. Lom, Herbert.
- ^ Jewish: "Contemporary Review, June, 1999 by Anthony Paterson" [5] "the Nazi ban on his compositions - he was Jewish" Accessed 6 Nov 2006.
born Moravia: "Composers of Classical Music" [6] "Brull, Ignaz 1846-1907 Moravia, Prossnitz - Austria, Vienna" Accessed 6 November 2006. - ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: "he described himself as an 'unpious Jew'"
- ^ a b Kreisler - [7] "Jascha Heifetz, Fritz Kreisler, Mischa Elman... were all Jews, too"
- ^ School of Oriental and African Studies, Newsletter of the Jewish Music Institute "Erwin Schulhoff, a Czech Jew executed by the Nazis..." Accessed 8 Dec 2006.
- ^ Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2nd ed., art. "Schulhoff, Julius": "Born in Prague"
- ^ Jewish Chronicle, February 16, 2007, p.14: "he carried on as the sole Jewidh conductor of the Kulturbund"
- ^ Bach cantatas site "The distinguished Czech-born English conductor" Lake Placid Film Forum "Walter Susskind, a German Jew" Both accessed 4 Jan 2007
- ^ "The Penguin Dictionary of Musical Performers", Arthur Jacobs, ISBN 0-14-051160-1, "Under threat as a Jew from Nazi persecution, settled in Britain, 1938."
- ^ Korngold Society: "he got thrown out of Vienna because he was Jewish" Jessica Duchen, author of E. Korngold's biography); Korngold Society: "BRNO, where the composer was born"; accessed 6 Feb 2007.
- ^ Jewish Encyclopedia, "born at Prague"; accessed 3 Dec 2006.
- ^ British Concise Dictionary of National Biography
- ^ Encyclopaedia Judaica, 2nd ed., art. "Blowitz, Henri
- ^ [8] "German-Jewish writers: Paul Kornfeld"
- ^ The Literary Encyclopedia: "Karl Kraus was born in Jicin (or Gitschin), Czechoslovakia (then a part of Austria-Hungary) into a Jewish family." Accessed 8 Feb 2007.
- ^ [9] "Hungarian writer Felix Salten" [10] "Hungarian/Austrian Jewish writer Felix Salten"
- ^ [11] "Everyone knows Walt Disney's Bambi. Far fewer know that the author of the original book was the Austrian writer, Felix Salten."
- ^ [12] "..Austrian novelist and journalist..."
- ^ [13]
- ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born of Jewish parents at Vienna"
- ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: "His grandfather Jacob had established the family as one of the first Jewish families to acquire great wealth and social acceptability in Bavaria ... His mother came from an Orthodox Frankfurt family and ensured that the children were properly instructed in Jewish matters ... He was a citizen of Austria-Hungary at his death."
- ^ jewish Encyclopedia "born June 10, 1759, at Prostiebor, near Kladrau, in the district of Pilsen, Bohemia" accessed 8 Feb 2007
- ^ Jewish Encyclopedia
The Dictionary of National Biography (or DNB) is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history. ...
The Dictionary of National Biography (or DNB) is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history. ...
The Jewish Telegraph is a Jewish Newspaper in Britain. ...
The Encyclopaedia Judaica is a 26-volume English-language encyclopedia of the Jewish people and their faith, Judaism. ...
The Dictionary of National Biography (or DNB) is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history. ...
The School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) is a specialist constituent of the University of London committed to the arts and humanities, languages and cultures and the law and social sciences concerning Asia, Africa, and the Near and Middle East. ...
...
The Jewish Telegraph is a Jewish Newspaper in Britain. ...
The Dictionary of National Biography (or DNB) is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history. ...
The Encyclopaedia Judaica is a 26-volume English-language encyclopedia of the Jewish people and their faith, Judaism. ...
The Dictionary of National Biography (or DNB) is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history. ...
The Dictionary of National Biography (or DNB) is a standard work of reference on notable figures from British history. ...
The Jewish Encyclopedia was an encyclopedia originally published between 1901 and 1906 by Funk and Wagnalls. ...
See also |