Results 21 to 30 of about 2,114 (263)
Dansk og/eller jøde (Jacques Blum, 1972) is reviewed by George Nelleman.Svensk flyktingpolitik under internationellt tryck 1936–1941 (Hans Lindberg, 1973) is reviewed by Joachim Nelhans.
George Nelleman, Joachim Nelhans
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Judendom och kristendom under de första århundradena. Nordiskt patristikerprojekt 1982–85. Vol. 1 (eds. Sten Hidal, Karl-Johan Illman, Tryggve Kronholm et al, 1986) is reviewed by Roger Syrén and M.H. Narrowe.The Jewish communities of Scandinavia. Sweden,
Roger Syrén +2 more
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Bunds historia framstår som både avslutad och högaktuell
En recension av Håkan Blomqvists bok Socialism på jiddisch: judiska Arbeter Bund i Sverige (Carlssons, 2020).
Martin Englund
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The medieval roots of antisemitism in Sweden
The lack of a local Jewish community did not prevent medieval Swedish clerics and lay people from being interested in Jews and Jewish questions. They bought, translated, read and preached from most of the available textual sources and thus spread the ...
Cordelia Heß
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In 1912, B’nai B’rith expanded to the North of Europe. At that time, B’nai B’rith was an order for Jewish men, organized in local lodges. In a more informal way, women often participated in the work of the European B’nai B’rith lodges, and in the ...
Hans Levy
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Till saknadens lov (Mikael Enckell, 1988) is reviewed by Inge Jonsson.Judiskt liv i Norden (eds. G. Broberg, H. Runblom & M. Tydén, 1988) is reviewed by Karl-Johan Illman.Multiethnic studies in Uppsala.
Inge Jonsson +4 more
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Homage to a king and country. A bibliography of Swedish Jewish pamphlets
A little-known part of Swedish Jewish bibliography are the many small separate booklets and addresses of homage produced by the Jewish communities in Stockholm, Norrköping, Gothenburg and Karlskrona to honor King and Country.
Margit Hoffman
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Exploring Jewish Country Houses in Sweden, 1760s-1960s
While much is known about Jews as economic actors, bearers of culture, and patrons in European cities between the eighteenth and twentieth centuries, Jews as owners of country estates have until recently almost eluded investigation, even though some
Mia Kuritzén Löwengart, Ulväng Göran
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Part-of-Speech and Morphological Tagging of Algerian Judeo-Arabic
Most linguistic studies of Judeo-Arabic, the ensemble of dialects spoken and written by Jews in Arab lands, are qualitative in nature and rely on laborious manual annotation work, and are therefore limited in scale.
Ofra Tirosh-Becker +3 more
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