Chernivtsi (redirect from Czernowitz)
aftermath of the Russo-Turkish War. Chernivtsi (known at that time as Czernowitz) became the center of the Galicia's Bukovina District until 1848, later...
99 KB (9,703 words) - 13:39, 7 October 2024
Yiddishist movement (redirect from Czernowitz Conference)
known as "The Czernowitz Conference" (טשערנאָוויצער קאָנפֿערענץ, Tshernovitser Konferents) took place in the Austro-Hungarian city of Czernowitz, Bukovina...
24 KB (2,901 words) - 03:21, 18 September 2024
Bukovina District (redirect from Kreis Czernowitz)
Bukowina), also known as the Chernivtsi District (‹See Tfd›German: Kreis Czernowitz), was an administrative division – a Kreis (lit. 'circle') – of the Kingdom...
13 KB (1,105 words) - 23:48, 13 August 2024
List of mayors of Chernivtsi (redirect from List of mayors of Czernowitz (1832-1918))
Chernivtsi history History of Chernivtsi (in Ukrainian) "Bürgermeister von Czernowitz". Archived from the original on 2013-05-28. Retrieved 2013-06-10. “Bukowinaer...
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Chernivtsi University (redirect from Franz-Josephs-Universität Czernowitz)
it was founded in 1875 as the Franz-Josephs-Universität Czernowitz when Chernivtsi (Czernowitz) was the capital of the Duchy of Bukovina, a Cisleithanian...
23 KB (2,328 words) - 14:04, 24 September 2024
The Czernowitz Synagogue, also called The Temple of Czernowitz (Ukrainian: Темпль, lit. 'Temple') was a former Reform Jewish synagogue located in Chernivtsi...
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(stadtholder) appointed by the emperor, with his official residence at Czernowitz from 1850. In 1860 the Bukovina was again amalgamated with Galicia, but...
33 KB (3,101 words) - 10:09, 29 September 2024
Hayyim Tyrer (redirect from Hayyim of Czernowitz)
for several well known Hasidic works. He is also known as "Hayyim of Czernowitz", after his time there. He was a pupil of Rabbi Yechiel Michl (the Maggid...
6 KB (421 words) - 22:16, 2 July 2024
Vorwärts (Cernăuți) (redirect from Vorwärts (Czernowitz))
('Forward') was a German-language socialist daily newspaper published from Czernowitz/Cernăuți, Bukovina (in Austria-Hungary, later in Romania; present-day...
6 KB (515 words) - 11:59, 25 December 2022
Baretzki was born in 1919 into a Bukovina German family in Cernăuți (Czernowitz), then part of the Kingdom of Romania. Hermann Langbein, an Austrian historian...
15 KB (1,828 words) - 22:10, 1 September 2024