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The Holocaust - Aftermath

A Wisdom Archive on The Holocaust - Aftermath

The Holocaust - Aftermath

A selection of articles related to The Holocaust - Aftermath

We recommend this article: The Holocaust - Aftermath - 1, and also this: The Holocaust - Aftermath - 2.
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The Holocaust - Aftermath
The Holocaust, The Holocaust - Aftermath, The Holocaust - Art and literature, The Holocaust - Concentration and Labor Camps 1933-1945, The Holocaust - Cruelty, The Holocaust - Death Marches and liberation 1944-1945, The Holocaust - Death Squads 1941-1943, The Holocaust - Death toll, The Holocaust - Disabled people, The Holocaust - Displaced Persons and the State of Israel, The Holocaust - Efficiency, The Holocaust - Etymology and usage of the term, The Holocaust - Euthanasia 1939-1941, The Holocaust - Execution of the Holocaust, The Holocaust - Extermination camps 1942-1945, The Holocaust - Features of the Nazi Holocaust, The Holocaust - Gay men, The Holocaust - Ghettos 1940-1945, The Holocaust - Historical interpretations, The Holocaust - Holocaust Memorial Day, The Holocaust - Holocaust theology, The Holocaust - Impact on culture, The Holocaust - Jehovah's Witnesses, The Holocaust - Jews, The Holocaust - Legal action against genocide, The Holocaust - Legal proceedings against Nazis, The Holocaust - Notes, The Holocaust - Others, The Holocaust - Pogroms 1938-1941, The Holocaust - Rescuers, The Holocaust - Resistance, The Holocaust - Resistance and Rescuers, The Holocaust - Resources, The Holocaust - Revisionists and deniers, The Holocaust - Roma, Sinti, and Manush 'Gypsies', The Holocaust - Scale, The Holocaust - Searching for records of victims, The Holocaust - Slavs, The Holocaust - Victims, The Holocaust - Who was directly involved in the killings?, The Holocaust - Why did people participate in, authorize, or tacitly accept the killing?, Anti-Semitism, Genocide, Historikerstreit, Death marches (Holocaust), Phases of the Holocaust, Jews outside Europe under Nazi occupation, Final solution, Generalplan Ost, Operation Reinhard, Lublin Plan, Madagascar Plan, Rhineland Bastard, List of famous Holocaust survivors, List of famous Holocaust victims, Aristides Sousa Mendes, Oskar Schindler, Chaim Michael Dov Weissmandl, Namik Kemal Yolga, Necdet Kent, Jan Karski, Nicolaus Rossini, Witold Pilecki, Zegota, Auschwitz, Dachau concentration camp, Treblinka, Majdanek, Belzec, Sobibór, Chełmno extermination camp, Warsaw Ghetto, Judenrat — Jewish administrative bodies established in the ghettos by order of the Nazis, Bialystok, Massacre in Jedwabne, Paneriai, Odessa Massacre, Zydowski Zwiazek Walki, ZOB, Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Bialystok Ghetto Uprising, Marcinkance Ghetto Uprising, History of Gays during the Holocaust, History of the Roma and Sinti during the Holocaust, Holocaust memorials, Involvement of Croatian Catholic clergy with the Ustasa regime, Wiedergutmachung — reparations to individual survivors

ARTICLES RELATED TO The Holocaust - Aftermath

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - The Holocaust

The Holocaust is the name applied to the systematic state-sponsored persecution and genocide of various ethnic, religious and political groups during World War II by Nazi Germany and collaborators. Early elements of the Holocaust include the Kristallnacht pogrom and the T-4 Euthanasia Program, progressing to the later use of killing squads and extermination camps in a massive and centrally organized effort to murder every possi ...

Including:

Read more here: » The Holocaust: Encyclopedia - The Holocaust

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - The Holocaust - Aftermath
The Holocaust - Displaced Persons and the State of Israel. The Holocaust and its aftermath left millions of refugees, including many Jews who had lost most or all of their family members and possessions, and often faced persistent anti-Semitism in their home countries. The original plan of the Allies was to repatriate these "Displaced Persons" to their country of origin, but many refused to return, or were unable to as their homes or communities had been destroyed. As a result, more than 250,000 languished ...

See also:

The Holocaust, The Holocaust - Etymology and usage of the term, The Holocaust - Features of the Nazi Holocaust, The Holocaust - Premeditation, The Holocaust - Efficiency, The Holocaust - Scale, The Holocaust - Cruelty, The Holocaust - Victims, The Holocaust - Jews, The Holocaust - Slavs, The Holocaust - Roma Sinti and Manush 'Gypsies', The Holocaust - Gay men, The Holocaust - Jehovah's Witnesses, The Holocaust - Disabled people, The Holocaust - Others, The Holocaust - Death toll, The Holocaust - Searching for records of victims, The Holocaust - Execution of the Holocaust, The Holocaust - Concentration and Labor Camps 1933-1945, The Holocaust - Pogroms 1938-1941, The Holocaust - Euthanasia 1939-1941, The Holocaust - Ghettos 1940-1945, The Holocaust - Death Squads 1941-1943, The Holocaust - Extermination camps 1942-1945, The Holocaust - Death Marches and liberation 1944-1945, The Holocaust - Resistance and Rescuers, The Holocaust - Resistance, The Holocaust - Rescuers, The Holocaust - Historical interpretations, The Holocaust - Who was directly involved in the killings?, The Holocaust - Why did people participate in authorize or tacitly accept the killing?, The Holocaust - Revisionists and deniers, The Holocaust - Aftermath, The Holocaust - Displaced Persons and the State of Israel, The Holocaust - Legal proceedings against Nazis, The Holocaust - Legal action against genocide, The Holocaust - Impact on culture, The Holocaust - Holocaust theology, The Holocaust - Art and literature, The Holocaust - Holocaust Memorial Day, The Holocaust - Notes, The Holocaust - Resources

Read more here: » The Holocaust: Encyclopedia II - The Holocaust - Aftermath

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - The Holocaust - Aftermath

The Holocaust - Displaced Persons and the State of Israel. The Holocaust and its aftermath left millions of refugees, including many Jews who had lost most or all of their family members and possessions, and often faced persistent anti-Semitism in their home countries. The original plan of the Allies was to repatriate these "Displaced Persons" to their country of origin, but many refused to return, or were unable to as their homes or communities ha ...

See also:

The Holocaust, The Holocaust - Etymology and usage of the term, The Holocaust - Features of the Nazi Holocaust, The Holocaust - Premeditation, The Holocaust - Efficiency, The Holocaust - Scale, The Holocaust - Cruelty, The Holocaust - Victims, The Holocaust - Jews, The Holocaust - Slavs, The Holocaust - Roma Sinti and Manush 'Gypsies', The Holocaust - Gay men, The Holocaust - Jehovah's Witnesses, The Holocaust - Disabled people, The Holocaust - Others, The Holocaust - Death toll, The Holocaust - Searching for records of victims, The Holocaust - Execution of the Holocaust, The Holocaust - Concentration and Labor Camps 1933-1945, The Holocaust - Pogroms 1938-1941, The Holocaust - Euthanasia 1939-1941, The Holocaust - Ghettos 1940-1945, The Holocaust - Death squads 1941-1943, The Holocaust - Extermination camps 1942-1945, The Holocaust - Death marches and liberation 1944-1945, The Holocaust - Resistance and rescuers, The Holocaust - Resistance, The Holocaust - Rescuers, The Holocaust - Perpetrators and collaborators, The Holocaust - Who was directly involved in the killings?, The Holocaust - Who authorized the killings?, The Holocaust - Who knew about the killings?, The Holocaust - Historical interpretations, The Holocaust - Why did people participate in authorize or tacitly accept the killing?, The Holocaust - Revisionists and deniers, The Holocaust - Aftermath, The Holocaust - Displaced Persons and the State of Israel, The Holocaust - Legal proceedings against Nazis, The Holocaust - Legal action against genocide, The Holocaust - Impact on culture, The Holocaust - Holocaust theology, The Holocaust - Art and literature, The Holocaust - Holocaust Memorial Days, The Holocaust - Notes, The Holocaust - Nazi plans related to the Holocaust, The Holocaust - Eugenics, The Holocaust - Individuals and the Holocaust, The Holocaust - Nazi concentration camps, The Holocaust - Ghettos, The Holocaust - Massacres and pogroms, The Holocaust - Jewish resistance

Read more here: » The Holocaust: Encyclopedia II - The Holocaust - Aftermath

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - Vichy France

Vichy France, or the Vichy regime was the de facto French government of 1940-1944 during the Nazi Germany occupation of World War II. Now known in French as the Régime de Vichy or Vichy, during its existence it referred to itself as L'État Français (The French State). Vichy France was established after France surrendered to Germany in 1940, and took its name from the government's capital in Vichy, southeast of Paris near Clermont-Ferrand. While officially neutral in the war, it was essentia ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vichy France: Encyclopedia - Vichy France

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - British Mandate of Palestine

The British Mandate of Palestine was a territory in the Middle East including the modern territories of Israel, Jordan, and the West Bank and Gaza Strip, formerly belonging to the Ottoman Empire, which the League of Nations entrusted to the United Kingdom to administer in the aftermath of World War I as a Mandate Territory. British Mandate of Palestine - Establishment of British League of Nations mandate. British interest in Zionism dates to the rise in importance of the British Empire's South Asian enterpr ...

Including:

Read more here: » British Mandate of Palestine: Encyclopedia - British Mandate of Palestine

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - Armenian Genocide

Despite this thesis, most Armenian, Western, and an increasing number of Turkish scholars believe that the massacres were a case of what is termed genocide. For example, most Western sources point to the sheer scale of the death toll. The event is also said to be the second-most studied case of genocide, and often draws comparison with the Nazi Holocaust. A growing list of countries, as discussed below, have officially recognized and accepted the authenticity of the Armenian Genocide. Armenian Genocide - Armenians in AnatoliaIncluding:

Read more here: » Armenian Genocide: Encyclopedia - Armenian Genocide

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - Arthur Hertzberg

Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg was born in Poland in 1921. Hertzberg, was 5 when he left Europe with his parents in 1926, recalled that as a teenager in an Orthodox Jewish neighborhood in Youngstown, Ohio, he would not accept the notion that the literary world of talmudic learning, the kabbalistic books and the writing of the chasidim were less worthy as compared to the Iliad, the Odyssey or Dante's Inferno. His father was an Orthodox rabbi trained in Eastern Europe, who taught Arthur to appreciate the richness of the Talmud and ...

Including:

Read more here: » Arthur Hertzberg: Encyclopedia - Arthur Hertzberg

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - 1940s

1910s 1920s 1930s - 1940s - 1950s 1960s 1970s 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1940s - Events and trends. The 1940s were seen as a transition period between the radical 1930s and the conservative 1950s, which also leads the period to be divided in two halves: The first half of the decade was dominated by World War II, the widest and most destructive armed conflict in history. So consequential was this event and its brutal aftermath that it laid the foundation ...

Including:

Read more here: » 1940s: Encyclopedia - 1940s

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia - Benjamin Frankel

Benjamin Frankel (January 31, 1906 – February 12, 1973) was a British composer. Benjamin Frankel - Biography. Frankel was born in London on January 31, 1906, the son of Polish-Jewish parents. He started learning the violin at an early age, showing remarkable talent; at age 14, his piano-playing talents attracted the attention of Victor Benham, who persuaded his parents to let him study music full-time. He spent a few weeks in Germany in 1922, but quickly returned to London, where he won a scholarship from ...

Including:

Read more here: » Benjamin Frankel: Encyclopedia - Benjamin Frankel

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War

Hans Frank was captured by American troops in May 1945 and was one of the defendants at the Nuremberg Trials. During his trial he converted to Catholicism. Frank surrendered forty volumes of his diaries to the Tribunal and much evidence against him and others was gathered from them. He was found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and on 1 October 1946 he was sentenced to death by hanging. In 1945 Poland's borders were redrawn, following the decision taken at the Teheran Conference of 1943 at the insistence of the Soviet ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Hungary - Revolution and Emancipation 1848-1849

History of the Jews in Hungary - Jews and the Hungarian Revolution. Jews entered the national guard as early as March of 1848; although they were excluded from certain cities, they reentered as soon as the danger to the country seemed greater than the hatred of the citizens. At Pest the Jewish national guard formed a separate division. When the national guards of Pápa were mobilized against the Croatians, Leopold Löw, rabbi of Pápa, joined the Hungarian ranks, inspiring his companions by his words of encourage ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Hungary, History of the Jews in Hungary - Earliest references through 1095, History of the Jews in Hungary - Early history 1100-1300, History of the Jews in Hungary - Expulsion recall and persecution 1349-1526, History of the Jews in Hungary - During the war with the Ottomans 1526-cca. 1700, History of the Jews in Hungary - Hapsburg rule, History of the Jews in Hungary - Further persecution and expulsions 1686-1740, History of the Jews in Hungary - Population in 1735, History of the Jews in Hungary - Under Maria Theresa 1740-1780, History of the Jews in Hungary - Under Joseph II 1780-1790, History of the Jews in Hungary - Toleration and Repression 1790-1847, History of the Jews in Hungary - Revolution and Emancipation 1848-1849, History of the Jews in Hungary - Jews and the Hungarian Revolution, History of the Jews in Hungary - Brief Emancipation and Aftermath 1849, History of the Jews in Hungary - Struggles for a second emancipation 1859-1867, History of the Jews in Hungary - 20th Century: Persecution and destruction, History of the Jews in Hungary - The Holocaust, History of the Jews in Hungary - Communist Rule, History of the Jews in Hungary - Today

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Hungary: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Hungary - Revolution and Emancipation 1848-1849

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland

Persecution of the Jews by the occupation government, particularly in the urban areas, began immediately after the occupation. In the first year and a half, however, the Germans confined themselves to stripping the Jews of their property and herding them into ghettoes and putting them into forced labor in war-related industries. During this period the Jewish community leadership, which, unlike Polish authorities, had an official recognition by the Germans, was able to some extent to bargain with the Germans. After the German attack on the So ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile

See also special article about Polish government in exile during Second World War. The Polish government re-assembled in Paris and formed a government in exile. Władysław Raczkiewicz was sworn in as President and chose General Władysław Sikorski as Prime Minister. Most of the Polish Navy escaped to the United Kingdom, and thousands of other Poles escaped through Romania or across the Baltic Sea to continue the fight. Many Poles took part in defence of France, in the Battle of Britain and other opera ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance

Resistance to the German occupation began almost at once, although there is little terrain in Poland suitable for guerilla operations. The Home Army (in Polish Armia Krajowa or AK), loyal to the Polish government in exile in London, was formed from a number of smaller groups in 1942. From 1943 the AK was in competition with the People's Army (Armia Ludowa or AL), backed by the Soviet Union and controlled by the Polish Communist Party. By 1944 the AK had some 380,000 men, although few arms: the AL was much smaller. The Polish resistance or ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

As the Soviets advanced through Poland in late 1944 the German administration collapsed. The Communist-controlled Committee of National Liberation (PKWN, Polski Komitet Wyzwolenia Narodowego), headed by Bolesław Bierut, was installed by the Soviet Union in Lublin, the first major Polish city to be liberated, in July, and began to take over the administration of the country as the Germans retreated. The government in exile in London had only one card to play, the forces of the AK. This was why the government in exile was determined th ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion

The Polish armed forces resisted the German invasion, but their strategic position was hopeless since Poland was surrounded on three sides by Germany and German-controlled Czechoslovakia. It was in Poland that the Germans first used the tactics of Blitzkrieg ("lightning war"): rapid advance of Panzer (armored) divisions, dive bombing to break up troop concentrations, and aerial bombing of undefended cities to sap civilian morale. The Polish Army and Air Force had little modern equipment to match the onslaught. German forces wer ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland

Under the terms of two decrees by Hitler (8 October and 12 October 1939), large areas of western Poland were annexed to Germany. These included all the territories which Germany had lost under the 1918 Treaty of Versailles, such as the Polish Corridor, West Prussia and Upper Silesia, but also a large area of indisputably Polish territory east of these territories, including the city of Łódź. The Germans provided for the division of the annexed areas of Poland into the following administrative units: Reichsgau Warthelan ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government

The remaining block of territory was placed under a German administration called the General Government (in German Generalgouvernement für die besetzten polnischen Gebiete), with its capital at Kraków. The General Government was subdivided into four districts, Warsaw, Lublin, Radom, and Kraków. (For more detail on the territorial division of this area see General Government.) A German lawyer and prominent Nazi, Hans Frank, was appointed Governor-General of the occupied territories on 26 October 1939. Frank oversaw the segreg ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles

It was German policy that the (non-Jewish) Poles were to be reduced to the status of serfs, and eventually replaced by German colonists. In the General Government all education but primary education was abolished and so was all Polish cultural, scientific, artistic life. Universities were closed and many university professors, along with teachers, lawyers, intellectuals and other members of the Polish elite, were arrested and executed. In 1943, the government selected the Zamojskie area for further German colonisation. German settlements were planned, and the Polish population expelled ami ...

See also:

History of Poland 1939–1945, History of Poland 1939–1945 - German and Soviet Invasion, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Dismemberment of Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The General Government, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles, History of Poland 1939–1945 - The Holocaust in Poland, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Governments in exile, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Resistance, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Aftermath of the War, History of Poland 1939–1945 - Yalta and the Soviet Occupation 1943–45

Read more here: » History of Poland 1939–1945: Encyclopedia II - History of Poland 1939–1945 - Treatment of the Poles

The Holocaust - Aftermath: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Hungary - Earliest references through 1095

It is not definitely known when Jews first settled in Hungary. According to legend, King Decebalus of Dacia permitted the Jews who aided him in his war against Rome to settle in his territory. A Latin inscription, the epitaph of Septima Maria, discovered within the territory of the ancient province of Pannonia, clearly refers to Jewish matters. But, although it may be unhesitatingly assumed that Jews came to Hungary while the Roman emperors held sway in that country, there is nothing to indicate that at that time they had settled there permanently. In the Hungarian language t ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Hungary, History of the Jews in Hungary - Earliest references through 1095, History of the Jews in Hungary - Early history 1100-1300, History of the Jews in Hungary - Expulsion recall and persecution 1349-1526, History of the Jews in Hungary - During the war with the Ottomans 1526-cca. 1700, History of the Jews in Hungary - Hapsburg rule, History of the Jews in Hungary - Further persecution and expulsions 1686-1740, History of the Jews in Hungary - Population in 1735, History of the Jews in Hungary - Under Maria Theresa 1740-1780, History of the Jews in Hungary - Under Joseph II 1780-1790, History of the Jews in Hungary - Toleration and Repression 1790-1847, History of the Jews in Hungary - Revolution and Emancipation 1848-1849, History of the Jews in Hungary - Jews and the Hungarian Revolution, History of the Jews in Hungary - Brief Emancipation and Aftermath 1849, History of the Jews in Hungary - Struggles for a second emancipation 1859-1867, History of the Jews in Hungary - 20th Century: Persecution and destruction, History of the Jews in Hungary - The Holocaust, History of the Jews in Hungary - Communist Rule, History of the Jews in Hungary - Today

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Hungary: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Hungary - Earliest references through 1095

More material related to The Holocaust can be found here:
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The Holocaust
YouTube Videos
related to
The Holocaust
Index of Articles
related to
The Holocaust
Index of Articles
related to
The Holocaust - Aftermath



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