Difference between revisions of "File:1935 Gregorovius de.jpg"
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== Abstract == | == Abstract == | ||
After the rise to power of Hitler, Leo Baeck republished this sympathetic essay by one of the greatest German | After the rise to power of Hitler, Leo Baeck republished this sympathetic essay by one of the greatest German historians to contrast it with the discriminatory laws imposed by the new regime. | ||
"A century ago the great German historian Ferdinand Gregorovius settled in Rome to work on his epochal study of postclassical Rome. There he came to know the miserable little community of Jews that had lived in the eternal city without interruption for two millenniums ... For clarity and conciseness this essay is a classic ... The prose account summarizes the varying intensity of the hardships perennially endured by the Jews in Rome ... Segregation, the yellow badge, exclusion from trades, and compulsory attendance at conversionist sermons were only finally abolished by Pious IX in 1848 ... The author's poetic "Lament of the Children of Israel in Rome" discloses his capacity for empathy and his deep pity and admiration for the people he came to know in the days of their emancipation."-- Review by J. Coert Rylaarsdam, The Journal of Religion 26.4 (Oct. 1949). | "A century ago the great German historian Ferdinand Gregorovius settled in Rome to work on his epochal study of postclassical Rome. There he came to know the miserable little community of Jews that had lived in the eternal city without interruption for two millenniums ... For clarity and conciseness this essay is a classic ... The prose account summarizes the varying intensity of the hardships perennially endured by the Jews in Rome ... Segregation, the yellow badge, exclusion from trades, and compulsory attendance at conversionist sermons were only finally abolished by Pious IX in 1848 ... The author's poetic "Lament of the Children of Israel in Rome" discloses his capacity for empathy and his deep pity and admiration for the people he came to know in the days of their emancipation."-- Review by J. Coert Rylaarsdam, The Journal of Religion 26.4 (Oct. 1949). |
Revision as of 15:54, 5 March 2022
{de} Ferdinand Gregorovius <1821-1891>. Der Ghetto und die Juden in Rom, ed. Leo Baeck. Berlin [Germany]: Schocken, 1935.
Abstract
After the rise to power of Hitler, Leo Baeck republished this sympathetic essay by one of the greatest German historians to contrast it with the discriminatory laws imposed by the new regime.
"A century ago the great German historian Ferdinand Gregorovius settled in Rome to work on his epochal study of postclassical Rome. There he came to know the miserable little community of Jews that had lived in the eternal city without interruption for two millenniums ... For clarity and conciseness this essay is a classic ... The prose account summarizes the varying intensity of the hardships perennially endured by the Jews in Rome ... Segregation, the yellow badge, exclusion from trades, and compulsory attendance at conversionist sermons were only finally abolished by Pious IX in 1848 ... The author's poetic "Lament of the Children of Israel in Rome" discloses his capacity for empathy and his deep pity and admiration for the people he came to know in the days of their emancipation."-- Review by J. Coert Rylaarsdam, The Journal of Religion 26.4 (Oct. 1949).
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