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oapen-20.500.12657-577472022-08-03T03:09:55Z Jüdische Identität in Deutschland und im Exil Kaiser, Silke Antisemitism Biography University history Jewish life History 20th century bic Book Industry Communication::H Humanities::HB History::HBL History: earliest times to present day::HBLW 20th century history: c 1900 to c 2000 Hans and Rahel Liebeschütz were a German-Jewish scientific couple. Both grew up in Hamburg during the German Empire and began their scientific careers in the Weimar Republic. Rahel Liebeschütz was the first woman to habilitate at the Medical Faculty of the University of Hamburg. Hans Liebeschütz was a historian and habilitated in Medieval Latin philology in 1929. The transfer of power to the National Socialists meant the end of their academic careers. Nevertheless, they remained in Hamburg until 1938 and experienced with their three children the increasing disenfranchisement of Jews. It was not until 1938/1939 that they emigrated to England, where they remained after the end of the war. Their impressive career and difficult life in the "Third Reich" and in exile are traced from archival and personal sources. 2022-08-02T12:43:19Z 2022-08-02T12:43:19Z 2021 book ONIX_20220802_9783943423792_32 2627-891X 9783943423792 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/57747 ger Hamburger Historische Forschungen application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9783943423792.pdf https://hup.sub.uni-hamburg.de/hupwp/cart/?add-to-cart=919&quantity=1 Hamburg University Press 10.15460/HUP.HHF.07.210 Hans and Rahel Liebeschütz were a German-Jewish scientific couple. Both grew up in Hamburg during the German Empire and began their scientific careers in the Weimar Republic. Rahel Liebeschütz was the first woman to habilitate at the Medical Faculty of the University of Hamburg. Hans Liebeschütz was a historian and habilitated in Medieval Latin philology in 1929. The transfer of power to the National Socialists meant the end of their academic careers. Nevertheless, they remained in Hamburg until 1938 and experienced with their three children the increasing disenfranchisement of Jews. It was not until 1938/1939 that they emigrated to England, where they remained after the end of the war. Their impressive career and difficult life in the "Third Reich" and in exile are traced from archival and personal sources. 10.15460/HUP.HHF.07.210 35685259-3553-4bae-af55-685815864a93 9783943423792 7 336 Hamburg open access
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