BREMEN

BREMEN
BREMEN, city and Land in Germany. There are a few references to Jews in Bremen from 1199. In 1345 Jews were prohibited from trading in Bremen, but Jewish moneylenders are still mentioned in the 14th century. Subsequently, Jews were not admitted to Bremen until 1803, when the inclusion of the Hanoverian townships of Barkhof and Hastedt within the boundaries of Bremen brought a viable Jewish community within its jurisdiction. Although Jewish settlement was still officially prohibited in Bremen, at the time of the Napoleonic Wars several Jewish families were living in the city, besides those settled in its two suburbs. The community sent representatives (see carl august buchholz ) to the congress of vienna in 1815 to press for Jewish rights in the German cities. The community in Bremen continued to grow, still without official authorization, and numbered 87 in 1821. The situation was regularized by the act of 1848 permitting Jews to settle in the city, and the community moved its institutions from Hastedt to Bremen. A synagogue was built in the Gartenstrasse in 1876. Subsequently, Bremen became an important port of transit for many thousands of Jews emigrating from Eastern Europe to America. The Jewish population in the Land Bremen numbered approximately 2,000 in 1933, including 1,314 living in the city. On Nov. 9, 1938, five Jews in Bremen were murdered and Jewish men were imprisoned in the Bremen-Oslebshausen jail until mid-December. By 1941 over 400 Jews had managed to emigrate. About 500 were deported directly from the city between November 1941 and September 1942, including 180 from the Jewish old age home. Other Bremen Jews were deported from different German cities and places of refuge outside Germany. The community was revived after the war, and a new synagogue was inaugurated in 1961. There were about 150 Jews living in the Land Bremen in 1967 and 132 in 1989. As a result of the arrival of Jews from the former Soviet Union, their number rose to 1,154 in 2003. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: Festschrift zum 60 Geburtstag von Carl Katz (1959); R. Ruethnick, Buergermeister Smidt und die Juden (1934); M. Markreich, Die Beziehungen der Juden zur Freien Hansestadt Bremen von 1065 bis 1848 (1928); idem, in: MGWJ, 71 (1927), 444–61; idem, Historische Daten zur Geschichte der israelitischen Gemeinde Bremen 1803–1926 (1926); AWJD, 16 (1961/62) no. 22, 25; Germ Jud, 2 (1968), 126. ADD. BIBLIOGRAPHY: R. Bruss, Die Bremer Juden unter dem Nationalsozialismus (1983); J. Jakubowski, Geschichte des juedischen Friedhofs in Bremen (2002). (Ze'ev Wilhem Falk)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bremen — Bremen …   Deutsch Wörterbuch

  • Bremen — • Formerly the seat of an archdiocese situated in the north western part of the present German Empire Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Bremen     Bremen      …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Bremen [4] — Bremen (hierzu der Stadtplan mit Karte »Gebiet der Freien Hansestadt Bremen« und Nebenkärtchen des Freihafengebiets, mit Registerblatt), Hauptstadt des gleichnamigen Freistaates, zugleich eine der ersten Handelsstädte Deutschlands. Wappen von… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Bremen — Bremen, GA U.S. city in Georgia Population (2000): 4579 Housing Units (2000): 1978 Land area (2000): 8.878798 sq. miles (22.995981 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.030187 sq. miles (0.078185 sq. km) Total area (2000): 8.908985 sq. miles (23.074166 sq …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • Bremen — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Bremen puede referirse a: Bremen (ciudad), ciudad de Alemania. Bremen (Estado), Estado federado de Alemania donde se encuentra la ciudad homónima. Bremen (manga), por Umezawa Haruto. Personas Adán de Bremen Obtenido… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bremen — es: 1. Bremen (ciudad), ciudad en Alemania 2. Bremen (estado), estado en Alemania donde se encuentra la ciudad homónima * * * (Freie Hansestadt Bremen) ► Estado de Alemania. Es el más pequeño de la República y forma un enclave en el estado de… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Bremen [2] — Bremen (Geschichte). Manche halten V. für das Phabiranum im Chaukenlaude bei Ptolemäos; es kommt bestimmt erst zur Zeit der Karolinger unter dem Namen Bremon (später Brema) als Fischerort vor. 788 gründete Karl der Gr. das Bisthum (s. Bremen,… …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Bremen [3] — Bremen, seit 1815 deutscher Freistaat mit dem amtlichen Titel »Freie Hansestadt B.«, ein Glied des Deutschen Reiches, dessen Gebiet (256,69 qkm) aus drei getrennt liegenden, an Größe sehr ungleichen Teilen besteht (s. die Karte bei S. 378). Der… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Bremen — Bremen, die freie Hansestadt, liegt mit ihrem Gebiete an beiden Seiten der Weser. Der Flächenraum des ganzen Freistaates beträgt 3 Quadrat Meilen mit 1 Stadt, 1 Flecken, 14 Kirchspielen mit 35 Dörfern und Weilern, und hat, die.Stadt nicht… …   Damen Conversations Lexikon

  • Bremen —    Bremen achieved substantial prestige as a theater city in the latter part of the 20th century with the presence of Bruno Ganz, Hangünther Heyme, Peter Stein, Peter Zadek, and other notables regularly in its midst. It had enjoyed a similar… …   Historical dictionary of German Theatre

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”