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Isler, Magnus, Lilien, families

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The collection contains letters of the Isler, Magnus and Lilien families including autobiographical records, as well as other documents of the family's activities spanning three generations. The letters feature a colorful picture of a German-Jewish educated middle class family in the 19th and early 20th century in Hamburg and Braunschweig. The letters of the Isler Magnus family allow a glimpse into the everyday life of a Jewish, middle-class Hamburg family in the 19th century. Meyer Isler (1807 Hamburg - 1888 Hamburg) wrote the first letters to his family as a student. The couple Meyer Isler and Emma Meyer (Dessau 1816-1886 Hamburg) wrote letters while traveling, and there is also extensive correspondence between Hamburg and Braunschweig when their daughter Sophie (Hamburg 1840-1920), married advocate Otto Magnus (Braunschweig 1836-1920) --

رقم الرف
P23
تاريخ الإصدار
1841-1934
الشكل
166 files..
لغة المادة
الألمانية; العبرية; lat; الآرامية;
العنوان Isler, Magnus, Lilien, families.
مساهم M.Isler (Meyer), 1807-1888
Emma,Isler 1816-1886
OttoMagnus
Sophie,Magnus 1840-1920
R.Magnus (Rudolf), 1873-1927
Helene,Lilien 1880-1971
Akademie der Bildenden Künste München
Juedischer Verlag
Neuer Israelitischer Tempelverein (Hamburg, Germany)
Betsalʼel (Academy)
ملاحظات Copies of transcriptions of around 1000 letters made by Hannah Peters, E.M. Liliens daughter, are also available at the IGDJ in Hamburg.
Copies/עותקים: HMB 1459-1541 of files 1-82
lds16 E. M. Lilien, "Briefe an seine Frau, 1905-1925." Hrsg. von Otto M. Lilien und Eve Strauss. Mit einer Einl. von Ekkehard Hieronimus. Eine Veröffentlichung des Leo-Baeck-Instituts. Jüdischer Verlag Athenäum, Königstein/Ts. 1985
Herrmann, Martina G.: "Sophie Isler verlobt sich. Aus dem Leben der deutsch-jüdischen Minderheit im 19. Jahrhundert", Köln 2016
هذا جزء من Isler, Magnus, Lilien, families - Private Collection
مستوى التوصيف Fonds Record
lds53 HMB 1459-1541 of files 1-82
lds57 Isler, Meyer (1807 Hamburg – 1888 Hamburg), son of Israel Abraham Isler and Gütchen (Jette) Meyer
German philologist and librarian
Isler attended the Jewish boys' school founded by his father, and later studied philology at the universities of Bonn and Berlin (Ph.D. 1830). Appointed registrar of the city library of Hamburg in 1832, secretary in 1851, superintendent in 1873, and director in 1878. The last-named post he held until his retirement in 1883. He was actively interested in Jewish matters, and was one of the first to advocate (in the "Allgemeine Zeitung des Judentums") the establishment of rabbinical seminaries. Isler was a prolific author and editor, among them B. G. Niebuhr's "Vorträge über Römische Gesch.". 1846-48
the same author's "Vorträge über Alte Länder-und Völkerkunde," 1851
Gabriel Riesser's "Gesammelte Schriften," 4 vols., Frankfurt a.M. und Leipzig, 1867-68.
Meyer Isler was married to Emma Meyer (1816–1886), who from 1839 was active in the Hamburg women's movement. She was also the co-founder of the "Hochschule für das weibliche Geschlecht" in 1850. The couple's daughter Sophie (1840–1920), married the lawyer Otto Magnus (1836–1920) from Braunschweig in 1867. Sophie and Otto Magnus are the parents of Rudolf (1873–1927) and Helene Magnus (1880 Braunschweig -1971), a young graphic design student who was studying at the Munich Art Academy and in 1903 met the art nouveau illustrator and print-maker, Ephraim Moses Lilien (Maurycy Lilien) (1874 Drohobycz, Galicia – 1925 Badenweiler), who studied painting and graphic techniques at the Academy of Arts in Krakow 1889-1893.
In 1906 E.M. Lilien and Helene Magnus married against the determined opposition of the bride's parents. Otto Magnus in particular was against his daughter's marriage to an 'Ostjude' from a poor background. The relationship with his father-in-law improved over the years - not least because of the artistic and economic success of his son-in-law. Lilien was particularly noted for his art on Jewish and Zionist themes. He is sometimes called "the first Zionist artist". As a member of the Zionist movement, Lilien traveled to Eretz Israel several times between 1906 and 1918. Lilien was one of the two artists who accompanied Boris Schatz to Mandatory Palestine in 1906 for the purpose of establishing Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design, and taught the school's first class in 1906 and designed the school's logo. The couple had two children, Otto Lilien (1907 Berlin) and Hannah Lilien Peters (1911 Berlin).
lds79 The Isler Magnus Lilien Family papers were deposited at the CAHJP on a number of occasions. In 1955 the CAHJP received files from the Hebrew University Archives relating to Meyer Isler's papers. In 1966, 1972 and 1880 the Central Zionist Archives (CZA) transferred files containing E.M. Liliens letters to his fiancé Helene Magnus, the "Brautbriefe" (P23-78), as well as a family photo album
The collection was completed in 2015 upon the transfer of transcriptions of around 1000 letters by Hannah Peters, E.M. Liliens daughter.
lds58 Some of the handwritten documents are written in German Kurrent script (German cursive handwriting) or in Hebrew script

رقم النظام 990043212110205171
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