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1 Biography  





2 Honors  





3 Selected works  





4 References  














Julius Carlebach






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Julius Carlebach (28 December 1922[1] in Hamburg, died 16 April 2001 in Brighton, UK) was a German-British rabbi and professor of sociology and history.

Biography

[edit]

He was the grandson of Rabbi Salomon Carlebach (1845–1919) and his wife Esther Carlebach, part of the Carlebach family of prominent German Jews.

Much of his family was imprisoned in the Jungfernhof concentration campinLatvia. Julius and a sister escaped the concentration camps, being taken in by British foster families via the Kindertransport.

Carlebach went to school in London, and was a sailor in the Royal Navy for ten years and managed an orphanage for Jewish children in Norwood. At the orphanage, he met South African teacher Myrna Landau, whom he married. In 1959 he went to Kenya, where he worked until 1963 in Nairobi and also served as rabbi and wrote about the Jewish community in that nation.[2] In Kenya, the couple's two sons were born, Joseph Zvi Carlebach and Ezriel Carlebach.

From 1964 he was a research student at the University of Cambridge and then taught at the University of Bristol. In 1968 he took over the job of Associate Professor of Sociology and Israel Studies at the University of Sussex in Brighton. There he also headed the Department of Sociology.[3] In 1989 he worked at the College of Jewish Studies in Heidelberg; he was its rector until 1997.

Carlebach was a board member of the Leo Baeck Institute in 1992.

Honors

[edit]

In 1994, Carlebach received the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany.[4]

Selected works

[edit]

Books

Articles or Essays

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Alter, Peter (1998). Learned outsiders", Times Higher Education
  • ^ Issroff, Sol (1999-2006) "Southern Africa Jewish Genealogy" citing Carlebach's obituary in the London Jewish Chronicle of 11 May 2001 for biographical details
  • ^ "The Newsletter of Cambridge University's Taylor-Schechter Genizah Research Unit at Cambridge University Library No. 2 October 1981". Archived from the original on 4 April 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2012.
  • ^ Anon, 2002. "Julius Carlebach conference Archived 11 March 2004 at the Wayback Machine"

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Julius_Carlebach&oldid=1149364575"

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    This page was last edited on 11 April 2023, at 19:33 (UTC).

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