Displaying: 126 150 of 324 matches for “anschluss”
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126. Studio portrait of the five Weisz siblings. Pictured (left to right) are Georges, Yehudit holding brother Paul, Esther, and Georges' twin Henri.
brother Paul. Esther's parents were married in Vienna but promptly departed for France after the Anschluss
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127. Close-up picture of Maman Rosa Gourmand.
brother Paul. Esther's parents were married in Vienna but promptly departed for France after the Anschluss
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128. Defendant Arthur Seyss-Inquart talks to fellow defendant Wilhelm Frick during a court recess at the International Military Tribunal trial of war criminals at Nuremberg.
Austro-German border, implementing the Anschluss, the annexation of Austria to the German Reich ... Following the Anschluss, Seyss-Inquart was appointed Reich Governor of the Ostmark (Austria) and SS
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129. Caricature of Nuremberg International Military Tribunal defendant Arthur Seyss-Inquart, by the German newspaper caricaturist, Peis.
Austro-German border, implementing the Anschluss, the annexation of Austria to the German Reich ... Following the Anschluss, Seyss-Inquart was appointed Reich Governor of the Ostmark (Austria) and SS
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130. Arthur Seyss-Inquart enters the courtroom prior to his sentencing for war crimes.
Austro-German border, implementing the Anschluss, the annexation of Austria to the German Reich ... Following the Anschluss, Seyss-Inquart was appointed Reich Governor of the Ostmark (Austria) and SS
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131. Group portrait of instructors in the Ferramonti camp school.
the Anschluss, Karl left Austria and moved to Bratislava, where he found a job in a machine shop. In ... Czechoslovak citizen, left Austria soon after the Anschluss and settled in Prague. In January 1942, upon
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132. A couple of refugees is pictured looking at each other in a camp on Rhodes.
the Anschluss, Karl left Austria and moved to Bratislava, where he found a job in a machine shop. In ... Czechoslovak citizen, left Austria soon after the Anschluss and settled in Prague. In January 1942, upon
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133. A Jewish father crouches next to his young daughter in a stroller.
Anschluss the family experienced growing persecution, and the family decided to emigrate. They hoped to come
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134. Liane Reif poses in winter clothes, standing next to her dog.
Anschluss the family experienced growing persecution, and the family decided to emigrate. They hoped to come
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135. Portrait of an Austrian-Jewish girl in a winter coat.
Anschluss the family experienced growing persecution, and the family decided to emigrate. They hoped to come
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136. A group of children stand with a woman outside the Hotel de France in Loudun.
Anschluss the family experienced growing persecution, and the family decided to emigrate. They hoped to come
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137. Two children stand next to a lamp-post in Loudun.
Anschluss the family experienced growing persecution, and the family decided to emigrate. They hoped to come
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138. Zionist leader Nahum Goldmann tours the Zeilsheim displaced persons camp.
appealed for the protection of Austrian Jews after the Anschluss and worked toward a solution of the
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139. Group portrait of Austrian Jewish refugees on Klesciceva Street in Samobor, northern Croatia.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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140. Document issued to Haim Ellenboghen, the donor's father, by the Jewish Relief Committee of Topusko, certifying that he is a delegate of that Committee on a mission to Bari, and that all authorities are to offer him assistance in the carrying out of his tasks.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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141. Letter to Sir Randolph Churchill from a group of Jewish refugees (for the most part Austrian) in Topusko, seeking his help in getting them permission to be transferred to the Bari camp in Italy.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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142. Letter to Sir Randolph Churchill from a group of Jewish refugees (for the most part Austrian) in Topusko, seeking his help in getting them permission to be transferred to the Bari camp in Italy.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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143. Document from the American Consul-General in Vienna certifying that the Trost family, consisting of Josef, Alice, Dorrit, and Erika, applied for American visas on September 15, 1938 and have been placed on the waiting list with the numbers 47291-47294.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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144. Austrian Jews at an outdoor cafe in Vienna. Pictured are members of the Fiedler and Goldstaub families.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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145. Group portrait of Jewish women in a cooking school in Vienna.
organization. Soon after the Anschluss Eric was among a group of Viennese Jews rounded up by Austrian police
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146. Portrait of Dorrit Trost (b. 1929), the niece of Herma Ellengoghen, as an Austrian-Jewish refugee living in Belgium.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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147. Portrait of Dorrit (behind) and Erika Trost, the two nieces of Herman Ellenboghen, as Austrian-Jewish refugees living in Belgium.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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148. Portrait of Alice (Ellenboghen) Trost and her daughter Dorrit, living as Austrian-Jewish refugees in Belgium.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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149. Austrian-Jewish refugees walk along a commercial street in central Brussels.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was
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150. Austrian-Jewish refugees walk along a commercial street in central Brussels.
in a Jewish-owned shoe store in Vienna. Soon after the Anschluss in March 1938, Herma no longer was