Saturday, October 9, 2010

Gay Thomasville Ga Crusing

Strange


source
There will publish a book of Osnabrück, but it is hardly a mention of it in German-speaking Internet. After all, has studied Panicos Panayi, a British historian, the years between 1929 and 1950. Focus is the history of everyday life, especially between the different population groups and minorities. I am only now came across them.


At least Sebastian Weitkamp from the University of Osnabrück has written about the book a review:
...
The central objective of the book are the continuities and discontinuities in the everyday life of ethnic groups in Osnabrück from 1929 to described in 1949, including the migration experiences of scientists, especially in the Christian and Jewish Germans, refugees, would investigate gypsies and slave laborers and prisoners of war. Promising is the time frame of investigation, not - as usual - is limited to the time of the Third Reich, but aware of the arc turns from the crisis of the Weimar Republic to the early postwar years. Panayi justifies this subject so that all groups mentioned in the specified time frame enormous upheavals and transformations in the individual as the companies were. ...


http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/rezensionen/2008-1-141

Panayi, Panikos
Life and Death in a German Town. Osnabruck from the Weimar Republic to World War II and Beyond
Macmillan: Life and Death in a German Town: Osnabrück from the Weimar Republic to World War II and Beyond (International Library of Twentieth Centruy History): Panayi: Books

weitergoogelt If you are, you will always find in Osnabrück Panayis work, including immigrants from the Osnabrück region in England in the 19th Centuries it.

A small number of immigrants from the Osnabrück district entered the country because members of their families already lived there. For instance, Anton Friedrich Schröder Emigrated from Quakenbrück in 1866 because of the residence of his brother-in-law in London, while John Thies, who left in the same year, had an uncle in London [24]. More solid evidence for chain migration exists in the residence of Germans from states in Particular Particular areas of Britain. . For instance, for much of the nineteenth century east London acted as a focus for native of Hanover and Hesse [25]


of: The Settlement of Germans in Britain during the Nineteenth Century


Andrew Stuart Bergerson with a critical review of the book:
National History Illustrated Locally

0 comments:

Post a Comment