Emmy and Ernst Rubensohn
Emmy and Ernst Rubensohn's first apartment from 1907: Emmy Rubensohn, born in Leipzig in 1884, marries Ernst Rubensohn on 17.08.1907 and moves in with him in Kassel. From 1913, Emmy's recently divorced brother Alfred Frank entrusted his daughter Dorothea (Dora) to the Rubensohns. The girl, born in 1907, spent her childhood with them.
Emmy Rubensohn / Frank family
The Frank family home, Emmy Rubensohn's last apartment in Leipzig before she moved to Kassel to live with her husband Ernst Rubensohn.
Jul. Firnbacher
John Löwenthal
Joel Wulf “John” Loewenthal was born in Danzig on June 14, 1821. His father was Wulf (ben Salomon) Löwenthal, who was also born in Danzig in 1792 and died on June 28, 1868 in Constantinople (Istanbul). John Löwenthal had three more brothers - Nathan, born in 1813, Isaak Lazarus, born in 1814 and Michael Bernhard, born in 1818. At a young age, John Löwenthal went to Constantinople in search of his father, like his brother Michael Bernhard 3 years before him. Around 1840 he sought his fortune in Berlin. In J. W.
Emmy Rubensohn / Frank family
At the Frank family's home, Emmy creates a book of memories in which she collects autographs of revered artists (such as the Gewandhaus conductors Carl Reinecke and Arthur Nikisch, Julius Klengel, the first cellist of the Gewandhaus, and the singers Nellie Melba and Lilli Lehmann-Kalisch)
Emmy Rubensohn / Frank family
The Frank family home where Emmy Rubensohn spent her childhood. She grew up in the sphere of influence of the German women's movement, of which Leipzig was the capital. The most influential personalities here were Louise-Otto Peters, Auguste Schmidt and Henriette Goldschmidt.
Emmy Rubensohn
Emmy Rubensohn, née Frank, was born on June 26, 1884 in Leipzig as the fourth child of the business family Wilhelm and Auguste Frank. In the first year of her life, she lives in Uferstraße.
Auguste Stern
Auguste Stern, née Würzburger, born in 1859, lived at Niedergasse 2 in Soest. Auguste Stern was deported to Theresienstadt in 1942. She died there on September 2, 1942. A stumbling block at Niedergasse 2 in Soest commemorates her fate.
Heinrich Zabludowski
The following entry can be found in the Jüdisches Adressbuch für Gross-Berlin - Edition1929/1930: Zabludowski Heinrich, Dipl. Kaufmann, Charlottenburg, Leibnitzstr. 48.
Lawyer, translator and table tennis player - Herbert Moritz Caro
Herbert Moritz Caro was born on October 16, 1906 in Berlin.he worked as a lawyer at the Berlin State Court and was a court assessor (probationary judge).Herbert Moritz Caro was admitted to the bar in January 1933.the so-called " Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service “ enacted on April 7, 1933.