History of italian jews
History of the Jews in Italy - Wikipedia
The Italian Republic and the Union of the Italian Jewish Communities developed an Understanding in 1987 that exempted Jewish students in public schools from attending religious instruction, allowed Jews in the civil service to request to not work on Shabbat, recognized some social service organizations operated by the Union, and the like (UCEI ...
[DOC File]Historical Investigation - World History
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Rome ruled the entire Italian Peninsula. Defeated Carthage in North Africa. Rome became the leading power in the Mediterranean Region. Rome then conquered: Spain, North Africa and eastern. Mediterranean. Julius Caesar- returned to Rome with his army and declared. himself “Dictator”
[DOCX File]The Classical Era in the West
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Shared power with the Italian King. Outlaws all other political parties. Rapidly expanded the military Formed the Nazi Party. Became Chancellor of Germany in 1933. Outlawed all other political parties. Created laws that were unfair to the Jews. Rapidly expanded military. Went against the Treaty of Versailles. Social Effects
[DOC File]Compare and contrast the Italian and German Unifications
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Croatia Began with a Population Count of 30,000. When German Orders Took Over They Were Left with About 15,000 Hungarian Jews. In Italy 5,000 Jews Were Taken to Concentration Camps. In Greece Around 45,000 In Total Were Taken. The 45,000 Includes Those From the German and Italian Zone.
[DOCX File]Deportation of the Jews
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Foreign Jews (with certain exceptions) were given four months to leave the country or be expelled. Jews naturalized after 1918 were stripped of their citizenship, and even Italian-born Jews were presented with strong economic incentives to go. Nevertheless, only 6,000 of Italy’s 46,500 Jews did so.
[DOC File]Rome’s “Jewish Ghetto”:
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By 1871, Europe was remapped with the rise of two newly united nations - the Kingdom of Italy and the German Empire. The unification movements of both countries took place at roughly the same time in the mid-19th century and were motivated by the same historical trends - that of liberalism and nationalism.
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