Wikipedia:Jewish Encyclopedia topics/C3

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Contents

[edit] Section 1

  1. Hermann L. Cohn JE German ophthalmologist; born at Breslau June 4, 1838. After graduating from the gymnasium of his native town he studied chemistry
  2. Lassar Cohn JE German chemist; born at Hamburg Sept. 6, 1858. After attending the gymnasium at Königsberg, he studied chemistry at different universities,
  3. Léon Cohn JE French statesman; born in Paris March 11, 1849; second son of Albert Cohn. His early training was received at the
  4. Ludwig Adolf Cohn JE German historian; born in Breslau May 22, 1834; died in Göttingen Jan. 13, 1871. He belonged to a prominent family
  5. Martin Cohn JE
  6. Meshullam Solomon Cohn (Meshullam Solomon Kohn) JE German rabbi; born about 1739; died at Fürth Dec. 17, 1819. After having spent a few years in the yeshibot
  7. Moritz Cohn JE Austrian writer; born at Kreuzburg, Silesia, Jan. 8, 1844. Educated at the high school of Brieg, he began life as
  8. Oskar Justinus Cohn JE German writer; born at Breslau Feb. 21, 1839; died at Bad Nauheim Aug. 6, 1893. Educated for a mercantile career,
  9. Rudolf Cohn JE German physiologist; born at Schneidemühl, Posen, Germany, April 23, 1862. He received his education at the Kneiphöf'sche Gymnasium and at
  10. Samuel Cohn JE German political economist; born at Bromberg 1862; died in Berlin July 30, 1900. He attended the Joachimsthal-Gymnasium, and studied philology
  11. Solomon Cohn JE German rabbi; born at Zülz, Prussian Silesia, March 24, 1822; died in Breslau Sept. 22, 1902. He was a grandson
  12. Tobias Cohn ours is about another Tobis Cohn JE German rabbi and writer; born at Hammerstein, West Prussia, Feb. 2, 1826. After graduating from the normal school, he conducted
  13. Toby Cohn JE German physician and medical author; born at Breslau Dec. 26, 1866. Cohn was educated at the Elisabeth gymnasium of his
  14. Adalbert Dorotheus Solomon Cohnfeld JE German author; born in Pyritz, Pomerania, Aug. 3, 1809; died in Berlin Jan. 20, 1868. He lived in Ḅreslau during
  15. Paul Cohnheim JE German physician; born at Labes, in Pomerania, Dec. 2, 1867. He was educated at the gymnasium at Stettin and the
  16. Isidor Cohnstein JE German gynecologist; born at Gnesen, province of Posen, Prussia, Aug. 1, 1841; died at Charlottenburg, near Berlin, July 25, 1894.
  17. Coin-Makers JE
  18. Colchester JE County town of Essex, England. Jews are first mentioned as living in Colchester in 1185, and it is probable that
  19. Rabbinical Colleges JE See Seminaries, Rabbinical.
  20. Charlotte Collins JE Anglo-American actress; born in London, England, about 1865. She began her stage career at the age of five, when she
  21. Colmar JE Chief town of Upper Alsace, Germany, on the Lauch and the Fecht. At the beginning of the thirteenth century Colmar
  22. Abraham Cologna JE
  23. History of the Jews in Cologne JE City of Rhenish Prussia. There are indications that a Jewish community existed here long before Christianity had become dominant.
  24. History of the Jews in Colombia JE
  25. Joseph ben Solomon Colon JE The foremost Talmudist of Italy in the second half of the fifteenth century; born probably at Chambéry, Savoy, about 1420;
  26. Colonial Jewish Monthly JE
  27. Jules Edouard Colonne JE French musician; born at Bordeaux July 23, 1838. He studied at the Paris Conservatory, where he was awarded the first
  28. Colophon JE An inscription or device placed at the end of books, generally with the intention of showing the title, the writer's
  29. Color JE It is noteworthy that Biblical Hebrew contains no term to express that property of light known as color. When a
  30. History of the Jews in Colorado JE One of the United States of North America; bounded on the north by Wyoming and Nebraska; east by Nebraska and
  31. Abraham Colorni (Abraham Colorno) JE Italian engineer; born at Mantua about 1530. His great skill in his profession caused him to be much sought after,
  32. Malachi Colorni JE Italian author; lived at Modena in the eighteenth century. He wrote a guide to letter-writing, "Megillat Sefer," still extant in
  33. Christopher Columbus and the Jews JE According to his own statement, Columbus had constant intercourse with Jews and Moors, with priests and laymen. He had personal
  34. History of the Jews in Columbus, Georgia JE
  35. History of the Jews in Columbus, Ohio JE
  36. Commandment ours redirects to 10 commandments JE The rendering in the English Bible versions of the Hebrew V04p180001.jpg, which, in its technical sense, is used in the
  37. 613 Commandments (613 Mitzvot) JE That the law of Moses contains 613 commandments is stated by R. Simlai, a Palestinian haggadist, who says (Mak. 23b):
  38. Commentaries on the Bible ours discusses only Christian commentaries JE
  39. Commentaries on the Talmud JE

[edit] Section 2

  1. Commerce JE Sale or exchange of goods, generally on a large scale. During the Biblical period the Hebrews in Palestine had what
  2. Commercial Law JE According to Jewish law persons legally capable of entering into any form of contract are legally capable of making commercial
  3. Commission JE
  4. Organization of Jewish communities JE At the beginning of the common era there were Jewish communities at Alexandria, Rome, Salamis, Corinth, Athens, Delos, etc.; at
  5. Ludwig Compiégne de Weil JE Convert to Christianity; lived at Paris, later at Metz, in the second half of the seventeenth century. He was a
  6. Comprat Vidal Ferussol JE
  7. Mordecai ben Eliezer Comtino JE Turkish Talmudist and scientist; lived at Adrianople and Constantinople; died in the latter city between 1485 and 1490. The earliest
  8. Conaniah JE A Levite who in the reign of Hezekiah had charge of the offerings and tithes brought to the Temple. Associated
  9. Abraham ben Solomon Conat JE Italian printer, Talmudist, and physician: flourished at Mantua in the second half of the fifteenth century. He obtained the title
  10. Joseph ben Gershon Concio JE Italian author; lived at Asti and Chieri in the beginning of the seventeenth century. He published several Hebrew poems, including:
  11. Concordance JE An alphabetical list of all the words in a book, with references to the passages where each word is found.
  12. Conegliano ours is about an Italian city JE A prominent Jewish family of northern Italy. The spelling "Conian," according to Kaufmann, is a misreading of the Hebrew V04p209003.jpg.
  13. Immanuel Conegliano JE
  14. Rabbinical Conferences JE Assemblies of rabbis to determine common courses of action or common principles of faith. Rabbinical conferences are a late phenomenon
  15. Confession of sin JE The Scriptures repeatedly prescribe confession of sin as a means to expiation and atonement. "It shall be that when he
  16. Confiscation of Hebrew books JE The first known decree directed against Hebrew literature is one of the emperor Justinian (553) forbidding the Jews to use
  17. Conflict of opinion JE Rarely did an opinion expressed by one of the rabbis of the Talmud pass unchallenged. In questions involving logical reasoning,
  18. Conflict of passages JE
  19. Congress of Jewish Women JE One of the denominational congresses of the World's Parliament of Religions, held at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Ill., 1893.
  20. Carlo Conigliani JE Italian jurist and political economist; born at Modena June 25, 1868; died there Dec. 6, 1901. After studying law at
  21. History of the Jews in Connecticut JE One of the six New England States, and one of the thirteen original states of theUnion. The first mention of
  22. Abraham ben Levi Conque JE Cabalist; lived at Hebron, Palestine, in the second half of the seventeenth century. Swayed by his cabalistic studies, Conque threw
  23. Joseph Conque JE Nephew of Abraham ben Levi Conque; lived in Hebron, Palestine, during the seventeenth century. He was the teacher of Isaac
  24. Conrad of Winterthur JE Burgomaster of Strasburg during the Black Death, in 1348. Together with the councilors Goffe Sturm (Schöppe) and Peter Schwarber, he
  25. Mase Conrat JE Professor and writer on Roman law; born in Breslau Sept. 16, 1848. His original name was Cohn, which he exchanged
  26. Consaguinity among Jews JE Owing to their dispersion among populations professing creed different from their own, Jews have married ear relatives more frequently than
  27. Consecration our is missing Judaism meaning JE The solemn setting apart of a person or thing to a special use or purpose. According to Fleischer (Levy, "Neuhebr.
  28. Consolation our article is about Dutch band :) JE Comfort; alleviation of sorrow (V04p233001.jpg); relief from grief (from V04p233002.jpg, meaning in pi'el form "to remove grief"); words of sympathy
  29. Benjamin Consolo JE Italian Hebraist; born at Ancona in 1806; died at Florence in 1887. He received his elementary instruction from Rabbi David
  30. Lake of Constance, Switzerland JE Region in the northeastern part of Switzerland. Of the Jewish communities designated as belonging to the district of the Lake

[edit] Section 3

  1. Abraham Constantinis JE Greek manufacturer, and president ("proëdros") of the Jewish community of Athens, Greece. He was born at Zante in 1865. After
  2. History of the Jews in Constantinople JE Capital of the Ottoman empire, situated on the Bosporus; the "Byzantium" of the ancients. The earliest official document hitherto discovered
  3. Constantinov, Volhynia JE
  4. Contros JE
  5. Modern converts to Christianity JE : The number of post-Mendelssohnian Jews who abandoned their ancestral faith is very large. According to Heman in Herzog-Hauck, "Real-Encyc." (x.
  6. History of the Jews in Copenhagan JE The capital of Denmark. Shortly after the opening of Denmark in 1657 to settlement by Jews, a number are known
  7. Coponius JE First procurator of Judea, about 6 C.E. He was, like the procurators that succeeded him, of knightly rank, and "had
  8. Cor Ashan JE
  9. Corbeil JE City in the department of Seine-et-Oise, France. Jews were settled very early in Corbeil, occupying a special quarter, called the
  10. Corcos JE A family whose history can be traced back to the end of the thirteenth century, and members of which are
  11. History of the Jews in Cordova JE City in Andalusia, Spain. As early as the eighth century it included Jews among its inhabitants. They lived in
  12. Isaac Hezekiah ben Jacob Cordova JE Publisher in the latter part of the seventeenth and the first part of the eighteenth century; son of Jacob b.
  13. Joshua Hezekiah de Cordova JE Rabbi and preacher in Amsterdam about the middle of the eighteenth century; author of "Sermam Moral que Neste K. K.
  14. Aryeh Löb Cordovero JE Rabbi of Zamosz, Poland, at the end of the seventeenth century. He wrote a book called "Pene Aryeh Zuṭa" (The
  15. Gedalyah ben Moses Cordovero JE Talmudic scholar; lived at Safed in the sixteenth century. He was a son of the famous cabalist Moses Cordovero, a
  16. Coreo de Viena JE Judæo-Spanish journal printed in rabbinic characters, published at Vienna since 1870. It was for some years under the editorship of
  17. History of the Jews in Corfu JE Most northerly of the Ionian Islands. The native Jews of Corfu fall into three distinct divisions of different origin (Greek,
  18. Coriat JE Jewish family of Morocco. In 1812 there appeared at Pisa a Hebrew work, under the title "Zekut Abot," in which
  19. David Chayyim Corinaldi (David Hayyim Corinaldi) JE Italian rabbi and author of the first half of the eighteenth century. He was a pupil of N. Pincherle, and
  20. History of the Jews in Corinth JE A city in ancient Argos, Greece, and the center of the cult of Aphrodite. Jews lived here, as in the
  21. Cornerstone JE The laying of the corneror foundation-stone (V04p275001.jpg, or V04p275002.jpg) (Job xxxviii. 4-6; Ps. xviii. 15, xxiv. 2) of the earth
  22. Nachman Nathan Coronel (Nahman Nathan Coronel) JE Palestinian scholar of Sephardic-Ashkenazic parentage; born at Amsterdam 1810; died at Jerusalem Aug. 6, 1890. His teacher was R. Abraham

[edit] Section 4

  1. Paul Nuñez Coronel JE Spanish Orientalist; born at Segovia; died Sept. 30, 1534. Though baptized before the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in
  2. Augustine Coronel-Chacon JE Portuguese Jew and agent at the court of Charles II. of England; born in Beira, Portugal; died after 1665. After
  3. Isabella Correa (Isabella Rebecca Correa) JE Spanish poetess of the seventeenth century; born in Spain; lived successively in Brussels, Antwerp, and Amsterdam; wife of the cosmographer
  4. Corregal JE
  5. Corriere Israelitico JE Italian monthly magazine devoted to Jewish history and literature; founded at Triest in 1863 by Abrama Vito Morpurgo, who edited
  6. Don Josée Cortissos JE Spanish army contractor; born 1656; died in London 1742. He was fifth in direct descent from Emanuel José Cortissos, Marquis
  7. Cos JE See Kos.
  8. Lewi Cosin JE Rabbi at Salonica, and later a preacher at Venice; born in 1573; died in 1625. He was the author of
  9. Chayyim ben Naphtali Cöslin (Hayyim ben Naphtali Cöslin JE Talmudical scholar and Hebrew grammarian of Berlin; died at Stettin, Prussia, March 21, 1832. He wrote the following works: (1)
  10. Cossacks' Uprising JE Since the fifteenth century, semi-military bands of Cossacks have been scattered over the steppes of southern and southeastern Russia, and
  11. Da Costa family pedigree JE The family of Da Costa is probably identical with that of the Mendez da Costa. It has even been suggested
  12. Andrea Mendes da Costa JE Chamberlain of Queen Catherine of Bragança, wife of Charles II. of England; flourished about 1665. His position at court was
  13. Anthony da Costa JE An opulent Jewish London merchant of the eighteenth century. He attained the position—unusual for a Jew in those days—of a .....
  14. Benjamin Mendez da Costa JE Bibliography: J. Picciotto, Sketches of Anglo-Jewish History, pp. 89, 95, 155.J. G. L.
  15. Israele di Emanuele Costa JE Italian rabbi; born 1819; died 1897. He succeeded Abraham Baruch Piperno as rabbi of Leghorn in 1864. Of his works
  16. Joseph da Costa JE Younger brother of Uriel Acosta or da Costa, to whom Manasseh Ben Israel dedicated his Spanish edition of the "Hope
  17. Solomon da Costa JE Donor of Hebrew library to the British Museum; flourished about 1760. A broker by profession, he acquired a considerable fortune,
  18. History of the Jews in Costa Rica JE See San Juan.
  19. Abraham Coster JE Dutch anti-Jewish preacher; lived at Amsterdam in the seventeenth century. He wrote "Histoire der Joden," a history of the Jews
  20. Rodrigo Cota JE Spanish poet; born at Toledo; died 1497. He came of a Marano family, three members of which—Francisco Cota, Lopez Cota,
  21. Count Heinrich von Coudenhove JE Austrian author, traveler, and diplomat; born in Vienna Oct. 12, 1859. Count Heinrich studied law at the University of Vienna;
  22. Council of Jewish Women JE An organization which came into being as a result of the Congress of Jewish Women, one of the denominational congresses
  23. Cousseri (Cousser) JE Jewish family of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; lived in Riva di Trento and neighboring towns of northern Italy. The
  24. Coutinho (Cuitiño) JE Name of a Jewish-Portuguese family, members of which, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, resided in Amsterdam, Hamburg, Brazil, and
  25. Fernando Coutinho JE Defender of the Jews, councilor of the supreme court, and afterward Bishop of Silves, in the reigns of Manuel and
  26. Covenant JE An agreement between two contracting parties, originally sealed with blood; a bond, or a law; a permanent religious dispensation. The
  27. Covilhão JE City in the province of Beira, Portugal, which in the thirteenth century had a Jewish congregation and was the seat
  28. Covo JE Name of a Jewish family of Salonica, Turkey, a branch of which lives at Widdin, Bulgaria. As the name indicates,
  29. Phineas Cowan JE English merchant, volunteer officer, and alderman; born at Chatham 1832; died at Buxton Oct. 22, 1899. From the first he

[edit] Section 5

  1. Israel Cowen JE American lawyer and jurist; son of Bennett and Bertha Cowen; born in Houston, Texas, Dec. 12, 1861; received his early
  2. Laurence Cowen JE Journalist and politician; born in 1865 at Hull. For some years he lived at Newcastle-on-Tyne, where his father, E. Cohen,
  3. Lionel Cowen JE Painter; born 1846; died Aug., 1895; brother of Frederic H. Cowen, the composer. Cowen, a painter of considerable ability, was
  4. Philip Cowen JE Jewish publisher and communal worker; born in New York city in 1853; educated in the public schools; was one of
  5. History of the Jews in Kraków (History of the Jews in Cracow) JE A city of Galicia, Austria, formerly the capital of the kingdom of Poland; founded about 700 C.E. There are no
  6. Yiddish Cradle Songs JE Songs written as lullabies; these exist in great variety and profusion among the Jews speaking Judæo-German or Yiddish, and among
  7. Crajova JE Chief town of the district of Dolschi; ancient capital of the Banat of Oltenie, Lower Wallachia. It may be assumed
  8. Book of Creation (Sefer Yetzirah) JE
  9. Era of Creation JE
  10. Creeping things JE A loose expression used in the A. V. as the equivalent of V04p341003.jpg and V04p341004.jpg. V04p341005.jpg ("remes" = creeping—that is,
  11. Alexandre ben Baruch Créhange JE French Hebraist; born at Etain, in the department of Meurthe-et-Moselle, 1791; died in Paris Jan. 7, 1872. He acted as
  12. Michael Creizenach JE German educator and theologian; born in Mayence May 16, 1789; died in Frankfort-on-the-Main Aug. 5, 1842. Creizenach is one of
  13. Theodor Creizenach JE German poet and historian of literature; son of Michael Creizenach; born April 17, 1818, in Mayence; died Dec. 6, 1877,
  14. Crémieu JE Town in the ancient province of Dauphiné, France. As early as the fifteenth century it had an important Jewish community.
  15. André Crémieu-Foa JE An officer in the French cavalry; born in Paris Jan. 20, 1857; died at Porto Novo, North Africa, Nov., 1892.
  16. Crémieux (colony) JE
  17. Gaston Crémieux JE French socialist and writer; born at Nîmes June 22, 1836; died at Marseilles Dec. 1, 1871. He entered upon an
  18. Hananeel Crémieux JE French Hebraist and judge; born 1800; died 1878; son of Mordecai Crémieux. He was a Talmudic scholar, and was teacher
  19. Hector Jonathan Crémieux JE French dramatist; born at Paris Nov. 10, 1828; died there in 1892; of the same family as Isaac Adolphe Crémieux.
  20. Mordecai ben Abraham Crémieux JE Rabbi at Aix, Provence; born at Carpentras in 1749; died May 22, 1825. He was the author of "Ma'amar Mordekai"
  21. Moses ben Solomon Crémieux JE Scholar; born at Carpentras, France, in 1766; died May 4, 1837. He was a nephew and son-in-law of Mordecai Crémieux.
  22. Abiatharibn Crescas ha-Kohen JE Physician in ordinary to King Juan II. of Aragon (1458-79); skilful oculist and learned astrologer. In Sept., 1468, he freed
  23. Astruc don Crescas JE Provençal scholar; lived probably at Perpignan, in the fourteenth century. Samuel, son of Solomon Shalom of Perpignan (compare Azulai, "Shem
  24. Chasdai ben Abraham Crescas (Hasdai ben Abraham Crescas) JE Religious philosopher; born in Barcelona, Spain, 1340; died 1410. He was of an illustrious and learned family, in "Ḳore ha-Dorot"
  25. Mordecai en Crescas of Orange JE Prominent member of the community of Carcassonne, France; lived in the second half of the thirteenth century. As leader (syndic)
  26. Vidal Crescas de Caslar JE Physician and liturgical poet of Avignon; member of the Yiẓhari family of that place. In 1327 Crescas translated into Hebrew
  27. Vidal Crescas of Perpignan JE French Talmudist; flourished in the first half of the fourteenth century. He was probably a native of Spain, going to
  28. Julius Bernhard Crescenz JE Anti-Jewish writer in Germany at the beginning of the seventeenth century. He wrote "De Judæorum Privilegiis," Darmstadt, 1604-12; "Geistliches Bedenken,
  29. Alexander Crescenzi JE Jewish convert to Christianity; lived at Rome in the seventeenth century. In 1666 he translated from the Spanish into Italian
  30. Elias Crespin JE Rumanian rabbi, teacher, and journalist; born about 1850 at Eskee Sara, eastern Rumelia; he fled to Rumania after the Turco-Russian
  31. Samuel Crespin JE Turkish rabbinical author; lived at Smyrna in the first half of the nineteenth century; son of Joshua Abraham Crespin, grand
  32. Cresques Lo Juheu JE Chartographer who flourished at Majorca and Barcelona at the end of the fourteenth century. Prince Juan of Aragon sent to
  33. History of the Jews in Crete JE Island in the Mediterranean, about 55 miles south of the Morea. Jews had settled there long before the Christian era
  34. History of the Jews in the Crimea JE Peninsula of southern Russia, on the northern shore of the Black Sea. It was formerly known as Krim-Tartary, and
  35. Isaac bin Crispin JE Spanish moralist and poet; lived at the beginning of the twelfth century. Judah al-Ḥarizi praises him among the renowned poets
  36. Crispus JE The ruler of the synagogue at Corinth, who became a Christian, with all his house, through the preaching of Paul

[edit] Section 6

  1. Benjamin ben Solomon Croneburg JE German publicist; lived at Neuwied, Prussia, in the eighteenth century. In 1758 he founded at Neuwied the Jewish periodical "Der
  2. Cronica Israelitica JE
  3. Joseph Crool JE Teacher and controversialist; flourished in England about 1838. He gave lessons in Hebrew to a few students in the University
  4. Crown of the Law JE A coronet, usually made of gilded silver, with bells, bearing the Hebrew inscription V04p372001.jpg. It is placed upon the upper
  5. Crowns of the Righteous JE The future bliss of the righteous is described by Rab in Ber. 17b: "There is neither eating and drinking nor
  6. Stefan Cruceanu JE Rumanian author; born at Jassy April 25, 1868. On receiving his bachelor's degree in 1889 he entered the University of
  7. Karl Csemegi JE President of the Hungarian Supreme Court of Judicature; born in Csongrad May 3, 1826; died March 18, 1899. Csemegi received
  8. Rosa Csillag JE Hungarian opera-singer; born about 1840. She attracted much attention in the chorus of the Hungarian National Theater at Budapest. Trained
  9. Therese Csillag JE Hungarian actress; born at Duna-Adony May 17, 1862. For many years she was a popular comedienne at the National Theater
  10. History of the Jews in Cuba JE Island in the Atlantic Ocean, the largest of the West Indian groups. The relations of the Jews with the
  11. Culturverein der Juden JE
  12. Mordecai ben Eliezer Cumatiano JE
  13. Petrus Cunaeus JE Dutch Christian and rabbinical scholar; born at Flushing 1586; died at Leyden Dec. 2, 1638. From 1617 until his death
  14. Cuneiform Inscriptions JE
  15. Cup of Benediction JE The cup of wine taken immediately after grace has been recited at the conclusion of a meal. The custom is
  16. Cup of Salvation JE
  17. Cupbearer JE The officer who served the cup to the king. Like the Cup, the cupbearer is first mentioned in the Old
  18. Curiel JE A wealthy Marano family which settled in the Netherlands and at Hamburg about the sixteenth century. They intermarried largely with
  19. Jacob Curiel JE Resident of the Portuguese court at Hamburg about the middle of the seventeenth century; died there in 1665. He had
  20. Nicolaus de Cusa JE Philosopher and theologian; born in Cusa, or Kues, on the Moselle, 1401; died in Todi, Umbria, 1464. He was Bishop
  21. Cuttah JE One of five cities from which Sargon, King of Assyria, brought settlers to take the places of the exiled Israelites

[edit] Section 7

  1. Sema Cuzzeri JE Italian poet; resident at Padua. He witnessed the terrible attack on the ghetto of Padua on Aug. 20, 1684. He
  2. Cypros JE Wife of King Agrippa I., daughter of Phasaelus and Salampsio, and granddaughter of Herod I. She had three daughters, Berenice,
  3. Cypros JE A woman of noble Arabian family; married about 75 B.C. the Jewish governor Antipater, to whom she bore five children,
  4. Cyrene JE A large and important city in Cyrenaica, the district of Upper Libya on the north coast of Africa, west of
  5. Cyril JE Apostle of the Slavonians and author of the Slavonic alphabet (Cyrillitza), which is probably a modification of an older Slavonic
  6. Cyzicenus Antiochus JE
  7. Tadeusz Czacki JE Polish statesman and author; born in Poryck, government of Volhynia, Russia, Aug. 28, 1765; died in Dubno, Volhynia, Feb. 8,
  8. Czarnikau JE Town in the district of Bromberg, province of Posen, Germany. The Jewish community of this town probably dates back to
  9. Prince Adam Georg Czartoryski JE Polish statesman and patriot; born in Warsaw Jan. 14, 1770; died in Montfermeil Castle, near Paris, July 15, 1861. After
  10. Baruch Czatzkes JE One of the Neo-Hebraic poets of the beginning of the nineteenth century; lived at Lutzk, Volhynia. Delitzsch ("Zur Gesch. der
  11. Martin Czechowic JE Polish Unitarian priest; born at Zbaszynie about 1530; died 1613. Czechowic lived at a time when religious restlessness was prevalent
  12. Czenstochow JE
  13. Czernigov JE
  14. Czestionev JE Village in the government of Warsaw, Russian Poland. It is the seat of a Jewish agricultural college, which was completed
  15. Jan Czynski (Jean Czynski) JE Polish lawyer, author, and journalist; born June 20, 1801; died in London, England, Jan. 31, 1867. The son of Jewish