[Jewish youth in secondary schools in Galicia 1848-1914]
With an English summary.
A French translation: 'La jeunesse juive dans des école secondaires en Galicie autrichuenne 1848-1914',
Revue des Etudes Juives, 156,1-2 (1997), 173-189.
Including a registration of curricular text books, which appeared in Galicia in the following cities (according to index, on pp 147-155): mostly Lwów and Kraków, and so Brody, Drohobycz, Zbaraż, Żółkiew, Tarnopol, Sanok, Stanisławów, Przemyśl, Kołomyja, Rzeszów/ Raysha and Czernowitz.
Including references to literal and educational initiatives of Mendel Lefin (121-122), Abraham Mendel Mohr (122), Joseph Perl (143-144, 431-432), Bezalel Stern and Jacob Goldenthal (431-432).
Including references to education in Galicia, in particular the school network under the management of Naphtali Herz Homberg at the turn of the 18th century (107) and the schools at the turn of the 19th century (the Polish ones established by Baron Maurice de Hirsch and the Hebrew ones headed by Solomon Schiller (139)).
There were addtional editions of this book - the last one, revised and expanded, in 1969; ibid., about Galicia - 112-113, 146.
Including efforts to establish a rabbinical seminary in Galicia and the status of people from Galicia in Vienna's rabbinical seminaryas teachers and students; the people referenced: Naphtaliz Herz Homberg (715), Joseph Perl (716-718), Solomon Judah Rapoport, Mordechai Bernstein (from Brody, in Odessa), Elazar Kalir (maskil from Brody) , Nachman Krochmal (716), Jehiel Michael Kritstianpoller (717), Rabbis ZeviHirsch Chajes, Shmuel Deitsch of Sambur (719), Zevi Hirsch Ornstein, Shimon Schreiber-Sofer, and Joshua Roke'ah (724), Joshua Heschel Schorr, faculty of the institution: Zevi Perez Chajes (726, 729), David Heinrich Mueller (727-728), Victor Aptowitzer (727-728, 729, 730), Leon Kellner, Saul Raphael Landau (728), and Benjamin Murmelstein (730), and the students Salo Wittmayer Baron, Judah Bergman, Abraham Jacob Brawer, Michael Berkowitz, Solomon Gandz, Haim Z'ew Hirschberg, Bernhard Wachstein, Abraham Weiss, Zevi Perez Chajes, Naphtali Herz Tur-Sinai, Judah Leo Landau, Leo Aryeh Mayer, Moses Schorr, as well as Benjamin Menachem Klar and Alexander Sperber of Bucovina.