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In 1810, Moses Lackenbacher, together with two of his children, Israel and Heinrich, and Moses Löwenstein created the company “Moses Lackenbacher & Compagnie” with headquarters in Nagykanizsa and a branch in Vienna. The main profile of the company was army purveyance. The business activity resulted in a high spatial mobility which led to socio-cultural acculturation and conversions to Christianity within the kinship. This paper explores the connection between kinship and the operation of the company on the basis of the prominent yet little-researched Lackenbachers in the early 19th-century Habsburg Monarchy. Central questions are how the relatives organized a company during the Napoleonic wars, as well as the impact of operating a business; how familial bonds and kinship links were affected, and, in this context, how relatives together evolved into a multi-religious network of kinship.
Neue Forschungen zur japanischen Militärgeschichte des 16. bis zur Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts
(2012)
1. Einleitung: Aspekte der Militärgeschicht 2. Militärgeschichtsforschung zur Sengoku- und Oda-Toyotomi-Zeit (1) Zu den Kriegen in der Sengoku- und Oda-Toyotomi-Zeit (1467/77 bis 1600/03) (2) Feuerwaffen (3) Burgen und Schlösser (4) Militärorganisation und Kriegsdisziplin (5) Proviantlieferung, Rüstungsgüter und Handelsverkehr (6) Krieg und Gesellschaft 3. Militärgeschichtsforschung zur Edo-Zeit (1600/03–1868) (1) Kriegsgeschichtliche Untersuchungen (2) Die Schlosspolitik als Herrschaftsmittel (3) Mobilisierung der Truppen (4) Militär und Gesellschaft (5) Waffenbesitz und -gebrauch (6) Die Einführung der abendländischen Kriegstechnik und die Küstenverteidigung (7) Bauernsoldaten am Ende der Edo-Zeit (8) Gedächtnis des Krieges, Gefallenenkult und Ideologie 4. Schlussbetrachtung: Krieg und Frieden, Ausbau der Staatsgewalt
In this article we will present a few examples of the theme of “calling for help and redemption” in Arabic and Hebrew poetry, with particular focus on eleventh and twelfth century Muslim Spain. More particularly, we will offer a glimpse into the life and oeuvre of two medieval poets (one Muslim, one Jewish); both were active in Muslim Spain in the same period and shared a similar fate of exile and wandering: on the one hand, the Sicilian Arabic poet Ibn Ḥamdīs (c. 1056–c. 1133) and on the other hand, the Spanish Jewish poet Moses ibn Ezra (1055–1138). We will take into account the impact of exile and wandering on the profusion of the theme of “calling for help and redemption” as well as the related theme of “yearning for one’s homeland” through an analysis and comparison of poetic fragments by the two aforementioned poets as well as additional Andalusian Jewish (Judah ha-Levi) and Muslim (Ibn Khafāja, al-Rundī and Ibn al-Abbār) poets.
Vorwort der russischen Seite
(2018)