2017
DOI: 10.1080/13501674.2017.1412926
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Jewish migration in modern times: the case of Eastern Europe

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(2 citation statements)
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“…About 236,000 Jews left the Austrian partition in 1881-1910, going During the years, the smallest number of Jews emigrated from the Prussian partition. In the years 1871-1890, 17,500 Jews left the Poznań province, and in 1910 only 35,300 Jews remained (the total population was 1,887 million) 10 . Few people left for Palestine, where in the period 1882-1914 about 65,000 Jews from Eastern Europe settled down, but it is difficult to indicate how many of them came from the Polish lands 11 .…”
Section: Jewish Emigration From Polish Landsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…About 236,000 Jews left the Austrian partition in 1881-1910, going During the years, the smallest number of Jews emigrated from the Prussian partition. In the years 1871-1890, 17,500 Jews left the Poznań province, and in 1910 only 35,300 Jews remained (the total population was 1,887 million) 10 . Few people left for Palestine, where in the period 1882-1914 about 65,000 Jews from Eastern Europe settled down, but it is difficult to indicate how many of them came from the Polish lands 11 .…”
Section: Jewish Emigration From Polish Landsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to older historiography, this factor was even decisive 34 . This obsolete thesis is already abandoned 35 , although there is no doubt that the pogroms in Russia from 1881-1882 and 1905-1906 were a factor conducive to emigration. The permanent sense of threat and uncertainty of tomorrow were for many people decisive and might have speed up the decision to leave, but it was not a condicio sine qua non for emigration.…”
Section: Circumstances and Reasons Of Emigrationmentioning
confidence: 99%