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Izrael Poznański

Izrael Kalman Poznański (25 August 1833–28 April 1900) was a Polish-Jewish businessman, textile magnate and philanthropist in Łódź, Congress Poland (part of the Russian Empire), and the husband of Eleonora Hertz Poznańska.[1] The mausoleum of Izrael and his wife, Eleonora Hertz, on the New Jewish Cemetery has been described as "probably the largest Jewish grave monument in the world".[2] The mausoleum and mosaic covering the inside of the dome were restored in 1993.

Izrael Poznański
Stanisław Heyman, Portrait of Izrael Kalman Poznánski (1891)
Born(1833-08-25)August 25, 1833
DiedApril 28, 1900(1900-04-28) (aged 66)
Łódź, Kingdom of Poland, Russian Empire
NationalityPolish
OccupationTextile manufacturer
Years active1852–1900
Known forManufaktura, Poznański Palace

Together with Ludwik Geyer and Karol Scheibler, he was counted among the three "Kings of Cotton" in Łódź.[3] His complex of mills in Łódź, Poland, have been turned into the 69-hectare (170-acre) Manufaktura mixed-use development, including a mall, 3 museums, a multiplex cinema, a hotel, and restaurants.

Life edit

Youth edit

 
Poznánski's cotton mills in Łódź, 1895.
 
Poznánski Palace, next door to the mills, as seen in 2005.
 
The Poznánski mausoleum in the Jewish Cemetery in Łodz.

Poznański was the grandson of the merchant Izaak Poznański from the town of Kowal in Kuyavia and the youngest son of the merchant Kalman (who was given the surname Poznański) and Małka Lubińska.[4][5] In 1825, the 40-year-old Kalman Poznański, with his wife, children, farmhand and servant, settled in Aleksandrów Łódzki. In 1834, the family, now quite wealthy, moved from Aleksandrów to Łódź, where the father acquired the right to trade in textiles, notably cotton and linen, and built the first two-story tenement house in the Old Town, where he also established a store selling fabrics and spices.

In Łódź, Izrael Poznański graduated from elementary school and the so-called junior high school. The future multi-millionaire entrepreneur learned from scratch. As a teenager, he collected scrap material using a rickety cart pulled by a run-down horse (later, to enhance his rags-to-riches tale, the rich man claimed that he did not have a horse at the time, and that he instead harnessed dogs to the cart). At the age of seventeen, in 1851, he married Leonia Hertz, the daughter of Mojżesz Hertz, a wealthy merchant from Warsaw. Israel was described then as a "master of the weaving profession" bringing an estate worth 500 rubles to the marriage. His wife, Leonia, brought him a dowry selling goods in Warsaw.

Career edit

In December 1852, Izrael Poznański took over the management of the family business from his father, and gradually expanded it over the next half-century. In 1859 the gross output of his plant was valued at 6,000 zlotys; by 1868, this had increased to 23,000 rubles. By 1871 Poznański had begun buying up plots at 17–23 Ogrodowa Street in order to build a new grand industrial complex; the following year, the first factory facility was erected on the site, a high-output cotton mill with some 200 mechanical looms.

Subsequently, Poznański rapidly expanded his plant, as described by the following timeline:

  • 1874–75 - enlargement of the weaving mill, construction of a bleacher and a finishing plant
  • 1877 - construction of a huge building for a spinning mill
  • 1878 - own mechanical workshop
  • 1880 - factory hospital (St. Joseph Hospital, currently named after Radliński) at ul. Drewnowska 75
  • 1885–90 - "Szpital Orozakonnych", currently the Department of Endocrinology of the University Clinical Hospital no. WAM - Central Veterans Hospital at ul. 1/3 Sterling
  • 1887 - dye shop, finishing shop and central boiler room
  • 1890, 1895 - other weaving mills
  • 1893 - iron foundry
  • 1895–1897 - large cotton warehouses at the Old Cemetery

This impressive complex (shot by master Polish photographer Bronisław Wilkoszewski for his album Views of the City of Łódź in 1895 and illustrated here) still stands. Built nearly entirely of orange brick, it is entered from the street through a large gate resembling a grandiose triumphal arch. To the right behind the entry is the building housing the offices of the company directors, which preserves its original marble interior. The main building (dating from 1877–78) stretches 170 meters to the left behind the entrance. The corner towers contain staircase, ventilation shafts, and water tanks for fire relief. It originally contained five-aisled production halls, and functioned as an industrial complex until World War II before being nationalized under the Communist regime. After some years of neglect it has now been transformed into a multiplex cinema, shopping center, and hotel, called Manufaktura. Poznański's own palatial residence, next door, also still stands.

On October 29, 1889, the family business was transformed into a joint-stock company, like other cotton enterprises in Łódź.[6] The official name of the plants was Towarzystwo Akcyjne Wyrobów Cottonowych IK Poznańskiego in Łódź (Poznański Cotton Products Joint Stock Company in Łódź). The expanding plants of Poznański employed more and more workers over the years: in 1865, there were some 70 workers; by 1879, this had grown to 426 workers; and in 1906, the firm employed around 6,800 people.

In 1883, a strike broke out at Poznański's factory as a result of deteriorating working conditions. At that time, the average workday for a laborer lasted 16 hours, from 5:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. That year, in addition, Izrael Poznański mandated that employees also work on public holidays, beginning on August 15, the Feast of Our Lady of Herbs. Any employee who disobeyed was fined up to 3 rubles. Protesters were subdued by the police and a group of Cossacks, and in all 50 people were removed from the factory.[7] In February 1884, Poznański fined the workers who protested against working on the Feast of Our Lady of Candlemas. One of the workers was assaulted.[8] In 1891, the report of the factory inspector documented that Poznański paid the lowest wages of any industrialist in Łódź, and the penalties that his weavers faced if they broke regulations were the most severe.[9] During the Łódź revolt in 1892, Poznański set up a temporary investigative office at his factory, where several striking workers were humiliated, beaten, and then fired from the factory without proof of their guilt.[10]

In 1884, Izrael Poznański purchased the property of Nieznanowice in the then-Włoszczowa district, where he built a starch factory to supply his textile factories in Łódź. The new plant employed 140 workers. He also built a two-story palace nearby modeled on neoclassical mansions.[11] In the summer of 1889, a fire destroyed this factory completely, and losses in uninsured movable property were estimated at 60,000 rubles.[12] In 1910, the Poznańskis sold the palace and the rest of the property of Niepanowice to the Karski family.[13]

Izrael Poznański died on April 28, 1900, and two days later he was buried in the family tomb in the New Jewish Cemetery in Łódź.[14][15] At the time of his death, he had amassed a fortune of 11 million rubles. World War I brought great losses to Poznański's enterprise. Successive generations managed the company until the 1930s, when the indebted business was taken over by Banca Commerciale Italiana.

Philanthropy edit

A clear change can be observed during Poznański's life story: initially he was known as a ruthless employer, neglecting the safety of employees. In his factories, there were numerous accidents resulting in disability or death. However, towards the end of his life he became involved in charity, building orphanages, schools for the poor and hospitals. He contributed in financing the iconostasis at the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Łódź, for which he was awarded the Order of St. Stanislaus by the Imperial Russian authorities.[16] In March 1895 he was awarded the Order of Saint Anna.[17] In 1891, he financed a terracotta floor for the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, on pl. Kościelny in Łódź, made by the German company Villeroy & Boch from Mettlach.[18][19][20] In the mid-1890s, he also financed ⅓ the cost of building a large organ in the church.[21] On February 18, 1895, he notarised 100,000 rubles to transform the Higher School of Crafts in Łódź into a technical school.[22] In 1899-1900 he was the president of the Łódź Jewish Charity Society, which he founded, among other organizations.[23]

Family edit

Poznański and his wife Leonia had seven children:

  • 4 sons - Ignacy, Herman, Karol and Maurycy
  • 3 daughters - Anna (Ajdla, later wife of Jakub Hertz), Joanna Natalia (later wife of Zygmunt Lewiński), and Felicja (Fajga, died in infancy)

Cultural Depictions edit

  • The figures of Max Ashkenazi from the novel The Brothers Ashkenazi by Israel Joshua Singer and Shaya Mendelsohn from The Promised Land by Władysław Reymont are partly modeled on Izrael Poznański.[24]
  • In May 2016, the Grand Theater in Łódź announced a competition to write an opera about Izrael Poznański, Man from Manufaktura to a libretto by Małgorzata Sikorska-Miszczuk.[25] On January 5, 2017, the first public performance of competition excerpts from the opera took place. The winner of the competition was Rafał Janiak. The world premiere of his work, originally planned for November 2018, took place on February 2, 2019.[26][27][28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich (Museum of the History of Polish Jews). "Poznanski Izrael Kalmanowicz" 2015-01-21 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  2. ^ Wojalski, Mirosław Zbigniew (2000). The Jewish cemetery in Lodz, p.58. Widzewska Oficyna Wydawnicza ZORA. ISBN 8388638017. Quote: "Across from this sarcophagus stands the magnificent mausoleum of Izrael Poznanski. The largest and most impressive grave monument in this cemetery, and probably the largest Jewish grave monument in the world".
  3. ^ Leszek Skrzydło, Rody fabrykanckie, 2nd ed. Łódź: Oficyna Bibliofilów, 1999, pp. 53–55. ISBN 83-87522-23-6.
  4. ^ Birth certificate of I. Poznański, State archives in Łódź. Files of the civil status of the Jewish community in Aleksandrów, ref. No. 8; cf. scan of the same.
  5. ^ Alan Jakman, "Król bawełny – Izrael Poznański." More Maiorum, moremaiorum.pl, 2014-08-26 (accessed 2020-09-21).
  6. ^ Skrzydło, ibid., pp. 53–55.
  7. ^ Adam Próchnik, Pisma. Studia i szkice (1864–1918). Krzysztof Dunin-Wąsowicz, editor. Warsaw: Spółdzielnia Wydawniczo-Handlowa "Książka i Wiedza”, 1963. pp. 361, 368. OCLC 831417378.
  8. ^ Res [Feliks Perl], Dzieje ruchu socjalistycznego w zaborze rosyjskim. Editions I. T. I. Warsaw: „Życie”, 1910. pp. 160, 330, series: „Życie”: wydawnictwo dzieł społeczno-politycznych; vol. 16. OCLC 891192604. [dostęp 2020-09-20].
  9. ^ Próchnik, ibid., p. 368.
  10. ^ Perl, ibid., p. 330.
  11. ^ Michał Szafrański, Nieznanowice: a historical outline. In Portal of the Nieznanowice village council: History of Nieznanowice [online]. niezanowice.pl. [accessed on 2016-03-20].
  12. ^ "Wiadomości bieżące. Pożar fabryki." Dziennik Łódzki 6, no. 153 (7 November 1889), p. 2. ed. Antoni Chomętowski. Lodz: Stefan Kossuth. ISSN 1898-3111. [accessed on 2016-03-20].
  13. ^ Szafrański, ibid.
  14. ^ "Ronika. B.P. Izrael K. Poznański (oraz dwa nekrologi)". Rozwój vol III, no. 99 (30 April 1900), pp. 2, 5–6. Wiktor Czajewski (red.). Łódź: Wiktor Czajewski. [accessed 2015-10-16]: "On Saturday, April 28, BP Izrael K. Poznański, our venerable boss, senior, died in Łódź after long and hard suffering."
  15. ^ "Nekrologi," Rozwój. vol III, no. 100 (1 May 1900), pp. 5–7. Wiktor Czajewski (red.). Łódź:Wiktor Czajewski. [accessed 2015-10-16]: "Yesterday, we placed in the grave the body of the prematurely deceased President of the Łódzkie Towarzystwo Dobroczynności BP Izrael K. Poznański."
  16. ^ "Kronika Łódzka. Jego Cesarska Mość...." Dziennik Łódzki vol. I, no. 232 (16 October 1884), p. 2. Zdzisław Kułakowski (red.). Łódź: Zdzisław Kułakowski. ISSN 1898-3111. [accessed 2015-10-24].
  17. ^ "Z miasta i Okolic. Najwyższe nagrody." Tydzień vol. XXIII, no. 10 (10 March 1895), p. 2. Mirosław Dobrzański (red.). Petroków (Piotrków Trybunalski): Mirosław Dobrzański. [accessed 2016-09-29].
  18. ^ Wiadomości ogólne. W kościele Wniebowzięcia N. M. P.... „Dziennik Łódzki”. Rok VIII (nr 163), s. 2, kol. 2, 1891-07-25. Bolesław Knichowiecki (red.). Łódź: Stefan Kossuth.ISSN 1898-3111. [dostęp 2020-09-20].
  19. ^ Wiadomości ogólne. Z kościołów. „Dziennik Łódzki”. Rok VIII (nr 218), s. 2, kol. 2, 1891-10-02. Bolesław Knichowiecki (red.). Łódź: Stefan Kossuth. ISSN 1898-3111. [dostęp 2020-09-20].
  20. ^ Parafia Wniebowzięcia Najświętszej Maryi Panny w Łodzi. O parafii. Rys historyczny. W:Portal archidiecezji łódzkiej. archidiecezja.lodz.pl > Parafie > Dekanat Łódź Bałuty [on-line]. Kuria Metropolitalna Łódzka. [dostęp 2020-09-20].
  21. ^ Enka. Kościół Wniebowzięcia Najświętszej Maryi Panny w Łodzi. „Tydzień”. Rok XXV (nr 24), s. 2, kol. 1–3, 1897-06-13. Mirosław Dobrzański (red.). Petroków (Piotrków Trybunalski): Mirosław Dobrzański. [accessed 2020-09-20].
  22. ^ Z miasta i Okolic. Ofiara. „Tydzień”. Rok XXIII (nr 14), s. 4, 1895-04-07. Mirosław Dobrzański (red.). Petroków (Piotrków Trybunalski): Mirosław Dobrzański. [accessed 2016-09-29].
  23. ^ Wiesław Puś, Żydzi w Łodzi w latach zaborów 1793-1914. Łódź, 1998, p. 180.
  24. ^ Roman Frister, Potomkowie Izraela Poznańskiego. W: Portal „Polityki”. polityka.pl > Więcej – Historia [on-line]. Polityka sp. z o.o. s.k.a., 2010-10-23. [accessed 2020-09-21]. Tekst ukazał się pod tytułem Powrót do ziemi obiecanej w tygodniku „Polityka” nr 43 (2779) z dn. 23 października 2010, p. 111.
  25. ^ Człowiek z Manufaktury. W: Strona Teatru Wielkiego w Łodzi. operalodz.com > Aktualności[on-line]. Teatr Wielki w Łodzi, 2016-05-05. [accessed 2019-02-15].
  26. ^ CZŁOWIEK Z MANUFAKTURY / pierwsze publiczne wykonanie opery z udziałem Małgorzaty Walewskiej. W: Strona Teatru Wielkiego w Łodzi. operalodz.com > Aktualności [on-line]. Teatr Wielki w Łodzi, 2016-12-12. [accessed 2017-01-07].
  27. ^ Publiczność ma głos! / Konkurs kompozytorski na operę CZŁOWIEK Z MANUFAKTURY. W:Strona Teatru Wielkiego w Łodzi. operalodz.com > Aktualności [on-line]. Teatr Wielki w Łodzi, 2017-01-05. [accessed 2017-01-07].
  28. ^ Informacja prasowa Teatru Wielkiego w Łodzi (autor korporatywny): „Człowiek z Manufaktury” – premiera w Teatrze Wielkim w Łodzi. W: Strona Urzędu Miasta Łodzi. uml.lodz.pl > Kalendarz > Luty 2019 > 02 [on-line]. Urząd Miasta Łodzi, 2019-02-02. [accessed 2019-02-15]. [zarchiwizowane ztego adresu (2019-02-15)].

Further reading edit

  • Alfred Döblin (1926) Reise in Polen (in German), published in English translation in 1991 as Journey to Poland (ISBN 1850433631). The book describes the Jewish Łódź of the 1920s.

External links edit

  • Poznanski's mausoleum

izrael, poznański, izrael, kalman, poznański, august, 1833, april, 1900, polish, jewish, businessman, textile, magnate, philanthropist, Łódź, congress, poland, part, russian, empire, husband, eleonora, hertz, poznańska, mausoleum, izrael, wife, eleonora, hertz. Izrael Kalman Poznanski 25 August 1833 28 April 1900 was a Polish Jewish businessman textile magnate and philanthropist in Lodz Congress Poland part of the Russian Empire and the husband of Eleonora Hertz Poznanska 1 The mausoleum of Izrael and his wife Eleonora Hertz on the New Jewish Cemetery has been described as probably the largest Jewish grave monument in the world 2 The mausoleum and mosaic covering the inside of the dome were restored in 1993 Izrael PoznanskiStanislaw Heyman Portrait of Izrael Kalman Poznanski 1891 Born 1833 08 25 August 25 1833Aleksandrow Kingdom of Poland Russian EmpireDiedApril 28 1900 1900 04 28 aged 66 Lodz Kingdom of Poland Russian EmpireNationalityPolishOccupationTextile manufacturerYears active1852 1900Known forManufaktura Poznanski PalaceTogether with Ludwik Geyer and Karol Scheibler he was counted among the three Kings of Cotton in Lodz 3 His complex of mills in Lodz Poland have been turned into the 69 hectare 170 acre Manufaktura mixed use development including a mall 3 museums a multiplex cinema a hotel and restaurants Contents 1 Life 1 1 Youth 1 2 Career 1 3 Philanthropy 2 Family 3 Cultural Depictions 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife editYouth edit nbsp Poznanski s cotton mills in Lodz 1895 nbsp Poznanski Palace next door to the mills as seen in 2005 nbsp The Poznanski mausoleum in the Jewish Cemetery in Lodz Poznanski was the grandson of the merchant Izaak Poznanski from the town of Kowal in Kuyavia and the youngest son of the merchant Kalman who was given the surname Poznanski and Malka Lubinska 4 5 In 1825 the 40 year old Kalman Poznanski with his wife children farmhand and servant settled in Aleksandrow Lodzki In 1834 the family now quite wealthy moved from Aleksandrow to Lodz where the father acquired the right to trade in textiles notably cotton and linen and built the first two story tenement house in the Old Town where he also established a store selling fabrics and spices In Lodz Izrael Poznanski graduated from elementary school and the so called junior high school The future multi millionaire entrepreneur learned from scratch As a teenager he collected scrap material using a rickety cart pulled by a run down horse later to enhance his rags to riches tale the rich man claimed that he did not have a horse at the time and that he instead harnessed dogs to the cart At the age of seventeen in 1851 he married Leonia Hertz the daughter of Mojzesz Hertz a wealthy merchant from Warsaw Israel was described then as a master of the weaving profession bringing an estate worth 500 rubles to the marriage His wife Leonia brought him a dowry selling goods in Warsaw Career edit In December 1852 Izrael Poznanski took over the management of the family business from his father and gradually expanded it over the next half century In 1859 the gross output of his plant was valued at 6 000 zlotys by 1868 this had increased to 23 000 rubles By 1871 Poznanski had begun buying up plots at 17 23 Ogrodowa Street in order to build a new grand industrial complex the following year the first factory facility was erected on the site a high output cotton mill with some 200 mechanical looms Subsequently Poznanski rapidly expanded his plant as described by the following timeline 1874 75 enlargement of the weaving mill construction of a bleacher and a finishing plant 1877 construction of a huge building for a spinning mill 1878 own mechanical workshop 1880 factory hospital St Joseph Hospital currently named after Radlinski at ul Drewnowska 75 1885 90 Szpital Orozakonnych currently the Department of Endocrinology of the University Clinical Hospital no WAM Central Veterans Hospital at ul 1 3 Sterling 1887 dye shop finishing shop and central boiler room 1890 1895 other weaving mills 1893 iron foundry 1895 1897 large cotton warehouses at the Old CemeteryThis impressive complex shot by master Polish photographer Bronislaw Wilkoszewski for his album Views of the City of Lodz in 1895 and illustrated here still stands Built nearly entirely of orange brick it is entered from the street through a large gate resembling a grandiose triumphal arch To the right behind the entry is the building housing the offices of the company directors which preserves its original marble interior The main building dating from 1877 78 stretches 170 meters to the left behind the entrance The corner towers contain staircase ventilation shafts and water tanks for fire relief It originally contained five aisled production halls and functioned as an industrial complex until World War II before being nationalized under the Communist regime After some years of neglect it has now been transformed into a multiplex cinema shopping center and hotel called Manufaktura Poznanski s own palatial residence next door also still stands On October 29 1889 the family business was transformed into a joint stock company like other cotton enterprises in Lodz 6 The official name of the plants was Towarzystwo Akcyjne Wyrobow Cottonowych IK Poznanskiego in Lodz Poznanski Cotton Products Joint Stock Company in Lodz The expanding plants of Poznanski employed more and more workers over the years in 1865 there were some 70 workers by 1879 this had grown to 426 workers and in 1906 the firm employed around 6 800 people In 1883 a strike broke out at Poznanski s factory as a result of deteriorating working conditions At that time the average workday for a laborer lasted 16 hours from 5 00 a m to 9 00 p m That year in addition Izrael Poznanski mandated that employees also work on public holidays beginning on August 15 the Feast of Our Lady of Herbs Any employee who disobeyed was fined up to 3 rubles Protesters were subdued by the police and a group of Cossacks and in all 50 people were removed from the factory 7 In February 1884 Poznanski fined the workers who protested against working on the Feast of Our Lady of Candlemas One of the workers was assaulted 8 In 1891 the report of the factory inspector documented that Poznanski paid the lowest wages of any industrialist in Lodz and the penalties that his weavers faced if they broke regulations were the most severe 9 During the Lodz revolt in 1892 Poznanski set up a temporary investigative office at his factory where several striking workers were humiliated beaten and then fired from the factory without proof of their guilt 10 In 1884 Izrael Poznanski purchased the property of Nieznanowice in the then Wloszczowa district where he built a starch factory to supply his textile factories in Lodz The new plant employed 140 workers He also built a two story palace nearby modeled on neoclassical mansions 11 In the summer of 1889 a fire destroyed this factory completely and losses in uninsured movable property were estimated at 60 000 rubles 12 In 1910 the Poznanskis sold the palace and the rest of the property of Niepanowice to the Karski family 13 Izrael Poznanski died on April 28 1900 and two days later he was buried in the family tomb in the New Jewish Cemetery in Lodz 14 15 At the time of his death he had amassed a fortune of 11 million rubles World War I brought great losses to Poznanski s enterprise Successive generations managed the company until the 1930s when the indebted business was taken over by Banca Commerciale Italiana Philanthropy edit A clear change can be observed during Poznanski s life story initially he was known as a ruthless employer neglecting the safety of employees In his factories there were numerous accidents resulting in disability or death However towards the end of his life he became involved in charity building orphanages schools for the poor and hospitals He contributed in financing the iconostasis at the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Lodz for which he was awarded the Order of St Stanislaus by the Imperial Russian authorities 16 In March 1895 he was awarded the Order of Saint Anna 17 In 1891 he financed a terracotta floor for the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary on pl Koscielny in Lodz made by the German company Villeroy amp Boch from Mettlach 18 19 20 In the mid 1890s he also financed the cost of building a large organ in the church 21 On February 18 1895 he notarised 100 000 rubles to transform the Higher School of Crafts in Lodz into a technical school 22 In 1899 1900 he was the president of the Lodz Jewish Charity Society which he founded among other organizations 23 Family editPoznanski and his wife Leonia had seven children 4 sons Ignacy Herman Karol and Maurycy 3 daughters Anna Ajdla later wife of Jakub Hertz Joanna Natalia later wife of Zygmunt Lewinski and Felicja Fajga died in infancy Cultural Depictions editThe figures of Max Ashkenazi from the novel The Brothers Ashkenazi by Israel Joshua Singer and Shaya Mendelsohn from The Promised Land by Wladyslaw Reymont are partly modeled on Izrael Poznanski 24 In May 2016 the Grand Theater in Lodz announced a competition to write an opera about Izrael Poznanski Man from Manufaktura to a libretto by Malgorzata Sikorska Miszczuk 25 On January 5 2017 the first public performance of competition excerpts from the opera took place The winner of the competition was Rafal Janiak The world premiere of his work originally planned for November 2018 took place on February 2 2019 26 27 28 See also editIzrael Poznanski s PalaceReferences edit Muzeum Historii Zydow Polskich Museum of the History of Polish Jews Poznanski Izrael Kalmanowicz Archived 2015 01 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 November 2013 Wojalski Miroslaw Zbigniew 2000 The Jewish cemetery in Lodz p 58 Widzewska Oficyna Wydawnicza ZORA ISBN 8388638017 Quote Across from this sarcophagus stands the magnificent mausoleum of Izrael Poznanski The largest and most impressive grave monument in this cemetery and probably the largest Jewish grave monument in the world Leszek Skrzydlo Rody fabrykanckie 2nd ed Lodz Oficyna Bibliofilow 1999 pp 53 55 ISBN 83 87522 23 6 Birth certificate of I Poznanski State archives in Lodz Files of the civil status of the Jewish community in Aleksandrow ref No 8 cf scan of the same Alan Jakman Krol bawelny Izrael Poznanski More Maiorum moremaiorum pl 2014 08 26 accessed 2020 09 21 Skrzydlo ibid pp 53 55 Adam Prochnik Pisma Studia i szkice 1864 1918 Krzysztof Dunin Wasowicz editor Warsaw Spoldzielnia Wydawniczo Handlowa Ksiazka i Wiedza 1963 pp 361 368 OCLC 831417378 Res Feliks Perl Dzieje ruchu socjalistycznego w zaborze rosyjskim Editions I T I Warsaw Zycie 1910 pp 160 330 series Zycie wydawnictwo dziel spoleczno politycznych vol 16 OCLC 891192604 dostep 2020 09 20 Prochnik ibid p 368 Perl ibid p 330 Michal Szafranski Nieznanowice a historical outline In Portal of the Nieznanowice village council History of Nieznanowice online niezanowice pl accessed on 2016 03 20 Wiadomosci biezace Pozar fabryki Dziennik Lodzki 6 no 153 7 November 1889 p 2 ed Antoni Chometowski Lodz Stefan Kossuth ISSN 1898 3111 accessed on 2016 03 20 Szafranski ibid Ronika B P Izrael K Poznanski oraz dwa nekrologi Rozwoj vol III no 99 30 April 1900 pp 2 5 6 Wiktor Czajewski red Lodz Wiktor Czajewski accessed 2015 10 16 On Saturday April 28 BP Izrael K Poznanski our venerable boss senior died in Lodz after long and hard suffering Nekrologi Rozwoj vol III no 100 1 May 1900 pp 5 7 Wiktor Czajewski red Lodz Wiktor Czajewski accessed 2015 10 16 Yesterday we placed in the grave the body of the prematurely deceased President of the Lodzkie Towarzystwo Dobroczynnosci BP Izrael K Poznanski Kronika Lodzka Jego Cesarska Mosc Dziennik Lodzki vol I no 232 16 October 1884 p 2 Zdzislaw Kulakowski red Lodz Zdzislaw Kulakowski ISSN 1898 3111 accessed 2015 10 24 Z miasta i Okolic Najwyzsze nagrody Tydzien vol XXIII no 10 10 March 1895 p 2 Miroslaw Dobrzanski red Petrokow Piotrkow Trybunalski Miroslaw Dobrzanski accessed 2016 09 29 Wiadomosci ogolne W kosciele Wniebowziecia N M P Dziennik Lodzki Rok VIII nr 163 s 2 kol 2 1891 07 25 Boleslaw Knichowiecki red Lodz Stefan Kossuth ISSN 1898 3111 dostep 2020 09 20 Wiadomosci ogolne Z kosciolow Dziennik Lodzki Rok VIII nr 218 s 2 kol 2 1891 10 02 Boleslaw Knichowiecki red Lodz Stefan Kossuth ISSN 1898 3111 dostep 2020 09 20 Parafia Wniebowziecia Najswietszej Maryi Panny w Lodzi O parafii Rys historyczny W Portal archidiecezji lodzkiej archidiecezja lodz pl gt Parafie gt Dekanat Lodz Baluty on line Kuria Metropolitalna Lodzka dostep 2020 09 20 Enka Kosciol Wniebowziecia Najswietszej Maryi Panny w Lodzi Tydzien Rok XXV nr 24 s 2 kol 1 3 1897 06 13 Miroslaw Dobrzanski red Petrokow Piotrkow Trybunalski Miroslaw Dobrzanski accessed 2020 09 20 Z miasta i Okolic Ofiara Tydzien Rok XXIII nr 14 s 4 1895 04 07 Miroslaw Dobrzanski red Petrokow Piotrkow Trybunalski Miroslaw Dobrzanski accessed 2016 09 29 Wieslaw Pus Zydzi w Lodzi w latach zaborow 1793 1914 Lodz 1998 p 180 Roman Frister Potomkowie Izraela Poznanskiego W Portal Polityki polityka pl gt Wiecej Historia on line Polityka sp z o o s k a 2010 10 23 accessed 2020 09 21 Tekst ukazal sie pod tytulem Powrot do ziemi obiecanej w tygodniku Polityka nr 43 2779 z dn 23 pazdziernika 2010 p 111 Czlowiek z Manufaktury W Strona Teatru Wielkiego w Lodzi operalodz com gt Aktualnosci on line Teatr Wielki w Lodzi 2016 05 05 accessed 2019 02 15 CZLOWIEK Z MANUFAKTURY pierwsze publiczne wykonanie opery z udzialem Malgorzaty Walewskiej W Strona Teatru Wielkiego w Lodzi operalodz com gt Aktualnosci on line Teatr Wielki w Lodzi 2016 12 12 accessed 2017 01 07 Publicznosc ma glos Konkurs kompozytorski na opere CZLOWIEK Z MANUFAKTURY W Strona Teatru Wielkiego w Lodzi operalodz com gt Aktualnosci on line Teatr Wielki w Lodzi 2017 01 05 accessed 2017 01 07 Informacja prasowa Teatru Wielkiego w Lodzi autor korporatywny Czlowiek z Manufaktury premiera w Teatrze Wielkim w Lodzi W Strona Urzedu Miasta Lodzi uml lodz pl gt Kalendarz gt Luty 2019 gt 02 on line Urzad Miasta Lodzi 2019 02 02 accessed 2019 02 15 zarchiwizowane ztego adresu 2019 02 15 Further reading editAlfred Doblin 1926 Reise in Polen in German published in English translation in 1991 as Journey to Poland ISBN 1850433631 The book describes the Jewish Lodz of the 1920s External links editPoznanski s mausoleum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Izrael Poznanski amp oldid 1200204867, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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