Meiselman V Meiselman
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Meiselman V Meiselman
Meiselman is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Myron Meiselman (1908-1998), American businessman and distinguished war veteran * Alexander Meiselman (1900–1938), Russian writer, poet, and orientalist * Avraham Elchanan Maizelman (1863-1928), Romanian Rabbi and scholar. *David I. Meiselman (1924–2014), American economist * Moshe Meiselman (born 1942), American Orthodox rabbi *Winifred Meiselman Winifred ("Win") Meiselman (1934-December 18, 2021) was the founder of the media accuracy group CAMERA, a historian of the American Civil War and specifically of Confederate spy Laura Ratcliffe, social worker, art therapist, poet, and artist. ...
(1934–2021), American media analyst and poet {{surname ...
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Myron Meiselman
Myron of Eleutherae ( grc, Μύρων, ''Myrōn'' ), working c. 480–440 BC, was an Athenian sculptor from the mid-5th century BC. He was born in Eleutherae on the borders of Boeotia and Attica. According to Pliny's '' Natural History'', Ageladas of Argos was his teacher. None of his original sculptures are known to survive, but there are many of what are believed to be later copies in marble, mostly Roman. Reputation Myron worked almost exclusively in bronze and his fame rested principally upon his representations of athletes (including his iconic ''Diskobolos''), in which he made a revolution, according to commentators in Antiquity, by introducing greater boldness of pose and a more perfect rhythm, subordinating the parts to the whole. Pliny's remark that Myron's works were ''numerosior'' than those of Polycleitus and "more diligent" seem to suggest that they were considered more harmonious in proportions (''numeri'') and at the same time more convincing in realism: ''dilige ...
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Alexander Meiselman
Alexander Davidovich Meiselman (1900 – 1938) was a Soviet writer, poet, orientalist, and theatre historian. Biography Alexander David Meiselman was born on the 11(24?) September 1900 in Tayga (formerly in the Mariinsk County of the Tomsk Province). He was the youngest of the nine children in the family. His father David Meiselman, who was a coachman, managed a post coach station on the Siberian Route. After the death of his father in 1904 he was in the charge of his elder brother and went to a grammar school in Irkutsk. After he finished school in 1918, he entered the faculty of law of the Irkutsk State University, and in 1920 he changed the faculty for the faculty of Oriental Humanities (later renamed the Department of Far East International Relations of the Faculty of Social Sciences), from which he graduated as a specialist in Japanese in 1924. He specialised in oriental theatre. In 1925 he moved to Leningrad, where at first, he worked as a technician and then an assis ...
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Pod Roșu Synagogue
The Pod Roșu Synagogue was a synagogue in Iași, Romania, in the neighborhood, during the 19th and 20th centuries. Cucu Street (under that name because of the sales of fowl which took place in a nearby market) was formerly called Sinagogilor Street for the many synagogues that were there (there were as many as 132 at one point), and the Pod Roșu Synagogue was built in a nearby neighborhood under the same name. Pod Roșu means "Red Bridge" in Romanian language, Romanian. History The Pod Roșu Synagogue was the second major synagogue to be built in Iași following the building of the Great Synagogue (Iași), Great Synagogue in Iași in 1671. In 1808, the Apter Rav, Rabbi Avraham Yehoshua Heshel, Avraham Yehoshua Heschel moved to Iași to found a Hasidic Judaism, Chassidic community there (he was to leave only a few years thereafter). As the Great Synagogue (then called the Schulhof) prayed in Nusach Ashkenaz, Nussach Ashkenaz, the intended synagogue was to pray in Nusach Sefar ...
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David I
David I may refer to: * David I, Caucasian Albanian Catholicos c. 399 * David I of Armenia, Catholicos of Armenia (728–741) * David I Kuropalates of Georgia (died 881) * David I Anhoghin, king of Lori (ruled 989–1048) * David I of Scotland (died 1153) * David I Strathbogie, Earl of Atholl (died 1270) * David I of Imereti, King in 1259–1293 * Dawit I of Ethiopia (died 1413) * David I of Kakheti David I ( ka, დავით I) (1569 – 21 October 1602), of the Bagrationi dynasty, was a king of Kakheti in eastern Georgia from October 1601 until his death in October 1602. Life David was a son of Alexander II of Kakheti by his wife Tina ...
, King of Kakheti (1601–1602) {{hndis, David 01 ...
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Moshe Meiselman
Moshe Meiselman is an American-born Orthodox rabbi and rosh yeshiva (dean) of Yeshiva Toras Moshe in Jerusalem, which he established in 1982. He also founded and served as principal of Yeshiva University of Los Angeles (YULA) from 1977 to 1982. He is a descendant of the Lithuanian Jewish Soloveitchik rabbinic dynasty. Early life and education Meiselman was born to Harry Meiselman, a dental surgeon, and Shulamit Soloveitchik, a teacher and Jewish school principal who attended New York University and Radcliffe College. On his father’s side, he is a descendent of the Hasidic Rebbe Rav Baruch of Kossov. On his mother's side, he is a descendant of the Soloveitchik rabbinic dynasty. His maternal grandfather was Rabbi Moshe Soloveichik and his maternal great-grandfather was Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik, known as Reb Chaim Brisker. His mother, Shulamit, authored the book ''The Soloveitchik Heritage: A Daughter's Memoir'' (1995). Meiselman was a nephew of Rabbi Dr. Joseph B. Soloveitchi ...
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