Max Friedländer (other)
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Max Friedländer (other)
Max Friedländer may refer to: *Max Friedländer (journalist) (1829–1872), Silesia-born Austrian journalist *Max Friedlaender (musicologist) (1852–1934), Silesia-born German bass singer and musicologist *Max Jakob Friedländer (1867–1958), Berlin-born German art historian *Max Friedlaender (lawyer) (1873–1956), German lawyer See also * Friedländer Friedländer (Friedlander, or Friedlaender) is a toponymic surname derived from any of German places named Friedland (other), Friedland. The surname may refer to: People Friedländer * Adolf Albrecht Friedländer (1870–1949), Aust ...
{{hndis, Friedlander, Max ...
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Max Friedländer (journalist)
Max Friedländer (18 June 1829, Pszczyna, Pless, Upper Silesia - 20 April 1872, Nice) was a Germans, German-Austrians, Austrian journalist. After studying law like his cousin Ferdinand Lasalle at the universities of Berlin, Breslau, and Heidelberg, he became Assessor (law), assessor at the city court of Breslau, and while holding this position he published his book on copyright, ''Der Ausländische und Einheimische Rechtsschutz Gegen Nachdruck und Nachbildung'', Leipzig, 1857. He began his journalistic career in 1856 by contributing to the Vienna ''Neue Freie Presse,'' and soon afterward moved to Vienna to become a member of the editorial staff of that paper, his articles on political economy and finance attracting the attention of influential statesmen and financiers. After the Italian unification, Italian war Friedländer conducted a successful journalistic campaign against the policy of Schmerling, and advocated strongly the granting of a liberal constitution. In September, ...
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Max Friedlaender (musicologist)
Max Friedlaender (12 October 1852, Brieg/Brzeg, Province of Silesia, Prussia – 2 May 1934, Berlin) was a German bass singer, music editor, and musicologist. He specialized in German Lieder. Life Friedlaender studied voice with well-known teachers Manuel Garcia in London and Julius Stockhausen in Frankfurt, both of the bel-canto school. From 1881 to 1883 the singer lived and worked at Frankfurt, moving to Berlin in 1883. He received a doctorate from the University of Rostock in 1894 with a dissertation on Franz Schubert and joined the music faculty at Berlin University in 1894. Friedlaender emigrated to America in 1911 where he taught at Harvard University. He succeeded Rochus von Liliencron as general editor for a ''Book of National Songs for Men's Choirs'' first proposed by Kaiser Wilhelm II in 1906. In the 1920s, Friedlaender was closely involved in the formation of the ''Deutsches Volksliedarchiv'' (German folksong archive). The Nazi regime popularized the archive's work ...
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Max Jakob Friedländer
Max Jakob Friedländer (5 July 1867 in Berlin – 11 October 1958 in Amsterdam) was a German-Jewish museum curator and art historian. He was a specialist in Early Netherlandish painting and the Northern Renaissance, who volunteered at the Kupferstichkabinett Berlin in 1891 under Friedrich Lippmann. On Lippmann's recommendation, Wilhelm von Bode took him on as his assistant in 1896 for the paintings division. He was appointed deputy director of the Kaiser Friedrich Museum (then containing the Berlin State Museums' old master paintings and sculpture) under Bode in 1904 and became director himself from 1924 to 1932, working on his history ''From Van Eyck to Bruegel'' and the 14-volume (printed in 16, with supplements) survey ''Early Netherlandish Painting''. In 1933 he was dismissed as a "non-Aryan" and in 1939 had to move to Amsterdam because he was Jewish. He attained the rank and title of geheimrat (privy councillor) under the German Empire. He also donated several works to the col ...
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Max Friedlaender (lawyer)
Max O. Friedlaender (28 June 1873 in Bromberg – 28 May 1956 in Twickenham) was a German lawyer. After passing the legal exam in 1898 in Munich, Friedlaender was admitted to the bar the following year. Friedlaender is known for his leading commentary on the German Bar Code (''Rechtsanwaltsordnung''), which was later expanded to include a lawyers' code of honour, the predecessors of modern formulations of professional responsibilities and duties. Due to his Jewish heritage, his bar license was withdrawn under the Nazi regime and Friedlaender fled to England in 1938. After World War II, he became an honorary member of the German Bar Association The German Bar Association (German: Deutscher Anwaltverein – DAV) is a voluntary association of German and German-speaking lawyers. It seeks to safeguard, protect and promote the professional and economic interests of the Bar, notary lawyers inc ... (''Deutscher Anwaltverein''). References Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to ...
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