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Dej — Municipality Dej Calvinist Church … Wikipedia
David [1] — David (hebr., der Geliebte). I. Fürsten: A) König von Juda: 1) D., jüngster Sohn des Isai (daher dichterisch der Isaïde), eines Hebräers in Bethlehem, aus dem Stamme Juda, dessen Heerden er hütete; wurde von Samuel als Nachfolger Sauls zum Könige … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Bezidu Nou — Neudorf Bözödújfalu Hilfe zu Wappen … Deutsch Wikipedia
BEZIDUL NOU — (Hg. Bőződújfalu), village in Transylvania, Romania, inhabited by Szeklers, a distinctive ethnic group of Hungarian origin who speak a specific Hungarian dialect. In the 17th century it was an important center of the Sabbatarians, who practiced… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
HEBRAISTS, CHRISTIAN — (1100–1890). Factors governing gentile enterprises in Hebrew scholarship prior to the latest phase of more widespread secular attitudes may be distinguished as (1) motivation; (2) scholarly facilities; and (3) occasion; appreciation and… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
HUNGARIAN LITERATURE — This article is arranged according to the following outline: biblical and hebraic influences the reformation and its aftermath 19TH AND 20TH CENTURY LITERATURE the figure of the jew in hungarian literature literature of the holocaust the jewish… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
PÉCHI, SIMON° — (c. 1567–c. 1639), Hungarian statesman, poet, and author, leader of the Judaizing Sabbatarian sect. Born in Transylvania, Péchi was at first employed as tutor of A. Eössy s children; Eössy, the founder of the sect, introduced him to the court of… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
ŞOMREI SABAT — ŞOMREI SABAT, Christian sect in Transylvania; though chronologically the latest, it was the most extreme faction in the Reformation in Hungary. Founded in the 1580s in central Transylvania, the sect had distinct anti Trinitarian trends. During… … Encyclopedia of Judaism