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  1. The Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau (official name: Jüdisch-Theologisches Seminar Fraenckel’sche Stiftung) was an institution in Breslau for the training of rabbis, founded under the will of Jonah Fränckel, and opened in 1854.

  2. JUEDISCH-THEOLOGISCHES SEMINAR, BRESLAU, first modern rabbinical seminary in Central Europe. Founded in 1854 with the funds which Jonas Fraenkel, a prominent Breslau businessman, had willed for the purpose, the seminary became the model for similar colleges set up in Europe and the U.S.

  3. The Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau. The urgent aim of the new Wissenschaft des Judentums was, from its. inception in 1822, to find new ways to help Jews with their integration into German society, while at the same time obstructing an eager assimilation and. counteracting a new wave of secularism.

  4. The first modern Jewish theological seminary, the Juedisch-Theologisches Seminar, was established in Breslau by Zachariah *Frankel in 1854. With its celebrated library it became a center of Jewish scholarship and spiritual activity until 1938.

  5. JUEDISCH-THEOLOGISCHES SEMINAR, BRESLAU , first modern rabbinical seminary in Central Europe. Founded in 1854 with the funds which Jonas Fraenkel, a prominent Breslau businessman, had willed for the purpose, the seminary became the model for similar colleges set up in Europe and the U.S.

  6. Oct 10, 2012 · On this day in 1854, the Juedisch-Theologisches Seminar (Jewish Theological Seminary) opened, in Breslau, then Germany, today Poland. The institution was the first modern rabbinical seminary in Central Europe, and a philosophical forerunner to today’s Conservative/Masorti movement.

  7. The Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) was founded in 1886 through the efforts of two distinguished rabbis, Sabato Morais and Henry Pereira Mendes, along with a group of prominent lay leaders from Sephardic congregations in Philadelphia and New York. Its mission was to preserve the knowledge and practice of historical Judaism.