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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Amalie_BeerAmalie Beer - Wikipedia

    Amalie Malka Beer (Hebrew: מלכה אסתר בעער; 10 February 1767 – 27 June 1854) was a German Jewish philanthropist, communal worker, and salonnière. Biography. Amalie Malka Wolff was born in Berlin to Prussian court factor Liepmann Meyer Wulff (1745–1812) and his wife

  2. German philanthropist and communal worker; died at Berlin June 22 (24), 1854. She was the wife of the banker Jacob Herz Beer, daugher of Liebmann Meyer Wolf (known as "the Berlin Crœsus"), and great-granddaughter of Lipmann Wolf Taussig. She was very charitable, and an active member of the Women's Aid Society for Wounded Soldiers, which was ...

  3. Amalie Beer (1767–1854), wife to Jacob Herz Beer (1769–1825), a banker and sugar manufacturer and supporter of the Jewish Enlightenment; European movement during the 1770s Haskalah, held a brilliant open house.

  4. Ordre de Louise. Vue de la sépulture. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata. Amalie Beer née Amalie Meyer Wulf (née le 10 février 1767 à Berlin et morte le 27 juin 1854 dans la même ville), est une salonnière prussienne à Berlin et la mère du compositeur Giacomo Meyerbeer .

  5. 29 de jan. de 2022 · Meyer Beer was born on 5 September 1791 at the gates of the Prussian capital in Tasdorf/Vogelsdorf – today’s Rüdersdorf near Berlin. A pure coincidence, because the actual destination of the journey, Frankfurt an der Oder, is not reached. Meyer’s father Jacob Herz Beer (1769-1825) came from there and married Amalie Meyer Wulff (1767-1854 ...

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  6. Amalie Beer (1767 – 1854), wife to Jacob Herz Beer (1769 – 1825), a banker and sugar manufacturer and supporter of the Haskalah, held a brilliant open house. Together with her husband she played a leading role in the Berlin “reform temple” movement.

  7. 26 de jul. de 2021 · Jul 26, 2021. When Richard Wagner was a fledgling opera composer in the 1840s, he sought help from the reigning maestro of the day: a German Jew named Giacomo Meyerbeer, whose operas were all the rage in France. Meyerbeer took a keen interest in the then-unknown German, which helped propel him to success.