Ina S. Lorenz

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Ina Susanne Lorenz (born March 5, 1940 ) is a German historian and university professor .

Life

Ina S. Lorenz, b. Werner, was born as the youngest child of a well-known Hamburg banking family. She completed her high school at the Heilwig School . After studying history, philosophy and art history in Munich, Berlin, Vienna and Karlsruhe, she received her doctorate with a thesis on the liberal politician Eugen Richter . In 1987 he completed his habilitation in Karlsruhe on the Jews in Hamburg from the German Empire to the end of the National Socialist tyranny. As a professor at the Institute for Social and Economic History at the University of Hamburg and as deputy director at the Institute for the History of German Jews in Hamburg, she makes significant contributions to research into the Jewish history of her hometown.

Research priorities

Ina S. Lorenz's focal points include the German-Jewish history of the 19th and 20th centuries, especially in northern Germany, and the social and community history of the Jews in Hamburg. In collaboration with Jörg Berkemann, among other things , she created a representation of the history of Hamburg's Jews between 1933 and 1938/1939 over a period of 20 years. This work consists of seven volumes and 4773 pages. It contains two monographs, four volumes of documents and a register volume. The historian Jörg Osterloh from the Fritz Bauer Institute calls this work a “Memorial to Hamburg's Jews” and rates it as the “standard work on the history of the Jews” in Hamburg from 1933–1939

Honors

Publications (selection)

Monographs

  • Eugene Richter. Decisive liberalism in the Wilhelmine era - 1871 to 1906. Matthiessen, Husum 1980. (Dissertation)
  • The Jews in Hamburg during the Weimar Republic. A documentation. Christians Verlag, 2 volumes, Hamburg 1987.
  • Identity and assimilation. Hamburg's Jews in the Weimar Republic. Christians Hamburg 1989.
  • Jewish sites in Hamburg (city map). Edited by the Institute for the History of German Jews and the State Center for Political Education Hamburg, Hamburg 1995.
  • with Jörg Berkemann : Dispute in the Jewish cemetery Ottensen (1663–1993). How long does it take forever. Two volumes, Hamburg 1995.
  • with Jörg Berkemann: The Hamburg Jews in the Nazi State 1933 to 1938/39. Seven volumes, Wallstein, Göttingen 2016, ISBN 978-3-8353-1811-3 . (Pension from Jörg Osterloh)
  • Ina S. Lorenz: David Sealtiel . I want to be the soldiers of my people. Berlin-Leipzig 2019, Hentrich & Hentrich, ISBN 978-3-95565-344-6 .

Articles in compilations and magazines

  • Socialist Society in Palestine. An exchange of letters between Ernst Toller and a Zionist from Hamburg (1925). In: P. Freimark, I. Lorenz, G. Marwedel (eds.): Judentore, Kuggel, tax accounts. Studies on the history of German Jews, primarily in the Hamburg area. Hamburg 1983, pp. 221-293.
  • ‹Ahasver goes to Eppendorf› - On the concentration of Hamburg's Jews in the districts of the 19th and 20th centuries. in: Informations zur modern district history, 1987 issue 1, pp. 23–29.
  • ‹Recognition as a service to people›. Some unpublished letters from Franz Rosenzweig to the historian Siegfried A. Kaehler. In: The philosopher Franz Rosenzweig (1886–1929). Vol. I, The Challenge of Jewish Learning. HG. W. Schmied-Kowarzik. International Congress - Kassel 1986, Freiburg, Munich 1988, pp. 187-213.
  • Ten years of struggle for the Hamburg system (1864-1873). In: The Hamburg Jews in the Emancipation Phase (1780-1870). Ed. P. Freimark and A. Herzig, Hamburg 1989, pp. 42-82.
  • The founding of the “Jewish Religious Association Hamburg” (1937) and the end of the Jewish communities in Altona, Wandsbek and Harburg-Wilhelmsburg. In: P. Freimark, A. Jankowski, I. Lorenz. Jews in Germany. Emancipation, integration, persecution and annihilation. Hamburg 1991, pp. 81-116.
  • The Hamburg Jewish Community 1860-1943. Empire - Weimar Republic - Nazi state. In: The Jews in Hamburg 1590 to 1990. Scientific contributions from the University of Hamburg to the exhibition “Four Hundred Years of Jews in Hamburg”. Edited by A. Herzig in collaboration with S. Rohde, Hamburg 1991, pp. 77-100.
  • The life of Hamburg's Jews under the sign of the 'Final Solution' 1942–1945. In: Displacement and Extermination of the Jews under National Socialism. Edited by A. Herzig and I. Lorenz in collaboration with S. Rohde, Hamburg 1992, pp. 207–249.
  • ‹Since he was and wanted to stay Jewish ...› Isaac Wolffson - lawyer and politician in Hamburg. In: ‹Heil über dich Harmonia›. Hamburg in the 19th century. Edited by I. Stephan and G. Winter, Hamburg 1992, pp. 447-470.
  • The Jewish cemetery in Ottensen (Hamburg). A project report. In: Aschkenas, 3, 1993, pp. 282-290.
  • Sephardim versus Ashkenazim. The late dispute over the Gabriel Riesser (1937/1938) grave monument. In: Sefarden in Hamburg. Edited by M. Studemund-Halevy, Hamburg 1993, pp. 455-485.
  • Dr. Leo Lippmann - Two reports. In: Leo Lippmann, ‹… that I feel and act like a good German›. A contribution to the history of the German-Israelite community in Hamburg from the beginning of 1935 to the end of 1942. Introduction Ina Lorenz, Finanzverwaltung Hamburg Hamburg 1993, pp. 19–33.
  • The Institute for the History of German Jews, Hamburg. In: Jewish life today in Germany. Edited by UR Kaufmann, Bonn 1993, pp. 163-172.
  • The 'Hamburg System' as the organizational model of a large Jewish community. Conception and Reality. In: Jewish communities and forms of organization from antiquity to the present. Edited by R. Jütte and AP Kustermann, Vienna et al. 1996 (Aschkenas, supplement 3), pp. 221–255.
  • No room for memory. The Ottensen Jewish Cemetery 1942–1992. In: P. Reichel (ed.): The memory of the city. Hamburg in dealing with its National Socialist past. Hamburg 1997, pp. 135-150.
  • Reminder signs and memorials. Hamburg Jews in the memory of the city. in: P. Reichel (ed.): The memory of the city. Hamburg in dealing with its National Socialist past. Hamburg 1997, pp. 167-186.
  • Maritime Hachschara in Hamburg (1935–1938). Lucy Borchardt: ‹The only Jewish shipowner in the world›. in: Preserve and Report. Festschrift for Hans-Dieter Loose on his 60th birthday. ed. by HW Eckardt and K. Richter, ZHG 83, T. 1, 1997, pp. 445-472.
  • The dark and difficult years (1933–1945). In: 150 Years of the Israelite Hospital in Hamburg. Hamburg 1997, pp. 65-85.
  • Ina S. Lorenz & J. Berkemann: End of the war and a new beginning. On the creation of the new Jewish community in Hamburg 1945-1948. In: The Jews in Hamburg 1590 to 1990. Scientific contributions from the University of Hamburg to the exhibition “Four Hundred Years of Jews in Hamburg”. Edited by A. Herzig in collaboration with S. Rohde, Hamburg 1991, pp. 633–656.
  • Otto Quirin: Portrait drawings of people in resistance against the Nazi regime. With texts by Ina S. Lorenz, Maike Bruhns, Verlag Beauty as Such, Frankfurt am Main 2016, ISBN 978-3-00-052222-2 .

Editing or co-editing

  • Jew gates, balls, tax accounts. Studies on the history of German Jews, primarily in the Hamburg area. Edited by P. Freimark, I. Lorenz and G. Marwedel, Hamburg 1983.
  • P. Freimark, A. Jankowski, I. Lorenz (ed.): Jews in Germany. Emancipation, integration, persecution and annihilation. Hamburg 1991.
  • Displacement and extermination of the Jews under National Socialism. Edited by A. Herzig and I. Lorenz in collaboration with S. Rohde, Hamburg 1992.
  • Dispute at the Ottensen Jewish cemetery (1663–1993). Texts and documents. Edited by I. Lorenz and J. Berkemann with the participation of Rabbi ZW Gotthold, Hamburg 1995.
  • Persecution and Trust in God. Letters from a Hamburg Jewish Orthodox family in the 'Third Reich'. Edited and introduced by Ina Lorenz with the participation of Brigitta Bohn-Strauss, Döling and Galitz, Hamburg 1998.
  • Otto Quirin: Hamburg Jewish Portraits. Edited by Michael Studemund Halevy and Ina Lorenz, foreword by Maike Bruhns, ConferencePoint-Verlag, Hamburg 2012, ISBN 978-3-936406-38-2 .

Festschrift

  • From the sources. Contributions to German-Jewish history. Festschrift for Ina Lorenz on her 65th birthday. Edited by Andreas Brämer , Stefanie Schüler-Springorum and Michael Studemund-Halévy, Hamburg 2005, Dölling & Galitz, ISBN 3-937904-09-3 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Lorenz, I .: Eugen Richter. The resolute liberalism in the Wilhelmine era, 1871 to 1906. Husum 1980.
  2. ^ The Jews in Hamburg at the time of the Weimar Republic. A documentation, 2 volumes, Hamburg 1987
  3. ^ Memorial to the Hamburg Jews. In: Insight 2018. Bulletin of the Fritz Bauer Institute. P. 88ff.
  4. ^ Obermayer German Jewish History Awards 2017 , accessed on January 20, 2017.
  5. 177th Ordinary General Meeting of the VHG , accessed on January 20, 2017.
  6. Memorial for the Hamburg Jews in Insight 2018 Bulletin of the Fritz Bauer Institute, p. 88ff.