1814 - 1891 (77 years)
Generation: 1
Generation: 2
2. | Doris Behrendt (1.Johanna1) was born on 13 Jul 1838; died on 10 Oct 1919 in Berlin; was buried in Weissensee Cemetery. Family/Spouse: Leopold Herzog. Leopold was born on 24 Feb 1838 in Preussich Stargard; died on 28 Mar 1890 in Berlin. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 9. Martha Herzog was born on 29 Sep 1866 in Konigsberg; died in 1942 in Holocaust - Theresienstadt.
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Generation: 3
12. | Fritz (Federico) Behrendt (3.Simon2, 1.Johanna1) was born on 30 Mar 1877 in Konigsberg; died in 1967 in Buenos Aires. Notes:
More information about Fritz can be found at -
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fritz_Behrendt_(Architekt)
(archived at https://archive.is/IblVd)
Here is a Google translate version of this -
Behrendt was born as the son of the dentist Simon Behrendt (* 1838) and his wife Selma b. Kanter (1857?1923) born in Königsberg. He came from a Jewish family (his grandfather Joseph Behrendt was a member of the Chewra Kadischa). [3] He married Marie Stranz (1886?1961) around 1906 in Berlin. The couple had four children, Peter Paul (* 1907 in Berlin-Steglitz; ? 1990 in Buenos Aires, Argentina), Charlotte Johanna Martha "Lotte", married Carrive (* 1909 in Breslau; ? 2002 in France), Lisbeth "Liesl" , married Mayer (* 1916 in Breslau; ? 2002 in Lima, Peru) and M. [4] [5] [6] [7]
Behrendt studied at the Technical University of Charlottenburg and at the Technical University of Munich, a. a. with Friedrich von Thiersch. At the beginning of the 20th century he worked as a freelance architect, he built a. a. a villa for the art collector Carl Sachs (1868?1943) in Breslau-Kleinburg. [8] In the spring of 1904 he was appointed government master builder (Assessor of the building trade). [9] In 1909 he was hired by the Wroclaw City Council, later promoted to building inspector and then to building councilor. After the First World War he was head of the city expansion office of the city of Wroclaw (city planning director), which coordinated the planned incorporation and development of the neighboring rural communities and the city of Deutsch-Lissa. On March 1, 1928, he was elected to the city council of Wroclaw as a city council with no portfolio. [10] On April 18, 1929, he was appointed to the post of city building council, which he held until January 31, 1934 (law on the reconstruction of the empire).
In 1939 Behrendt emigrated to Argentina with his wife and three of his adult children. The daughter Lotte stayed in Europe; she married the French surrealist and Kafka translator Jean Carrive from Bordeaux in 1934. [11]
In his role as a construction officer, Behrendt designed public buildings, mainly school buildings. The duties and powers of the city building council also included overseeing all construction projects in the city. Research into the archive shows that Behrendt personally checked more important building plans and provided them with green entries. For example, he cut down the southern tower of the post office on Klosterstrasse. Furthermore, the five-storey version of the high-rise building for the Werkbundsiedlung in Breslau planned by Adolf Rading goes back to his intervention. The Werkbund exhibition itself took place under heavy resistance from Behrendt. [12]
Fritz married Marie (Maria) Stranz in Jul 1906 in Steglitz, Berlin. Marie was born on 14 Aug 1886 in Berlin; died in 1961 in Buenos Aires. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
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Generation: 4
32. | Heinrich Hanoch Jacoby (13.Antonia3, 4.Heinrich2, 1.Johanna1) was born on 2 Mar 1909 in Konigsberg; died on 13 Dec 1990 in Tel Aviv. Notes:
From https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jacobi-hanoch
(archived at https://archive.is/wip/aL4x4)
JACOBI, HANOCH (Heinrich; 1909?1990), Israeli composer, conductor, and string player. Born in Germany, he studied the viola and composition with Paul Hindemith at the Berlin Hochschule für Musik (1927?30). From 1930 to 1933 he played in the Grosses Orchester des Südwestdeutsche Rundfunk. In 1934 he emigrated to Ere? Israel and settled in Jerusalem where he joined the Jerusalem String Quartet (1934?9) and the Palestine Music Conservatory (1934?47), later the Jerusalem Academy of music, of which he became the director (1954?1958). In 1959, he moved to Tel Aviv, where he joined the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra as a violist until 1974. After leading the Herzliyah String Quartet, he founded his own quartet. Jacobi was a conservative composer although the influence of his new homeland may be felt in his works. Among his popular compositions which were considered Israeli cultural symbols are the cantata Od Yavo Yom ("The Day Will Come," 1944), the Suite for Strings (1946); Kinnor Hayah le-David ("King David's Lyre") in honor of the birth of the state of Israel (1948); and Judean Hill Dance: Hora Variations (1952). During his later years, he wrote pedagogical compositions for string instruments based on Jewish tunes from Mediterranean and Middle Eastern countries. He also wrote three symphonies (1944, 1955, 1960) and other orchestral works such as Partita concertanta (1971), Mutatio I (1975), Variations (1976), and Mutatio II (1977).
Heinrich married Alice Kanel on 19 Feb 1937 in Alexandria, Egypt. Alice was born in 1915 in Turkey; died in 2009 in Tel Aviv. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Heinrich married Sabina Wittman in 1932. Sabina was born in 1906; died on 2 Apr 1936 in Tel Aviv. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]
Children:
- 52. Chava Jacoby was born on 5 May 1933 in Breslau; died on 26 Feb 2009 in Jerusalem.
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