Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'ShUM Sites of Speyer, Worms and Mainz' has mentioned 'United States' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
German JewsDeutsche Juden (German)xd7x99xd7x94xd7x93xd7x95xd7xaa xd7x92xd7xa8xd7x9exd7xa0xd7x99xd7x94xe2x80x8e (Hebrew)xd7x93xd7x99xd7x99xd7x98xd7xa9xd7xa2 xd7x99xd7x99xd7x93xd7x9f (Yiddish)The location of Germany (dark green) in the European Union (light green)Total population116,000 to 225,000[1]Regions with significant populationsxc2xa0Germany xc2xa0Israel xc2xa0United States xc2xa0Chile xc2xa0Argentina xc2xa0Brazil xc2xa0Mexico xc2xa0Colombia xc2xa0United KingdomLanguagesEnglish, German, Russian, Hebrew, other immigrant languages, YiddishReligionJudaism, agnosticism, atheism or other religionsRelated ethnic groupsOther Ashkenazi Jews, Sephardi Jews, Mizrahi Jews, Israelis | WIKI |
Religion God in Judaismxc2xa0(names) Principles of faith Mitzvotxc2xa0(613) Halakha Shabbat Holidays Prayer Tzedakah Landxc2xa0of Israel Brit Barxc2xa0and Bat Mitzvah Marriage Bereavement Philosophy Ethics Kabbalah Customs Synagogue Rabbi Texts Tanakh Torah Nevi'im Ketuvim Talmud Mishnah Gemara Rabbinic Midrash Tosefta Targum Beit Yosef Mishneh Torah Tur Shulchan Aruch Zohar Communities Ashkenazim Mizrahim Sephardim Teimanim Beta Israel Gruzinim Juhurim Bukharim Italkim Romanyotim Cochinim Bene Israel Related groups Bnei Anusim Lemba Crimean Karaites Krymchaks Kaifeng Jews Igbo Jews Samaritans Crypto-Jews Mosaic Arabs Subbotniks Noahides Population Judaism by country Lists of Jews Diaspora Historical population comparisons Genetic studies Land of Israel Old Yishuv New Yishuv Israeli Jews Europe Armenia Austria Azerbaijan Belarus Bulgaria Cyprus Czech Republic Estonia Finland France Georgia Germany Greece Hungary Italy Latvia Lithuania Moldova Netherlands Poland Portugal Romania Russia Serbia Spain Sweden Ukraine United Kingdom Asia Afghanistan China India Indonesia Iran Iraq Japan Lebanon Malaysia Philippines Syria Turkey Uzbekistan Vietnam Yemen Africa Algeria Egypt Ethiopia Libya Morocco South Africa Tunisia Zimbabwe North America Canada United States Latin America and Caribbean Argentina Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Cuba Dominican Republic Elxc2xa0Salvador Guyana Haiti Jamaica Mexico Paraguay Puerto Rico Suriname Uruguay Venezuela Oceania Australia Fiji Guam Newxc2xa0Zealand Palau Denominations Orthodox Modern Haredi Hasidic Reform Conservative Karaite Reconstructionist Renewal Haymanot Humanistic Culture Yiddish theatre Dance Humour Minyan Wedding Clothing Niddah Pidyon haben Kashrut Shidduch Zeved habat Conversionxc2xa0to Judaism Hiloni Music Religious Secular Cuisine American Ashkenazi Bukharan Ethiopian Israeli Israelite Mizrahi Sephardic Yemenite Literature Israeli Yiddish American Languages Hebrew Biblical Yiddish Yeshivish Jewish Koine Greek Yevanic Juhuri Shassi Judaeo-Iranian Ladino Ghardaxc3xafa Sign Bukharian Knaanic Zarphatic Italkian Gruzinic Judeo-Aramaic Judeo-Arabic Judeo-Berber Judeo-Malayalam History Timeline Name "Judea" Leaders Twelve Tribes of Israel Ancient history Kingdomxc2xa0of Judah Templexc2xa0in Jerusalem Babylonian captivity Assyrian captivity Yehud Medinata Second Temple Jerusalemxc2xa0(inxc2xa0Judaism timeline) Hasmonean dynasty Sanhedrin Schisms Pharisees Hellenistic Judaism Jewishxe2x80x93Roman wars History of the Jews in the Byzantine Empire Christianityxc2xa0and Judaism Hinduismxc2xa0and Judaism Islamicxe2x80x93Jewish relations Middle Ages Golden Age Sabbateans Hasidism Haskalah Emancipation Antisemitism Anti-Judaism Persecution The Holocaust Israel Land of Israel Aliyah Jewish atheism Baal teshuva Arabxe2x80x93Israeli conflict Politics Politics of Israel Judaism and politics World Agudath Israel Anarchism Bundism Feminism Leftism Zionism General Green Labor Neo-Zionism Religious Revisionist Post-Zionism Category Portalvte | WIKI |
[34] The United States was the primary destination for emigrating German Jews. | WIKI |
Jews emigrating from Berlin to the United States, 1939 | WIKI |
The United States was another destination for German Jews seeking to leave the country, though the number allowed to immigrate was restricted due to the Immigration Act of 1924. | WIKI |
Between 1933 and 1939, more than 300,000 Germans, of whom about 90% were Jews, applied for immigration visas to the United States. | WIKI |
By 1940, only 90,000 German Jews had been granted visas and allowed to settle in the United States. | WIKI |