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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alfred_LévyAlfred Lévy - Wikipedia

    Alfred Lévy (French pronunciation: [alfʁɛd levi]; 14 December 1840 – 23 July 1919) was a French rabbi who became Chief Rabbi of France in the period immediately before and during World War I. Life [ edit ]

  2. LÉVY, ALFRED (18401919), chief rabbi of France, scholar, and author. Lévy, who was born in Lunéville, France, graduated from the Paris Ecole Rabbinique in 1866 and subsequently served as rabbi at Dijon (1867–69), Lunéville (1869–80), and Lyons (1880–1905).

  3. Alfred Lévy. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata. Alfred Lévy ( 14 décembre 1840, Lunéville – 22 juillet 1919, Pau) fut grand-rabbin de France de 1907 à 1919. Biographie. Alfred Moïse Lévy est né à Lunéville en Lorraine, le 14 décembre 1840. Il est le fils d'Abraham Lévy et de son épouse Adélaïde Israel.

  4. Alfred Lévy, né le 7 juin 1872 à Metz et mort le 14 février 1965 à Nancy, est un peintre aquarelliste [1] français. Décorateur en chef de l'entreprise Majorelle, il s'est illustré dans le style Art déco.

  5. Bernard-Henri Lévy (born November 5, 1948, Beni Saf, Algeria) is a French philosopher, journalist, filmmaker, and public intellectual who was a leading member of the Nouveaux Philosophes (New Philosophers).

  6. Jan 17, 2023 · In 1952, French demographer Alfred Sauvy coined the term ‘Third World’, a neologism that expanded globally and became a key category of post-war thought. After the term's decline in the 1980s, decolonial studies and the new Cold War historiography revisited it, using it to ‘provincialize’ Cold War history.

  7. In 1923, Robert Gamzon, grandson of the Chief Rabbi of France Alfred Lévy, founded the first chapter of the Éclaireurs Israélites de France (EIF) in Paris. This Scouting organization brought together native-born and immigrant Jewish youth, and affirmed their Jewish identity.