Entry Personal Name
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
- control field: 4601
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
- control field: DLC
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
- control field: 20240808170744.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS
- fixed length control field: 800501n| azannaabn |b aaa
010 ## - LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CONTROL NUMBER
- LC control number: n 50019386
024 7# - OTHER STANDARD IDENTIFIER
- Standard number or code: 0000000109230740
- Source: isni
024 7# - OTHER STANDARD IDENTIFIER
- Standard number or code: 89088977
- Source: viaf
024 7# - OTHER STANDARD IDENTIFIER
- Standard number or code: Q704954
- Source: wikidata
035 ## - SYSTEM CONTROL NUMBER
- System control number: (OCoLC)oca00054819
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
- Original cataloging agency: DLC
- Language of cataloging: eng
- Description conventions: rda
- Transcribing agency: DLC
- Modifying agency: OCoLC
- Modifying agency: ICU
- Modifying agency: DLC
- Modifying agency: NNU
- Modifying agency: OCoLC
046 ## - SPECIAL CODED DATES
- Birth date: 1873-05-23
- Death date: 1956-11-02
- Source of date scheme: edtf
100 1# - HEADING--PERSONAL NAME
- Personal name: Baeck, Leo,
- Dates associated with a name: 1873-1956
370 ## - ASSOCIATED PLACE
- Place of birth: Leszno (Poland)
- Place of death: London (England)
- Place of residence/headquarters: Berlin (Germany)
- Place of residence/headquarters: Terezín (Ústecký kraj, Czech Republic)
- Source of term: naf
373 ## - ASSOCIATED GROUP
- Associated group: Theresienstadt (Concentration camp)
- Source of term: naf
- Start period: 1943
- End period: 1945
374 ## - OCCUPATION
- Occupation: Rabbis
- Occupation: Theologians
- Occupation: Scholars
- Source of term: lcsh
377 ## - ASSOCIATED LANGUAGE
- Language code: ger
400 1# - SEE FROM TRACING--PERSONAL NAME
- Personal name: בק, ליאו,
- Dates associated with a name: 1873־1956
510 2# - SEE ALSO FROM TRACING--CORPORATE NAME
- Control subfield: r
- Relationship information: Chief executive of:
- Corporate name or jurisdiction name as entry element: World Union for Progressive Judaism
510 2# - SEE ALSO FROM TRACING--CORPORATE NAME
- Control subfield: r
- Relationship information: Founded corporate body of person:
- Corporate name or jurisdiction name as entry element: Leo Baeck Institute
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: His Das wesen des j̈udenturus ... 1905.
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: English Wikipedia website, viewed Apr. 26, 2017
- Information found: (Leo Baeck (23 May 1873--2 Nov. 1956) was a 20th-century German rabbi, scholar and theologian. He served as leader of Liberal Judaism in his native country and internationally, and later represented all German Jews during the Nazi era. After the war, he settled in London, U.K., where he served as the chairman of the World Union for Progressive Judaism. In 1955, the Leo Baeck Institute for the study of the history and culture of German-speaking Jewry was established, and Baeck was the first international president of this institute. The Institute now includes branches around the world including the Leo Baeck Institute, New York, and the Leo Baeck Institute, London.)
- Uniform Resource Identifier: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Baeck
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Information converted from 678, Apr. 26, 2017
- Information found: (Dr.)
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Jewish Virtual Library, 3 January 2018
- Information found: (Rabbi Leo Baeck presented his major philosophical ideas in a book called The Essence of Judaism. It was titled as a response to Adolph von Harnack's book The Essence of Christianity, which Baeck critiqued when it was published in 1901. Baeck's personal life deserves some mention because he lived by the values described in his writings. As president of the representative body of Jews in Germany after 1933, he was given many opportunities to escape. He refused, insisting that he would stay so long as there was a minyan in Germany. In 1943 he was sent to the Terezin (Terezienstadt) concentration camp. He survived the horrors by helping others, teaching, and refusing to lose his sense of self or dignity. His philosophical beliefs were not swayed by the Holocaust. He always maintained that evil was the result of humans using their free will to not do the ethical. The enormity of the Nazi atrocities did not shake that belief.)
- Uniform Resource Identifier: http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/leo-baeck
670 ## - SOURCE DATA FOUND
- Source citation: Arendt, H. Eichmann in Jerusalem, 2006:
- Information found: page 119 (Dr. Leo Baeck, former Chief Rabbi of Berlin; We know the physiognomies of the Jewish leaders during the Nazi period very well: ... Leo Baeck, scholarly, mild-mannered, highly educated, who believed Jewish policemen would be "more gentle and helpful" and would "make the ordeal easier" (whereas in fact they were, of course, more brutal and less corruptible, since so much more was at stake for them).
942 ## - KOHA INTERNAL USE
- Koha auth type: PERSO_NAME