Howard N. Lupovitch is professor of history and director of the Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic Studies at Wayne State University. He is the author of Jews at the Crossroads: Tradition and Accommodation during the Golden Age of the Hungarian Nobility, 1729-1878 and Jews and Judaism in World History, and coeditor of Poland and Hungary: Jewish Realities Compared (Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry, volume 31).
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List of Tables Preface Part I. Beginnings, 1738-1838 1. Introduction: Budapest as a Laboratory of Urban Jewish Identity 2. The Obuda Kehilla and the Magnate-Jewish Symbiosis 3. Terezvaros and the Pest Jewish Community Part II. Coming of Age, 1838-1873 4. Washing Away the Ancien Regime : The Great Flood and the Rebranding of Budapest, 1838-1873 5. A Model Neolog Community: From Nordau's Pest to Herzl's Budapest 6. The Pest Jewish Women's Association: A Cautious Path to the Mainstream 7. The Other Side of Budapest Jewry: Orthodox and Lower-Income Jews Part III. After Trianon 8. Paradise Waning: War, Revolution, and the New Budapest, 1914-1938 9. 1938 and Beyond Notes Bibliography Index