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EN
This text is the result of an edition effort undertaken to compile a portion of manuscript fragments containing the memories of Wawrzyniec Dayczak (Dajczak) (1882-1968) – the son of a farmer from the Ternopil region – later a Lviv architect. The presented chapter covers the years of his early youth, spent – in the period 1894-1903 – in Brody, the then-capital of a district, where he attended the local German-language secondary school, named in honour of Crown Prince Rudolf. The ethnic diversity among both teachers and students: Poles, Ukrainians, and Jews (with the latter as the majority), makes it possible to approach the school and the relations within it, as well as the position of the school in the local environment – as a reflection of the general social conditions within what is culturally understood as Eastern Galicia (in its small-town version).
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Galicja – twórcza inspiracja Józefa Rotha

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EN
In his article „Galicia – Joseph Roth’s Creative Inspiration” the author stresses the influence of his childhood and young age on his work. It is multicultural Galicia which was the inspiration, particularly the Jewish culture and multinationality of the Habsburg Monarchy. The author distinguishes three periods in Roth’s life – love of Galicia, escape from it and coming back to his love. The role of family Brody is especially stressed – this place carries throughout his masterpieces. The author exposes Polish elements in Roth’s work and his friendships and contacts with other Polish writers like Józef Wittlin, Bruno Schultz and Julian Tuwim. The author discovers the everlasting truth – to find oneself an realize one’s life’s goals both the feeling of alienation and sense of one’s fatherland is important.
PL
This study examines the report of the death of the Jewish merchant Rubin Josefowicz (9.02.1663). This study uses the report to fulfil three goals. First, it sheds light on Brody’s Jewish past. A copy of documents from the town of Biecz is for the moment the earliest complete source which describes in detail the trade activity of a Jew from Brody. Secondly, the report reveals additional evidence of the trade history within the borders of the Polish‑Lithuanian Commonwealth. Finally, the investigation reveals aspects of merchants’ everyday life in the town of the Carpathian foothill region.
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