- Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, as well as in
Central and
Eastern Europe.
Frankists believed in
Sabbatai Zevi, one of the most
famous of all self-proclaimed...
-
Frankists may
refer to:
Frankists (Judaism), a
Sabbatean sect of the 18th and 19th centuries,
followers of
Jacob Frank Frankists (Croatia), a Croatian...
-
Frankists (Croatian: Frankovci) were
followers of a
political ideology that
bases positions and
lines around the
thought of
Josip Frank, a
Croatian nationalist...
- the
Frankists to
Roman Catholicism were
being actively carried on with the
higher representatives of the
Polish Church; at the same time the
Frankists tried...
- mother,
descended from a
converted Frankist family": "Mickiewicz, Adam,"
Encyclopaedia Judaica. "Mickiewicz's
Frankist origins were well-known to the Warsaw...
-
Poland and
continued to lead the
community after the
dismantling of the
Frankist court and
arrest order from the Duke of Hesse. Nonetheless, her followers...
- Naḥman ben
Samuel ha-Levi (Hebrew: נחמן בן שמואל הלוי 1721 – 1792) was a
Frankist rabbi, who
lived in Busk, Galicia, in the
first part of the eighteenth...
- (de facto) Preceded by
Members of the
defunct Croatian Committee Radical Frankist wing of the
Party of
Rights Succeeded by
Various emigre groups Headquarters...
- on 21
December 1874 in Warsaw, to Wanda, née Grabowska, who was from a
Frankist family of
converts to Catholicism, and Władysław Żeleński, a prominent...
- Wagnalls. Maciejko,
Pawel (2011). The
Mixed Multitude:
Jacob Frank and the
Frankist Movement, 1755-1816.
University of
Pennsylvania Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-8122-0458-2...