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・ Alfred R. Lindesmith
・ Alfred R. Loeblich Jr
・ Alfred R. Ludvigsen
・ Alfred R. Page
・ Alfred Radcliffe-Brown
・ Alfred Radley
・ Alfred Rahlfs
・ Alfred Rainer
・ Alfred Ramsbottom
・ Alfred Rankley
・ Alfred Ransom
・ Alfred Ransom (Royal Navy officer)
・ Alfred Raoul
・ Alfred Rapp
・ Alfred Rappaport
Alfred Rappaport (diplomat)
・ Alfred Rappaport (economist)
・ Alfred Rasho
・ Alfred Rasser
・ Alfred Ravenscroft Kennedy
・ Alfred Rawlinson
・ Alfred Rawlinson (bishop)
・ Alfred Reade Godwin-Austen
・ Alfred Redl
・ Alfred Redwine shooting
・ Alfred Reed
・ Alfred Reeves
・ Alfred Rehder
・ Alfred Reid
・ Alfred Reid (politician)


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Alfred Rappaport (diplomat) : ウィキペディア英語版
Alfred Rappaport (diplomat)

Alfred Rappaport (16 June 1868 – 11 October 1946) was an Austrian diplomat and writer. Rappaport was considered an authority on Balkans and Albanian affairs in the foreign ministry of Austria-Hungary. For his services he was ennobled by Franz Joseph I in 1916 and became known as Alfred Rappaport, Ritter von Arbengau. After the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire he retired and focused on publishing his works on the Balkans.
== Life ==
Born the son of Eugen Rappaport, an Austrian Jewish businessman, Alfred converted to Roman Catholicism in 1883 and in 1900 joined the Oriental Academy. In 1893 he joined the staff of the Austro-Hungarian consulate of Shkodër and in October 1895 became vice-consul under Theodore Ippen. In Shkodër Rappaport learned Albanian and associated himself with Franz Nopcsa. From 1897 to 1899 he headed the vice-consulate of Prizren and from 1900 to 1903 the consulate of Baghdad. In 1904 he was reassigned to the Balkans as consul general of Skopje. In 1909 he was recalled to Vienna by Count Alois Lexa von Aehrenthal and became director of the Albanian department and deputy director of the Oriental one.〔
In 1916 Franz Joseph ennobled him with the title of Ritter and allowed him to add a place name to his surname, which was then a standard procedure in Austria. As part of the process, Rappaport was invited by the authorities to propose a coat of arms and three place names from which one would be chosen. The three choices Rappaport submitted were ''Arward'' ("of Vardar"), ''Drineck'' ("of Drin"), and ''Arbengau'' (deriving from the Latin term ''Arbanum'' for the Albanian people and gau, a country subdivision used by Germanic-speaking peoples). As the first two were already in use by other noble families, the authorities chose ''Arbengau''.
After the First World War Rappaport was one of the few former leading diplomats of the foreign ministry that were initially employed by the Republic of Austria as director of the political department. However, during the reforms of 1920 and 1921, when the Republic had to drastically reduce the number of people employed in the public sector, he was retired.

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