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Emil Reich
Emil Reich (24 March 1854 – 11 December 1910) was an Hungarian-born historian of a Jewish family who lived and worked in the United States and France before spending his final years in England. Will Johnston has called Reich "a flowering of Hungarian improvisation" and "an unduly neglected English-language essayist".〔William M. Johnston, ''The Austrian Mind: An Intellectual and Social History, 1848–1938'' (1983), p. 351: "Still another flowering of Hungarian improvisation occurred in an unduly neglected English-language essayist of Hungarian birth, Emil Reich (1854–1910). A Catholic born at Preschau in Slovakia, Reich studied at Prague, Budapest, and Vienna..."〕 Reich's work, while lively, often fell down on detail and completeness. He loved paradox.〔W. B. Owen, revised by H. C. G. Matthew, 'Reich, Emil (1854–1910)', in ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (Oxford University Press, 2004) (online version ) (subscription required), accessed 26 September 2013〕 ==Early life== According to Johnston, Reich was a Roman Catholic "born at Eperjes in todays Slovakia" (then part of the Austrian Empire). Other writers say he was Jewish.〔Thomas Weber, 'Anti-Semitism', in ''Our Friend "The Enemy": Elite Education in Britain and Germany Before World War I'' (Stanford University Press, 2008), (p. 190 )〕〔Asher Tropp, ''Jews in the Professions in Great Britain 1891–1991'' (1991), p. 58〕 The son of Louis Reich, the young Reich was educated at schools at Eperjes and at Kassa (then in Hungary, now in Slovakia) before taking a series of degrees at the universities of Prague, Budapest, and Vienna, where he graduated as a Doctor of Laws (''Doctor Juris Universi'').〔
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