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・ Ephraim Anderson
・ Ephraim Atwood House
・ Ephraim Avea Nsoh
・ Ephraim Avigdor Speiser
・ Ephraim B. Hall
・ Ephraim B. Potter House
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Ephraim Carlebach
・ Ephraim Chambers
・ Ephraim Chiume
・ Ephraim Cleveland House
・ Ephraim Cohen-Reiss
・ Ephraim Colclough
・ Ephraim Cook
・ Ephraim Curtis
・ Ephraim Curzon
・ Ephraim Cutler
・ Ephraim Cutter
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・ Ephraim Davis House
・ Ephraim Dean
・ Ephraim Deinard


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Ephraim Carlebach : ウィキペディア英語版
Ephraim Carlebach

Ephraim Carlebach (March 12, 1879 in Lübeck – 1936 in Ramat Gan,〔http://www.dzb.de/verkauf/zeitschriften/dzbn/0203/index.html 〕 British Mandate of Palestine), was a German-born Orthodox rabbi.
==Biography==
Carlebach belonged to a well known German rabbi family. His father Salomon Carlebach (1845–1919) was rabbi in Lübeck. He had seven brothers and four sisters. He attended the Katharineum school in Lübeck, where he befriended his schoolmate Thomas Mann, as the latter recalled.〔Thomas Mann, Letter to Cilly Neuhaus of 18 February 1947, In: Thomas Mann: ''Briefe II'', Erika Mann (ed.), S. Fischer Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1963, p. 526〕
Four of his brothers were rabbis as well. They are Emanuel Carlebach (1874-1927), Joseph Carlebach (1883–1942), David Carlebach (1885–1913) and Hartwig Naftali Carlebach (1889–1967).〔Sabine Niemann (ed.): ''Die Carlebachs, eine Rabbinerfamilie aus Deutschland'', Ephraim-Carlebach-Stiftung (ed.). Dölling und Galitz. Hamburg 1995, ISBN 3-926174-99-4〕
Carlebach is most known for his work in founding Orthodox Jewish schools in Germany, notably Leipzig, from 1900. He was a leading figure in the construction of the and the synagogue ''Etz Chaim''.
In 1924 he was appointed the chief Orthodox Rabbi of Leipzig. In 1935 Carlebach moved to the British Mandate of Palestine where he died in 1936. His son Esriel Carlebach was the founder and first editor of the newspaper Maariv. His nephew Shlomo Carlebach was known as "The Singing Rabbi".

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