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Oberlander Jews
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Oberlander Jews (; "Upper Province") were the Jews who inhabited the northwestern regions of the historical Kingdom of Hungary, which are contemporary western and .

"Oberland", in this context, is a Hungarian-Jewish historiographic term, unrelated to the territory of (Oberungarn, sometimes Oberland).Menahem Keren-Kratz. Cultural Life in Maramaros County (Hungary, Romania, Czechoslovakia): Literature, Press and Jewish Thought, 1874-1944. Ph.D dissertation submitted to the Senate of Bar-Ilan University, 2008. OCLC 352874902. pp. 23-24. Its origin lies in the immigration pattern of Jews into the country during the 18th century. Those arriving from Austria and settled in the adjacent counties of the northwest, mainly from Trencsén to , and gradually spread further; however, a large swath in the center of northern Hungary, between and Hajdú, remained closed for Jewish settlement until all residential limits were lifted in 1840. Thus, a demarcation line separated the Austrian and Moravian Jews from the , who emigrated to the northeastern territories. Those west of it were known as "Oberlander" (highlanders), and the Galicians were "" (lowlanders). In rabbinic sources written in Hebrew, it was translated as the Upper and Lower Provinces ( Galil E'lion, Galil Takhton).M. E. Gonda, Yitsḥaḳ Yosef Kohen, I. Márton. Yehude Hungaryah : meḥḳarim hisṭoriyim. ha-Agudah le-ḥeḳer toldot Yehude Hungaryah (1980). OCLC 16130215. p. 128. The designation was coined by the former. After 1840, the geographical boundary dividing Oberland and Unterland was the linguistic one between : It stretched from the , between Poprád (present-day ) and Liptószentmiklós (present-day Liptovský Mikuláš), Nagyszabos (present-day Slavošovce) and Rozsnyó (present-day Rožňava), continuing just north of and south of , until reaching the Hungarian border in Kolozsvár (present-day ).Jechiel Bin-Nun. Jiddisch und die Deutschen Mundarten: Unter Besonderer Berücksichtigung des Ostgalizischen Jiddisch. Walter de Gruyter (1973). p. 93. While sometimes applied to all western Jews, like those in and beyond, it came to denote the Orthodox ones who resided in contemporary , west of the boundary detailed above, and in contemporary .Yeshayahu A. Jelinek, Paul R. Magocsi. The Carpathian Diaspora: The Jews of Subcarpathian Rus' and Mukachevo, 1848-1948. East European Monographs (2007). p. 5-6. Their ancestors arrived in two waves: The first, comprising Austrians, came after the expulsion of the Jews from Vienna in 1670. They were welcomed by Paul I, Prince Esterházy, who allowed them to settle in Burgenland and to form the on his lands.Peter F. N. Hörz. Jüdische Kultur im Burgenland: historische Fragmente, volkskundliche Analysen. Institut für Europäische Ethnologie (2005). p. 187. Another, much larger, wave entered Hungary in the wake of an Imperial decree from 1727, which limited the number of Jews allowed to marry in Moravia to 5,106. It remained in effect until 1848.Wilma Iggers. The Jews of Bohemia and Moravia: A Historical Reader. Wayne State University Press (1992). p. 57.

Oberland also followed an pattern of its own, as its Jews tended to embrace the German language and culture.Michael Brenner. Kleine jüdische Geschichte. C.H.Beck (2012). pp. 214-215. In spite of undergoing thorough modernization, they remained largely Orthodox, and were primarily influenced by the and his disciples in the yeshiva of Pressburg, the province's largest city. However, they were mostly more moderate and educated than the Unterlander, and the differences between Neo-Orthodox and Ultra-Orthodox in the country paralleled geographic ones. While was rampant in Unterland, it had never reached the northwest.Michael K. Silber. The Emergence of Ultra-Orthodoxy: The Invention of Tradition. In: Jack Wertheimer, ed. The Uses of Tradition: Jewish Continuity since Emancipation (New York-Jerusalem: JTS distributed by Harvard U. Press, 1992). pp. 41-42. During the 19th century, Hungarian Jews were roughly divided into three cultural groups: the , Hungarian-speaking and heavily ones in the center of the kingdom; the modern Orthodox, non-Hasidic, German-speaking Oberlander; and the Unterlander, who were strongly influenced by Hasidism.Robert Perlman. Bridging Three Worlds: Hungarian-Jewish Americans, 1848-1914. University of Massachusetts Press (2009). p. 65.Bernard Spolsky. The Languages of the Jews: A Sociolinguistic History. Cambridge University Press (2014). p. 212.

The Oberlander shared a common dialect of Western Yiddish, mixed with Hungarian and Slovak vocabulary. Their resembled those of pre-emancipation , like donning before marriage and laying in the . Following World War II, some integrated in East European Ultra-Orthodox groups, while others joined Hungarian Hasidic sects like Satmar, Nitra, Vien, Puppa, and Kashou. Several congregations that self-identify as Oberlander and adhere to such customs are present in Israel, New York, in London's , and in .


See also
  • History of the Jews in Slovakia
  • History of the Jews in Hungary


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