

An edition of Lviv (2000)
a city in the crosscurrents of culture
By John Czaplicka
Publish Date
2000
Publisher
Ukrainian Research Institute, Harvard University
Language
eng
Pages
362
Description:
"To offer a broad historical and contemporary portrait of Lviv, Czaplicka has gathered together a wide range of scholars from the areas of historiography, history, art and architectural history, urban planning, literary history and criticism, and cultural history. Known variously over the centuries as Leopolis, Lwow, Lvov, and Lemberg, this city served as a laboratory for the forging of modern Jewish, Polish, and Ukrainian identities. Historically, Armenians, Germans, Jews, Poles, and Ukrainians interacted in the Galician and formerly Polish and Habsburg metropolis. The resulting confluence of cultures in this now Ukrainian city was at times violent, but each of the ethnic groups and religions residing in the city contributed to its urban, urbane, and truly cosmopolitan character. The book emphasizes the richness of this local cultural heritage."--Jacket.
subjects: Civilization, Ukraine, history, History, Ethnic relations, Buildings, structures, Jews, In literature
Places: Lʹviv (Ukraine), Ukraine, Lʹviv