Wróbel, Piotr (1994). «The Jews of Galicia under Austrian-Polish Rule, 1869–1918». Austrian History Yearbook (på engelsk). 25: 97–138. ISSN1558-5255. doi:10.1017/S0067237800006330. Besøkt 19. juni 2020. «Galicia occupied an important place in the history of the Jewish Diaspora. Galician Jews made up a majority of Habsburg subjects of Mosaic faith and formed a cultural bridge between Westjuden and Ostjuden. Numerous outstanding Jewish political figures and scholars, such as Isaac Deutscher, Karl Radek, and Martin Buber, were born or raised in Galicia, where Zionist and Jewish socialist movements flourished at that time. The unique atmosphere of a Galician shtetl was recorded in Hassidic tales, in the books of Emil Franzos, Manes Sperber, Bruno Schulz, Andrzej Kuśniewicz, and others.»
Whitebook, Joel (2017). «Wandering Jews: From Galicia to Vienna». Freud: An Intellectual Biography (på engelsk). Besøkt 19. juni 2020. «At the time, Jacob was living in the town in which he was born, Tysmenitz in Galicia, which had been part of Poland until 1772, when it was annexed by the Austrian Empire, of which it remained a part until the end of the First World War.»
civita.no
Lars Peder Nordbakken og Lars Fr H Svendsen (28. juni 2019). «Mises, Ludwig von - forfatterskapet». Civita. Besøkt 19. juni 2020. «I 1867 ble alle restriksjoner på jødisk innvandring til Wien avskaffet. Wien ble etter dette en magnet for progressive jøder fra de østlige provinsene som så en mulighet til å bli integrert i en mer sekulær og kosmopolitisk verden. Wienermagnetismen ble enda sterkere etter at polsk-nasjonale krefter fikk økt makt i Galicia fra 1882.»
Wróbel, Piotr (1994). «The Jews of Galicia under Austrian-Polish Rule, 1869–1918». Austrian History Yearbook (på engelsk). 25: 97–138. ISSN1558-5255. doi:10.1017/S0067237800006330. Besøkt 19. juni 2020. «Galicia occupied an important place in the history of the Jewish Diaspora. Galician Jews made up a majority of Habsburg subjects of Mosaic faith and formed a cultural bridge between Westjuden and Ostjuden. Numerous outstanding Jewish political figures and scholars, such as Isaac Deutscher, Karl Radek, and Martin Buber, were born or raised in Galicia, where Zionist and Jewish socialist movements flourished at that time. The unique atmosphere of a Galician shtetl was recorded in Hassidic tales, in the books of Emil Franzos, Manes Sperber, Bruno Schulz, Andrzej Kuśniewicz, and others.»
Wróbel, Piotr (1994). «The Jews of Galicia under Austrian-Polish Rule, 1869–1918». Austrian History Yearbook (på engelsk). 25: 97–138. ISSN1558-5255. doi:10.1017/S0067237800006330. Besøkt 19. juni 2020. «Galicia occupied an important place in the history of the Jewish Diaspora. Galician Jews made up a majority of Habsburg subjects of Mosaic faith and formed a cultural bridge between Westjuden and Ostjuden. Numerous outstanding Jewish political figures and scholars, such as Isaac Deutscher, Karl Radek, and Martin Buber, were born or raised in Galicia, where Zionist and Jewish socialist movements flourished at that time. The unique atmosphere of a Galician shtetl was recorded in Hassidic tales, in the books of Emil Franzos, Manes Sperber, Bruno Schulz, Andrzej Kuśniewicz, and others.»