HERZL.org
is available for sale
About HERZL.org
HERZL is a highly brandable five-letter .org name for a site dedicated to the history of Israel. It served as an online presence for a site dedicated to everything about Binyamin Ze’ev (Theodor) Herzl.
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$5,700
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Domain name HERZL.org
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Herzl – A Man of His TimesLife in Vienna, the Capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
In his thirties, Herzl lived in the two main centers of the time – Vienna, where he had lived since he was 18, and Paris, where he worked as the correspondent for the Vienna-based newspaper Neue Freie Presse. Herzl experienced the exciting atmosphere of these two cities, which constituted the spiritual, creative and social center of Europe, and was exposed to global changes that had a profound impact on the situation in both cities.At the end of the 19th century, the author Hermann Broch defined Vienna, Herzl’s primary residence, as a “merry apocalypse:” The extensive revival of the city in the fields of industry, art, philosophy and science took place alongside the decline of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Thus Vienna, as the capital of the empire, was simultaneously in a state of boom and decline. Inhabitants of the city pursued a hedonistic and wealthy lifestyle, spent their time at ostentatious balls and devoted much attention to social and creative leisure activities, yet the disintegration of the empire hovered in the background, producing a sense of anxiety and threat. The numerous changes in the political, economic and social spheres, and the emergence of nationalist and other ideologies, created a charged atmosphere that carried the vision of security and progress, but also engendered a sense of confusion and fear.Johannes Brahms’ composition A German Requiem was a powerful expression of the general sentiment that an era was coming to an end. Many artists of the time produced works focusing on the themes of death and profound emotional upheaval, and these seemed to internalize the growing personal and collective obsession with questions relating to sex, death and mental anguish. It was abundantly clear that changes on the political and international map would shake the fabric of both personal and social life, and fear of impending change can clearly be seen in the works of the Expressionist artists. The leaders of the movement – the artists Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt and Oskar Kokoschka; the literary figures Franz Werfel and Georg Trakl; and the composers Gustav Mahler and Arnold Schoenberg all worked in Vienna, and their creativity was clearly influenced by the spirit of the times, and perhaps influenced the times, as well.The Status of the JewsThe Viennese Jews were devoted to their city and patriotic to their country. They were thoroughly integrated in the surrounding society, and happily adopted local customs. They spoke and wrote in German, followed the latest cultural fashions, and felt that they were authentically Viennese. Herzl himself, although born in Budapest, was thoroughly Viennese in his character and lifestyle; indeed, the fact that he was not Viennese born and had arrived in the city in his youth may actually have led him to intensify his effort to adopt a Viennese identity.Like most of the Jews of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Herzl felt he was lucky to be a subject of Emperor Franz-Josef, who adopted an enlightened and reasonable attitude towards the residents of the empire, Jews included. The Jews were involved in all fields of industry, economics and politics, and occupied key positions in the social elite of Budapest, Herzl's birthplace and the city where he spent his childhood. The Jews of Budapest had German cultural leanings, and saw themselves as an integral part of the empire.Thus Herzl felt thoroughly at home in Austro-Hungary, and his Judaism did not lead to any sense of separation or alienation. As a child, he felt that he belonged to his Hungarian city and to the empire that surrounded it; as he grew older, he moved confidently in his surroundings, with a profound and self-confident sense of belonging. He saw his Judaism as one of the inherent components of his individual identity, but not as bearing any exceptional significance.Like his fellow Jewish residents in the Viennese Prater, the home of many wealthy Jewish families who contributed to the prosperity of Vienna, Herzl saw himself as an integral and authentic part of the urban landscape. Toward the end of the 19th century, however, the picture changed. Rifts that had remained beneath the surface began to appear in a powerful and ugly manner. To the observer, Vienna seemed to change almost overnight from a stronghold of tolerance, pluralism and openness to a narrow-minded city dominated by racist emotions and anti-Semitic movements – a society that offered security and the hope of advancement only to those who met clear and strict conditions of religion, race and nationality. In fact, however, this process occurred gradually, and its early symptoms could have been identified.