About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 80. Chapters: Chinese Jews, Jewish Chinese history, Synagogues in Hong Kong, Aurel Stein, Connie Chung, Huang Chao, History of the Jews in China, Chiune Sugihara, Shanghai International Settlement, Shanghai Ghetto, Jewish settlement in Imperial Japan, Kaifeng Jews, A Jewish Girl in Shanghai, Radhanite, Adolph Joffe, Edward Isaac Ezra, Nathan Gregory Silvermaster, Matthew Nathan, Abraham Kaufman, Sidney Rittenberg, Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln, Morris Cohen, Allan Zeman, Mir yeshiva, Chaim Leib Shmuelevitz, Shanghai Russians, Charles K. Bliss, Seishirō Itagaki, Friedrich Rosen, Israel Epstein, Chaim Walkin, Manfred Stern, Ho Feng-Shan, Yisrael Mendel Kaplan, Samuel Isaac Joseph Schereschewsky, Jacob of Ancona, Rene Rivkin, Franz Weidenreich, History of the Jews in Hong Kong, Baghdadi Jews, Eva Sandberg, David Samuel Margoliouth, Sassoon family, W. Michael Blumenthal, Victor Sassoon, Eli Marom, Simon Kaspe, Noel Jacobs, Sidney Shapiro, Zhao Yingcheng, Mikhail Borodin, History of the Jews in Taiwan, Silas Aaron Hardoon, Ellis Kadoorie, Jakob Rosenfeld, Ohel Leah Synagogue, Israelis in China, Lawrence Kadoorie, Baron Kadoorie, Pan Guang, Ursula Kuczynski, Elly Kadoorie, Shimon Sholom Kalish, Horace Kadoorie, Leo Hanin, Aaron Avshalomov, Eduard Glass, Stanislaw Flato, Jakob Rudnik, Center of Jewish Studies Shanghai, Salem Shaloam David, Paul Komor, Otto Schnepp, Institute of Jewish Studies, Tadeusz Romer, Kadoorie family, Serge Rubanraut, Ludwik Rajchman, Elias David Sassoon, Mark Gayn, Yaacov Liberman, Harbin Jewish Research Center. Excerpt: Huang Chao (simplified Chinese: traditional Chinese: pinyin: Huang Chao; Wade-Giles: Huang Ch'ao, died 884) was the leader of the Huang Chao Rebellion (traditional Chinese: , 874-884), known in mainland China as the Huang Chao Revolution (simplified Chinese: traditional Chinese: pinyin: ...