Gitel and Isaac Coppel: family tree

Identifier
WL1772
Language of Description
English
Alt. Identifiers
  • 70901
Dates
1 Jan 2004 - 31 Jan 2004
Level of Description
Collection
Languages
  • English
Source
EHRI Partner

Biographical History

Gitel Jette Levi (1778-1839) was only 14 years old when she had her first child, David. Her husband, Beer Behrend, suddenly died in 1803 leaving her to look after their seven children. In 1805 she married her second husband, Isaac Coppel, who lived with his mother, Bräune Coppel, in Hanover. He was respected for his social work throughout Hanover and particularly in the Jewish community of the suburb of Linden. They had five more children. Isaac and Gitel decided to send their 15 year old son, David, through the Napoleonic trade blockade between Britian and continental Europe to England to prevent his enrolment in the Napoleonic army. David initially lived in London's East-end and in 1812 joined a ships agency firm in Liverpool, first as an employee and in 1825 as a partner. He helped three more sons of Gitel and Isaac to establish themselves as dentists in England. Amongst them was Louis who worked in Manchester and in 1853 returned to Germany to live in Göttingen with his youngest daughter, Juliet Benfey. David's second son, Henry, studied medicine and practised in London. He was medical adviser and member of the managing committee of the Jewish Norwood Orphanage and published articles on education of working class youths in England.

Gitel and Isaac Coppel were ancestors of the Ullstein family

Acquisition

1 folder- family tree

Donated July 2008

Donor: Mr Meyer

Scope and Content

This collection consists of correspondence and a family tree of the descendants of the Jewish couple Gitel and Isaac Coppel, whose family has had interconnected German and British relations since 1807 when their eldest son was sent to England to prevent his forced enrolment in Napoleon's armies for the Russian campaign.

Papers including translations of Hebrew gravestone inscriptions of Isaac Coppel, Bräune Coppel (Isaac's mother) and Gitel Coppel who were buried at the Old Jewish Cemetery in Hanover (Lower Saxony).

Conditions Governing Access

Open

Related Units of Description

  • see WL1361 - Frederick Ullstein: personal papers, 1856-1998; WL1738 Frederick Ullstein: family correspondence

Subjects

Places

This description is derived directly from structured data provided to EHRI by a partner institution. This collection holding institution considers this description as an accurate reflection of the archival holdings to which it refers at the moment of data transfer.