Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 33. Chapters: Austrian expatriates in the Czech Republic, Berchtold family, Czech people of Croatian descent, Stillfried family, Emil Artin, Prince Eduard Franz of Liechtenstein, Count Leopold Berchtold, Josef Bican, Henry of Bohemia, Erna Furman, Karl Kautsky, Kunigunde of Bohemia, Franz Graf von Wimpffen, Princess Sophie von Hohenberg, Friedl Dicker-Brandeis, Franz Ulrich, 11th Prince Kinsky of Wchinitz and Tettau, David Flusser, Etti Plesch, Prince Ernst von Hohenberg, Rudolf Vytla il, Renate Spitzner, Karl Rankl, Walter Susskind, Georg Eisler, Maria Jeritza, Friedrich Torberg, Baron Raimund von Stillfried, Germans in the Czech Republic, Ottokar Chiari, Friedrich von Berchtold, De tna, Angern an der March, Heinrich Jalowetz, Max Pallenberg, Uher ice, Gertrude of Babenberg, Duchess of Bohemia, Karel Klostermann, Jakub Schikaneder, Vlado Miluni, Robert Mayr-Harting, Furstenberg-Taikowitz. Excerpt: Emil Artin (March 3, 1898 - December 20, 1962) was an Austrian-American mathematician. Emil Artin was born in Vienna to parents Emma Maria, nee Laura (stage name Clarus), a soubrette on the operetta stages of Austria and Germany, and Emil Hadochadus Maria Artin, Austrian-born of Armenian descent. Several documents, including Emil's birth certificate, list the father's occupation as "opera singer" though others list it as "art dealer." It seems at least plausible that he and Emma had met as colleagues in the theater. They had been married in St. Stephen's Parish on July 24, 1895. Emil entered school in September 1904, presumably in Vienna. By then, his father was already suffering symptoms of advanced syphilis, among them increasing mental instability, and was eventually institutionalized at the recently established (and imperially sponsored) insane asylum at Mauer Ohling, 125 kilometers west of Vienna. It is notable that neither wife ...