Search results
Dutch legal notary
- Arnold van den Bergh (20 January 1886 ‒ 28 October 1950) was a Dutch legal notary based in Amsterdam. He was a well-known and high-profile lawyer, one of six Jewish notaries operating in Amsterdam.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_van_den_Bergh
People also ask
Who is Arnold van den Bergh?
What did van den Bergh do for a living?
Why did Arnold van den Bergh give up the Frank family?
When did van den Bergh die?
What happened to Mr Van den Bergh?
Was Arnold van den Bergh Jewish?
A team including an ex-FBI agent said Arnold van den Bergh, a Jewish figure in Amsterdam, probably "gave up" the Franks to save his own family. The team, made up of historians and other...
- Anne Frank Poem Sells for $148,000
A poem by Dutch schoolgirl Anne Frank written shortly before...
- Dutch
An Amsterdam bakery called "Anne & Frank" is changing its...
- Dirty Jokes
Anne Frank's diary, written in hiding from the Nazis, is...
- Anne Frank 'May Not Have Been Betrayed
World-famous wartime diarist Anne Frank may have been...
- Anne Frank Poem Sells for $148,000
Jan 17, 2022 · Van den Bergh had been a member of Amsterdam's Jewish Council, a body forced to implement Nazi policy in Jewish areas. It was disbanded in 1943, and its members were dispatched to...
Jan 17, 2022 · Now a team led by a former FBI agent say they have identified a suspect who may have betrayed Anne and her family - a man called Arnold van den Bergh.
- Josh Salisbury
Arnold van den Bergh (20 January 1886 ‒ 28 October 1950) [2] was a Dutch legal notary based in Amsterdam. He was a well-known and high-profile lawyer, one of six Jewish notaries operating in Amsterdam.
Jan 17, 2022 · They believe a relatively unknown figure, Jewish notary Arnold van den Bergh, gave the Frank family up in order to save his own family, research team member Pieter van Twisk told the daily NRC ...
Jan 17, 2022 · As it happened, Van den Bergh—who died in 1950—had come up before, in a report from the 1963 investigation. Though astonishingly, there was little apparent follow up by police.
Jan 18, 2022 · A team that included retired U.S. FBI agent Vincent Pankoke and around 20 historians, criminologists and data specialists identified a relatively unknown figure, Jewish notary Arnold van den...