Including references to David Neumark (346, 359), Henry Malter (346, 354), Jacob Mann (373), Zevi Diesendruck (346, 372), Solomon Buber (348), Simon Bernfeld (361), Shalom Spiegel (362-363, 374), Salo Wittmayer Baron (363, 376-377), Jacob Zallel Lauterbach (364-365), Israel Elfenbein, (370) and Gershom Bader (378).
Mainly sub-chapter 4, In Galicia and Bukovina (1696 - 1712), dealing with, among other things, tens of Rabbis from there. For details see the Hebrew section
Part one: Including chapters on Nachman Krochmal, Isaac Erter - Joseph Perl and Max Letteris, and extensive reference to Solomon Judah Rapoport
Part two - including: 'Chapter Twenty-one: Peretz Smolenskin, 1842-1885' (178-210); including reference to Max Letteris (186), Rapoport (187), Solomon Rubin, Ahron Porjes (190) and mainly Mordecai David Brandstaedter (190-192).
Including the parts:
3 (174),17.1, 1936, 4 (including the chapters, '1. Agriculture', '2. The Tenants');
4 (175), 24.1, 4 (including the chapters '3. Merchants', '4. Craftsmen', '5. Doctors', '6. Various Occupations');
6 (177), 7.2, 5-4 (the chapter 'Hassidism in Galicia' - mainly about Hassidism as seen in Joseph Perl's 'Revealer of Secrets');
7 (178), 14.2, 5-4 (including the chapters: '6. The Hassidic Propaganda System', 4; '7. "The Tzadikksand Their Courts', 4-5); 8 (179), 21.2, 5 (about the Haskalah leaders in Galicia, Perl, Judah Leib Mieses, Isaac Erter, Nachman Krochmal, and Solomon Judah Rapoport, and the reforms they advocated); 9 (180), 28.2, 5 (about themaskilim'sattitude towards working the land' - mainly about Perl and also about Erter and Mieses); 11 (182) 13.6, 5 (the chapter '6. The Attitude of theMaskilimto Hassidism' - mainly via Perl and his essays).