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  1. The Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium ( Hebrew: הַגִּימְנַסְיָה הָעִבְרִית הֶרְצְלִיָּה, romanized : HaGimnasya Haivrit Herzliya, also known as Gymnasia Herzliya ), originally known as HaGymnasia HaIvrit (lit. Hebrew High School) is a historic high school in Tel Aviv, Israel .

  2. The fate of the first campus of the Gymnasium, among other events, sparked the establishment of the Society for the Preservation of Israel Heritage Sites in 1984. The society’s logo features the Gymnasium building. Founded in 1905, the Gymnasia Herzliya is the first Hebrew High School in Tel Aviv. Its first home was on Herzl Street in Tel Aviv.

  3. Jul 28, 2016 · David B. Green. On July 28, 1909, the cornerstone of the first permanent home of the Herzliya Gymnasium, the first Hebrew high school in pre-state Israel, was laid in the new, Hebrew-speaking city of Tel Aviv, which itself had been officially founded three months earlier. The school Gymnasia Herzliya, as it’s called in Hebrew, had actually ...

    • David B. Green
    • dbgiht@gmail.com
  4. The Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium ( Hebrew: הגימנסיה העברית הרצליה, HaGymnasia HaIvrit Herzliya, also known as Gymnasia Herzliya ), originally known as HaGymnasia HaIvrit (lit. Hebrew High School) is the first Hebrew high school in the world. It opened in 1905 in Jaffa. It moved between several buildings in Jaffa until 1909 ...

  5. Joseph Barsky’s design for the Herzliya Gymnasium, established in 1905 as the first Hebrew high school in Palestine, was adapted from Charles Chipiez’s and Georges Perrot’s understanding of Palestinian antiquarian and vernacular architecture, combined with elements conceived as expressing “Oriental” and “Hebraic” spirit or tradition.

  6. The Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium, originally known as HaGymnasia HaIvrit is a historic high school in Tel Aviv, Israel. The school was founded in 1905 in Ottoman-controlled Jaffa. The cornerstone-laying for the school's new building on Herzl Street in the Ahuzat Bayit neighborhood of Tel Aviv took place on July 28, 1909.

  7. Oct 12, 2011 · 20. Yaakov Tzur, “The Gymnasium and the Gymnasts,” in The Jubilee Yearbook of the Hebrew Gymnasium in Jerusalem, ed. H. Merhavia (Jerusalem: Association of Supporters of the Hebrew Gymnasium in Jerusalem, 1992), 172. 21. Klausner, “The History of the Hebrew Gymnasium,” in The Jubilee Yearbook, 49–56. 22. O.

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