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'''Samuel (or Solomon) Judah Lob Rapoport''' (], ] - ], ]), ] ] and ]ish scholar, was born at ]. | '''Samuel (or Solomon) Judah Lob Rapoport''' (], ] - ], ]), ] ] and ]ish scholar, was born at ]. | ||
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After various experiences in business, Rapoport became successively rabbi of ] (1837) and of ] (1840). He was one of the founders of the new "learning in ]" movement. His chief work was the first part of an (unfinished) encyclopaedia (Ereklz Millin, 1852). Equally notable were his biographies of ], Nathan (author of the ]), ], ] and others. | After various experiences in business, Rapoport became successively rabbi of ] (1837) and of ] (1840). He was one of the founders of the new "learning in ]" movement. His chief work was the first part of an (unfinished) encyclopaedia (Ereklz Millin, 1852). Equally notable were his biographies of ], Nathan (author of the ]), ], ] and others. |
Revision as of 16:40, 18 February 2006
Samuel (or Solomon) Judah Lob Rapoport (June 1, 1790 - October 16, 1867), Austrian rabbi and Jewish scholar, was born at Lemberg.
After various experiences in business, Rapoport became successively rabbi of Tarnopol (1837) and of Prague (1840). He was one of the founders of the new "learning in Judaism" movement. His chief work was the first part of an (unfinished) encyclopaedia (Ereklz Millin, 1852). Equally notable were his biographies of Saadia Gaon, Nathan (author of the Arukh), Hai Gaon, Eleazar Kalir and others.
Thrown upon his own resources about 1817, Rapoport became cashier of the meat-tax farmers. He had already given evidence of marked critical ability, though his writings previously published were of a light character—poems and translations. His critical talent, however, soon revealed itself. In 1824 he wrote for Bikkure ha'Ittim an article on the independent Jewish tribes of Arabia and Abyssinia. Though this article gained him some recognition, a more permanent impression was made by his work on Saadia Gaon and his times (published in the same journal in 1829), the first of a series of biographical works on the medieval Jewish sages. Because of this work he received recognition in the scholarly world and gained many enthusiastic friends, especially S. D. Luzzatto (Bernfeld, Toledot Shir, p. 33).
He died at Prague in 1867.
External link
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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(help) - This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
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