Deer Abarbanell

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Hirsch Abarbanell (also Hirsch Zebi Jakob Abarbanell ; born 1788 in Fraustadt , Poland-Lithuania ; died February 26, 1866 in Lissa, Province of Posen , Kingdom of Prussia (now Leszno , Poland)) was rabbinical administrator , head of a yeshiva and dayan .

life and work

Hirsch's father was the Fraustädter Rabbi Jacob Abraham Abarbanell (d. 1833). His older brother Salomon Jakob Abarbanell (1775 – after 1836) later worked as a wool merchant, first in Bojanowo and then in Berlin .

Hirsch was taught the Talmud in Fraustadt, Glogau and later in Lissa . In Lissa he learned from Chief Rabbi Jakob Lorbeerbaum , who worked in Lissa until 1821. He was considered a favorite student and confidante of the laurel tree. While the rabbinate in Lissa was not occupied between 1821 and 1864, Abarbanell headed his own yeshiva and was one of six Talmud lecturers there. From 1828 he also worked as a dayan, one of the judges of a rabbinical court. After the death of his father Jacob Abraham in 1833, Hirsch Abarbanell was offered the successor to his father's rabbinate in Fraustadt. However, he refused. In 1845 Hirsch Abarbanell becomes rabbinical administrator in Lissa. From 1845 to 1849 he published four approvals in Lissa.

Before 1813, Hirsch Abarbanell married Reisel Moll (d. 1833), daughter of the businessman Löb Wolf Moll. They had eight children together: Mathilde Abarbanell (1813–1887), Louis / Leib Wolf Abarbanell (born 1819), Rudolph / Jerachmiel E. Abarbanell (1822–1889), Flora Abarbanell (born 1824), Cäcilie Abarbanell (born. 1826), Miriam Abarbanell (d. 1836), Marianne Abarbanell (d. 1835) and Josef Abarbanell (d. 1832).

Rabbis Samuel Baeck from Lissa, Salomon Feldblum from Schmiegel (today Śmigiel ), Joseph Klein from Glogau (today Głogów) and Rudolf Ungerleider from Rawitsch (today Rawicz ) attended his funeral .

literature

  • Michael Brocke, Julius Carlebach; Carsten Wilke (Ed.): Biographical Handbook of Rabbis Part 1: The Rabbis of the Emancipation Period in the German, Bohemian and Greater Poland Countries 1781–1871 Volume 1 . KG Saur, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-598-24871-7 , p. 121 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Georg Heuberger: Leo Baeck 1873–1956 .: From the tribe of rabbis . Jüdischer Verlag im Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt 2001, ISBN 978-3-633-54174-4 , pp. 19 .
  2. Michael Brocke, Julius Carlebach; Carsten Wilke (Ed.): Biographical Handbook of Rabbis Part 1: The Rabbis of the Emancipation Period in the German, Bohemian and Greater Poland Countries 1781–1871 Volume 1 . KG Saur, Munich 2004, ISBN 3-598-24871-7 , p. 121 .