Jakob Hollander

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Jakob Hollander ( March 25, 1844 in Altona - December 8, 1880 in Trier ) was a German Orthodox Chief Rabbi .

The son of Klaus rabbi Isaiah Hollander studied the during his six-year grammar school in Altona Talmud at the local Chief Rabbi Jacob Ettlinger , his studies continued in Berlin and was established in March 1869 in Hall with the dissertation hasaken De Rabban Gamaliele, theo logo doctorate . He then attended the neo-Orthodox rabbinical school in Eisenstadt , which Esriel Hildesheimer moved to Berlin on September 2, 1873.

From 1871 he worked as a rabbi in Hanover and three years later moved to Wreschen in the province of Posen . In 1879 he became rabbi and religion teacher at the grammar school in Trier , most recently he was chief rabbi . In 1879, he was criticized in the magazine Der Israelit for allegedly disregarding religious rules. Hollander corresponded with Esriel Hildesheimer on questions of religious conversion and took an orthodox position.

literature

  • Michael Brocke, Julius Carlebach (Hrsg.): Biographisches Handbuch der Rabbis: The rabbis of the emancipation time in the German, Bohemian and Wielkopolska countries 1781-1871. KG Saur, Munich, 2004, ISBN 3-598-24871-7 , p. 458
  • Rabbi Werner (Danzig): Words of Remembrance: consecrated in memory of the immortalized Chief Rabbi Dr. Jacob Hollander: on behalf of the Trier synagogue community , printed by Hof-Buchdruckerei H. Neubürger, Dessau 1881
  • Jacob Hollander. In: Encyclopaedia Judaica . Vol. 8, Eschkol, Berlin 1928 ff.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Giuseppe Veltri, Christian Wiese: Jewish education and culture in Saxony-Anhalt from the Enlightenment to National Socialism . Metropol, Berlin 2008, p. 291, ISBN 978-3940938053
  2. The Israelite, October 29, 1879, online at Alemannia Judaica
  3. David Ellenson: Rabbi Esriel Hildesheimer and the Creation of a Modern Jewish Orthodoxy , University of Alabama Press, 2003, ISBN 0-8173-1272-2 , p. 69 ( preview on Google Books )
  4. David Ellenson, Daniel Gordis: Conversion, Law, and Policy Making in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Orthodox Responsa: Pledges of Jewish Allegiance , Stanford University Press, 2012, ISBN 978-0-8047-7805-3 f, p 47th ( Preview on Google Books )