Jonas Laupheimer

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Jonas Jomtov Laupheimer (born July 1, 1846 in Laupheim ; died January 25, 1914 in Bad Buchau ) was a German rabbi .

Life

Jonas Laupheimer, son of Elias Laupheimer (1805-1884) and Klara Hofheimer Laupheimer (1811-1893), was born in 1846 in Laupheim. He had nine siblings. From 1870 to 1871 he attended the Jewish Theological Seminary in Breslau and in 1880 was appointed rabbinical administrator in Buttenhausen , which is now part of Münsingen . From 1887 to 1914 - he died after a stroke - he was a rabbi in Bad Buchau , which was united with the Buttenhausen rabbinate during this time.

His marriage to Bluma Hofheimer (1858–1937), which has existed since 1876, resulted in four daughters and one son. The four daughters Cornelia, Elsa, Hermine and Frida all died shortly after birth or in childhood. The son Friedrich Laupheimer (1890–1965) later became a district rabbi in Bad Ems.

documentation

State Office for Monument Preservation Baden-Württemberg , formerly LDA BW (State Monument Office BW, restructured in 2004).

Epigrams

  • Gravestone in Buchau no.360a, buried on January 27, 1914
  • Gravestone in Buchau no. 360b for Bluma Laupheimer, née Hofheimer

literature

  • Israelit January 2, 1902 (vol. 43, no. 1), p. 5 for the silver wedding anniversary
  • Markus Brann , History of the JTS , 1904, p. 178
  • "On the history of the Jews in Buttenhausen", community newspaper for the isr. According to Württemberg , December 1, 1928 (JG. 5, No. 17), pp. 214f.
  • Aron Tänzer , The History of the Jews in Württemberg , 1937/1983, p. 74
  • Alfred Fritz, The History and Development of the Jews in Buttenhausen , Diss. Stuttgart-Hohenheim, 1938, p. 75.
  • Sauer, Württemberg and Hohenzollern , 1966, p. 56
  • Joseph Mohn, The Path of Sorrows under the Swastika. From the history of the city and monastery of Buchau am Federsee , ed. from the city of Bad Buchau, Bad Buchau 1970, p. 91
  • PK Baden-Württemberg , pp. 57, 60, 187 (Jerusalem 1986; Heb.)

Individual evidence

  1. Michael Brocke , Julius Carlebach (ed.), Biographisches Handbuch der Rabbis , II / 2, p. 367, Article 2335, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-24874-0