- Dávid Leimdörfer
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Dr. David Leimdörfer (Hungarian: Leimdörfer Dávid; September 17, 1851–1922) was a rabbi born in Hliník nad Hronom (also Hungarian: Geletnek, Slovak: Hliník (nad Hronom), German: Hlinick), Kingdom of Hungary, 17 September 1851.
He was educated at his native place and at Zsolna (today Žilina), Waitzen (Vác), Budapest, Pressburg (today Bratislava), and Vienna. He became a military chaplain in the Austro-Hungarian army; from 1875 to 1883 he was rabbi at Nordhausen (Thuringia), Prussia, and in 1883 he became rabbi at Hamburg Temple, where he was also principal of the school for religion and of the Jewish high school for girls. He died in 1922.
Contents
Literary works
Leimdörfer's works include:
- Kurzgefasste Religionslehre der Israeliten, Nordhausen, 1876
- Die Kürzeste Darstellung der Nachbiblischen Gesch. für die Israelitische Schuljugend, ib. 1880 (4th ed. 1896)
- Die Chanuka Wunder, Magdeburg, 1888; and Die Lebende Megilla, Hamburg, 1888; both festival plays
- Der Hamburger Tempel, ib. 1889
- Das Heilige Schriftwerk Koheleth im Lichte der Gesch, ib. 1892
- Die Messias Apokalypse, Vienna, 1895
- Das Psalter Ego in den Ichpsalmen, Hamburg, 1898
- Zur Kritik des Buches Esther, Frankfurt, 1899
- Die Lösung des Koheleträtsels Durch Ibn Baruch, Berlin, 1900
- Der Altbiblische Priestersegen, Frankfurt, 1900
See also
- Hamburg Temple
References
- This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.
External links
Categories:- 19th-century rabbis
- 20th-century rabbis
- 19th-century Hungarian people
- 20th-century Hungarian people
- Hungarian Reform rabbis
- Austrian rabbis
- German Reform rabbis
- Rabbis in the military
- Hungarian expatriates in Germany
- Austro-Hungarian Jews
- People from Žiar nad Hronom District
- People from Nordhausen
- People from Hamburg
- 1851 births
- 1923 deaths
- Rabbi stubs
- Hungarian history stubs
- Hungarian people stubs
- Jewish biography stubs
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