David Friedrichsfeld
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David Friedrichsfeld (born about 1755 in Berlin - February 19, 1810, Amsterdam) was a German-Jewish writer in German and Hebrew.
In Berlin he absorbed the scholarship and ideas of the Meassefim. In 1781 he went to Amsterdam, where he was one of the leaders in the fight for the emancipation of the Jews, writing in the promotion of this cause his Beleuchtung ... das Bürgerrecht der Juden Betreffend, Amsterdam, 1795, and Appell an die Stände Hollands, etc., ib., 1797.
Besides contributing to the "Ha-Meassef," he wrote "Ma'aneh Rak," on the pronunciation of Hebrew among the Sephardim (being also a defense of Moses Leman's "Imrah Ẓerufah," Amsterdam, 1808); and "Zeker Ẓaddiḳ," a biography of Hartwig Wessely, ib. 1809. Some of his works are still in manuscript (comp. Steinschneider, "Verzeichnis der Hebr. Handschriften der Königl. Bibliothek zu Berlin," ii., No. 255, pp. 110 et seq.).
[edit] References
- Heinrich Grätz, Gesch. 1st ed., xi. 134, 229;
- Moritz Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. col. 987;
- William Zeitlin, Bibl. Post-Mendels. p. 99
[edit] External links
This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.