Michael Sachs
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Michael Sachs (1808-1864) was a German rabbi from Glogau (Głogów), Silesia.
He was one of the first Jewish graduates from the modern universities, earning a Ph.D. degree in 1836. He was appointed Rabbi in Prague in 1836, and in Berlin in 1844. He took the conservative side against the Reform agitation, and so strongly opposed the introduction of the organ into the Synagogue that he retired from the Rabbinate rather than acquiesce.
Sachs was one of the greatest preachers of his age, and published two volumes of Sermons (Predigten, 1866-1891). He co-operated with Zunz in a new translation of the Bible. Sachs is best remembered for his work on Hebrew poetry, Religioese Poesie der Juden in Spanien (1845); his more ambitious critical work (Beitrage zur Sprach- und Alterthumsforschung, 2 vols., 1852-1854) is of less lasting value. He turned his poetic gifts to admirable account in his translation of the Festival Prayers (Machzor, 9 vols., 1855), a new feature of which was the metrical rendering of the medieval Hebrew hymns. Another very popular work by Sachs contains poetic paraphrases of Rabbinic legends (Stimmen porn Jordan und Euphrat, 1853).
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- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.