Hyman Hurwitz

Hyman Hurwitz (1770–1844), was a learned Jew who became first professor of Hebrew at University College, London. He was born in Poznan, Poland in 1770, came to England about 1797[1] and conducted a private academy for Jews at Highgate, where he established a close friendship with Samuel Taylor Coleridge and corresponded with him. Coleridge once described Hurwitz as "the first Hebrew and Rabbinical Scholar in the Kingdom"[1]. In 1828, on Coleridge's recommendation[1], he was elected professor of the Hebrew language and literature at University College, London. His inaugural lecture was published. He died on 18 July 1844.[2]

Works

Hurwitz also wrote many Hebrew hymns, odes, elegies, and dirges. A Hebrew dirge, "chaunted in the Great Synagogue, Aldgate, on the day of the Funeral of Princess Charlotte" was published in 1817, with an English translation in verse by Coleridge. The Knell, another Hebrew elegy by Hurwitz on George III of the United Kingdom, appeared in an English translation by W. Smith at Thurso in 1827.

References

  1. ^ a b c Whalley, George, ed (1984). The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Marginalia. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul Ltd. pp. 1188–1189. ISBN 0-7100-02505. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Eeo9AAAAIAAJ. Retrieved 27 April 2011. 
  2. ^  Husband, William (1891). "Hurwitz, Hyman". In Sidney Lee. Dictionary of National Biography. 28. London: Smith, Elder & Co. "source: [Private information; Voice of Jacob, iii. 196 (22 Aug. 1844); Brit. Mus. Cat.]" 

External links

Hurwitz's inaugural lecture, on Google Books