Difference between revisions of "Commentators:R. Samson Raphael Hirsch/0"

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<li><b>Dates</b> –&#160;1808 – 1888</li>
 
<li><b>Dates</b> –&#160;1808 – 1888</li>
 
<li><b>Location</b> –&#160;R. Hirsch was born and raised in Hamburg, and held rabbinic positions in Oldenburg, Emden, Moravia, and Frankfurt.</li>
 
<li><b>Location</b> –&#160;R. Hirsch was born and raised in Hamburg, and held rabbinic positions in Oldenburg, Emden, Moravia, and Frankfurt.</li>
<li><b>Education and Occupation</b> –&#160;After attending yeshiva in Mannheim, R. Hirsch went to the University of Bonn, studying philosophy, history, and classical languages, and later served as rabbi of several communities.<fn>Oldenburg (1830-1841), Emden (1841-1847),chief rabbi of Moravia (1847-1851), and rabbi of the Orthodox community in Frankfurt (1851-1888). R. Hirsch adopted this last position - in a small, nascent Orthodox community in a city dominated by Reform – after receiving an "appeal from Frankfurt to go to the aid of a tiny group, whose very founding is, in my view, given the goals I had all my life, the most promising development that has occurred in Jewry within the last several decades. For now, for the first time, a Jewish community has been formed, which is openly and proudly dedicated to a most holy principle, in an area which has been successfully conquered by the faces of confusion. What can I do! This holy cause is the very one to which I have consecrated my life." See Hildesheimer, "Historical Perspectives".</fn> His rabbinic activities focused on battling Reform Judaism and developing the Torah im Derekh Eretz school of Modern Orthodoxy.<fn>Sometimes termed "neo-Orthodoxy". This school encourages general education along with traditional Jewish education, as well as involvement in general society and culture.</fn> </li>
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<li><b>Education and Occupation</b> –&#160;After attending yeshiva in Mannheim, R. Hirsch went to the University of Bonn, studying philosophy, history, and classical languages, and later served as rabbi of several communities.<fn>Oldenburg (1830-1841), Emden (1841-1847),chief rabbi of Moravia (1847-1851), and rabbi of the Orthodox community in Frankfurt (1851-1888). R. Hirsch adopted this last position - in a small, nascent Orthodox community in a city dominated by Reform – after receiving an "appeal from Frankfurt to go to the aid of a tiny group, whose very founding is, in my view, given the goals I had all my life, the most promising development that has occurred in Jewry within the last several decades. For now, for the first time, a Jewish community has been formed, which is openly and proudly dedicated to a most holy principle, in an area which has been successfully conquered by the faces of confusion. What can I do! This holy cause is the very one to which I have consecrated my life." See Hildesheimer, "Historical Perspectives".</fn> His rabbinic activities focused on battling Reform Judaism and developing the Torah im Derekh Eretz school of Modern Orthodoxy.<fn>Sometimes termed "neo-Orthodoxy". This school encourages general education along with traditional Jewish education, as well as involvement in general society and culture.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Family</b> –&#160;R. Hirsch was the son of Raphael and Gella Hirsch. His great uncle was R. Yehuda Leib Frankfurter Spira, who authored the Torah commentary HaRekhasim_Levikah.<fn>See his commentator page at: http://alhatorah.org/Commentators:R._Yehuda_Leib_Frankfurter_%28HaRekhasim_Levikah%29</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Family</b> –&#160;R. Hirsch was the son of Raphael and Gella Hirsch. His great uncle was R. Yehuda Leib Frankfurter Spira, who authored the Torah commentary HaRekhasim_Levikah.<fn>See his commentator page at: http://alhatorah.org/Commentators:R._Yehuda_Leib_Frankfurter_%28HaRekhasim_Levikah%29</fn></li>
<li><b>Teachers</b> –&#160;Chakham Isaac Bernays,<fn>Rabbi of Hamburg.</fn> R. Yaakov Ettlinger,<fn>Author of the Talmud commentary Arukh LaNer and head of the yeshivah in Mannheim that R. Hirsch attended. R. Ettlinger encouraged R. Hirsch to attend university.</fn> R.Mendel Frankfurter.<fn>R. Hirsch's grandfather and the head of the Altona rabbinical court.</fn> </li>
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<li><b>Teachers</b> –&#160;Chakham Isaac Bernays,<fn>Rabbi of Hamburg.</fn> R. Yaakov Ettlinger,<fn>Author of the Talmud commentary Arukh LaNer and head of the yeshivah in Mannheim that R. Hirsch attended. R. Ettlinger encouraged R. Hirsch to attend university.</fn> R.Mendel Frankfurter.<fn>R. Hirsch's grandfather and the head of the Altona rabbinical court.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Contemporaries</b> –&#160;Abraham Geiger.<fn>R. Hirsch was friends with Geiger at the University of Bonn, but Geiger later became a prominent Reform leader and one of R. Hirsch's most bitter antagonists.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Contemporaries</b> –&#160;Abraham Geiger.<fn>R. Hirsch was friends with Geiger at the University of Bonn, but Geiger later became a prominent Reform leader and one of R. Hirsch's most bitter antagonists.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Students</b> –&#160;</li>
 
<li><b>Students</b> –&#160;</li>
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<li>1817 – Reform congregation organized in Hamburg. The Hirsch home was a center of anti-Reform activity, which left a deep impact on the young Samson.</li>
 
<li>1817 – Reform congregation organized in Hamburg. The Hirsch home was a center of anti-Reform activity, which left a deep impact on the young Samson.</li>
 
<li>1844 - Reform rabbinical synod of Brunswick, where radical reforms were adopted, such as annulment of dietary and matrimonial laws. In the aftermath, R. Hirsch moved towards support for organizational separation between the Orthodox and Reform communities.</li>
 
<li>1844 - Reform rabbinical synod of Brunswick, where radical reforms were adopted, such as annulment of dietary and matrimonial laws. In the aftermath, R. Hirsch moved towards support for organizational separation between the Orthodox and Reform communities.</li>
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<li>1876 – Prussian "Law of Secession" passed, which provided a legal basis to create a separate Orthodox community.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</li>
 
</li>
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<subcategory>Works
 
<subcategory>Works
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li><b>Biblical commentaries</b> –&#160;</li>
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<li><b>Biblical commentaries</b> – R. Hirsch authored an extensive 5-volume Torah commentary in German,&#160; published together with his own translation into German,<fn>The commentary was later published in an English translation in: The Pentateuch - with Translation and Commentary, Judaica Press, 1962. It was reissued in a new translation by Daniel Haberman as The Hirsch Chumash, Feldheim/Judaica Press, 2009.</fn> as well as a commentary on Tehillim.<fn>Published in English as The Psalms - with Translation and Commentary. Philipp Feldheim, 1960.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Rabbinics</b> –&#160;
 
<li><b>Rabbinics</b> –&#160;
 
<ul>
 
<ul>

Version as of 07:55, 24 July 2015

R. Samson Raphael Hirsch – Intellectual Profile

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R. Samson Raphael Hirsch
RSR Hirsch
Name
R. Samson Raphael Hirsch
Dates
Location
Works
Exegetical Characteristics
Influenced by
Impacted on

Background1

Life

  • Name – 
    • Hebrew name – ר' שמשון בן רפאל הירש 
    • German name – - Samson Raphael2 Hirsch
  • Dates – 1808 – 1888
  • Location – R. Hirsch was born and raised in Hamburg, and held rabbinic positions in Oldenburg, Emden, Moravia, and Frankfurt.
  • Education and Occupation – After attending yeshiva in Mannheim, R. Hirsch went to the University of Bonn, studying philosophy, history, and classical languages, and later served as rabbi of several communities.3 His rabbinic activities focused on battling Reform Judaism and developing the Torah im Derekh Eretz school of Modern Orthodoxy.4
  • Family – R. Hirsch was the son of Raphael and Gella Hirsch. His great uncle was R. Yehuda Leib Frankfurter Spira, who authored the Torah commentary HaRekhasim_Levikah.5
  • Teachers – Chakham Isaac Bernays,6 R. Yaakov Ettlinger,7 R.Mendel Frankfurter.8
  • Contemporaries – Abraham Geiger.9
  • Students – 
  • Notable events
    • 1810 – France annexes Hamburg, commencing a process of emancipation of the Jews and the opening of general society to broader Jewish participation.
    • 1817 – Reform congregation organized in Hamburg. The Hirsch home was a center of anti-Reform activity, which left a deep impact on the young Samson.
    • 1844 - Reform rabbinical synod of Brunswick, where radical reforms were adopted, such as annulment of dietary and matrimonial laws. In the aftermath, R. Hirsch moved towards support for organizational separation between the Orthodox and Reform communities.
    • 1876 – Prussian "Law of Secession" passed, which provided a legal basis to create a separate Orthodox community.

Works

  • Biblical commentaries – R. Hirsch authored an extensive 5-volume Torah commentary in German,  published together with his own translation into German,10 as well as a commentary on Tehillim.11
  • Rabbinics – 
    • Talmudic novellae – 
    • Halakhic codes – 
    • Responses to the works of others – 
    • Responsa – 
  • Jewish thought – 
  • Commonly misattributed to – 

Torah Commentary

Characteristics

  • Verse by verse / Topical – 
  • Genre – 
  • Structure – 
  • Language – 

Methods

  • – 

Themes

  • – 

Textual Issues

  • Manuscripts – 
  • Printings – 
  • Textual layers – 

Sources

Significant Influences

  • Earlier Sources – 
  • Teachers – 
  • Foils – 

Occasional Usage

Possible Relationship

Impact

Later exegetes

Supercommentaries