MODERN TIMES – TO 1880 — introduction dawn of the enlightenment influence of mercantilist absolutism on jewish status arguments for toleration moses mendelssohn egalitarianism and emancipation in the u.s. the french revolution napoleon bonaparte and the french sanhedrin… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
ZIONISM — This article is arranged according to the following outline: the word and its meaning forerunners ḤIBBAT ZION ROOTS OF ḤIBBAT ZION background to the emergence of the movement the beginnings of the movement PINSKER S AUTOEMANCIPATION settlement… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Yaakov Lorberbaum — Yaakov ben Moshe Lorberbaum of Lissa (1760 1832) (known in English as Jacob ben Jacob Moses of Lissa or Jacob Lorberbaum or Jacob Lisser, Hebrew: יעקב בן משה מליסא) was a Rabbi and Posek. He is known as the Ba al HaNesivos for his most well known … Wikipedia
Elia — ist eine alternative Schreibweise des biblischen Propheten Elija ein belgischer Hochspannungsnetzbetreiber, siehe Elia System Operator ein Dorf auf der griechischen Halbinsel Sithonia, siehe Elia (Sithonia) Elia ist der Familienname folgender… … Deutsch Wikipedia
CARO, JOSEPH ḤAYYIM BEN ISAAC — (1800–1895), rabbi. He was born in Slupca, where his grandfather was rabbi and his father dayyan, and studied under akiva eger . After holding the post of rabbi in a number of towns in the Poznan district, he was appointed in 1859 to Wloclawek.… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
HIRSCHENSOHN — HIRSCHENSOHN, family of rabbis, who were among the first in the revival of settlement in Ereẓ Israel in the 19th century. JACOB MORDECAI HIRSCHENSOHN (1821–1888), rabbi and yeshivah administrator, was born in Pinsk. He studied in the yeshivot of… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
LORBEERBAUM, JACOB BEN JACOB MOSES OF LISSA — (c. 1760–1832), Polish rabbi and halakhist. His father, the rabbi of Zborow, died before Lorbeerbaum was born and his relative, Joseph Te omim , brought him up. After his marriage he settled in Stanislav and engaged in business, but devoted most… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SEDEH ELIYAHU — (Heb. שְׂדֵה אֵלִיָּהוּ), kibbutz in central Israel, in the Beth Shean Valley, affiliated with Ha Kibbutz ha Dati. Sedeh Eliyahu was founded in 1939 by religious pioneers from Germany. In 1970 Sedeh Eliyahu had 375 inhabitants, increasing to 656… … Encyclopedia of Judaism