Mannheimer, Isaac Noah

Mannheimer, Isaac Noah
(1793-1865)
   Austrian preacher and liturgist. He was born in Copenhagen, where he taught religion and held services for adherents of Reform Judaism. In 1824 he became a preacher at the new Seitenstetten Synagogue in Vienna. He later adopted a more Conservative approach to Reform Judaism, and translated the prayerbook and the festival prayers into German. In 1848 he was elected to the Reichstag where he advocated Jewish rights.

Dictionary of Jewish Biography. .

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  • MANNHEIMER, ISAAC NOAH — (1793–1865), Vienna preacher and creator of a moderate, compromise Reform ritual. Born in Copenhagen, he was the son of a Hungarian ḥazzan. He received his general education at the local secular school and studied Hebrew literature and Talmud… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Isaac Noah Mannheimer — (October 17, 1793, Copenhagen March 17, 1865, Vienna) was a Jewish preacher. The son of a chazzan, he began the study of the Talmud at an early age, though not to the neglect of secular studies. On completing the course of the cathedral school at …   Wikipedia

  • Mannheimer — may refer to: Family name Jakob Mannheimer (1724, nearby Darmstadt 1803), Jewish German banker (de) Isaac Noah Mannheimer (German: (also) Isaak N. Mannheimer, Isak Noa Mannheimer; 1793, Copenhagen 1865, Vienna), Jewish Danish Austrian preacher… …   Wikipedia

  • Isaac Hirsch Weiss —  Ne doit pas être confondu avec Joseph Hirsch Weiss. Isaac Hirsch Weiss …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Reform movement in Judaism — is a historic and on going religious and social movement that originated simultaneously in the early nineteenth century in the United States [The beginning of the US Reform movement is usually dated to 1824 when a group of reformers in Charleston …   Wikipedia

  • AUSTRIA — AUSTRIA, country in Central Europe. Middle Ages Jews lived in Austria from the tenth century. However the history of the Jews in Austria from the late Middle Ages was virtually that of the Jews in vienna and its environs. In the modern period,… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • VIENNA — VIENNA, capital of austria . Documentary evidence points to the first settlement of Jews in the 12th century. The first Jew known by name is shlom (Solomon), mintmaster and financial adviser to Duke Leopold V. The community possessed a synagogue… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • POLITICS — Introduction Jewish involvement in national politics in the various countries in which they settled dates from the period of Jewish emancipation at the end of the 18th and the first half of the 19th century. In fact, personalities such as joseph… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • PREACHING — In the Talmudic Period NATURE AND PURPOSE OF THE SERMON The sermon, delivered in the synagogue or in the house of study, mainly on Sabbaths and festivals, is a very ancient institution. Nothing is known of its beginnings. It may have originated… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • LIBERALISM — Introduction Liberalism is an ideological and socio political movement uniting the adherents of representative government and freedom   of the individual in politics with freedom of enterprise in economics. It emerged in Western Europe in the age …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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