10:19:30


[Login]   
[Book List]  
 
Bidding Information
Lot #    19722
Auction End Date    1/8/2008 12:18:00 PM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Jahres-Bericht der Lazarus Ottensoser-Stiftung
Author    [Community - Only Ed.]
City    Wurzburg
Publisher    Verlagsdruckerei Wurzburg
Publication Date    1916
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition. 39, [1] pp. 219:143 mm., light age staining. A very good copy bound in the original wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   The annual report of the Israelitische Praparandenschule (Talmud-Thora) of Hochberg-Wurzberg which was named in honor of Lazarus Ottensoser. Wurzburg was the capital of Lower Franconia, Bavaria, Germany. It ranked as a city in 741, and had a Jewish community as early as the eleventh century, although the first documentary evidence of the existence of Jews in the town is dated in 1119. The Crusade of 1147 brought much suffering on the Jews, and they were also persecuted in 1298, and again in 1349, when in their synagogue the men, together with their wives and children, met a voluntary death in the flames. Bishop Julius continued the work begun by Bishop Friedrich, who had expelled the Jews of Würzburg in 1565, and banished the community from the city. The cemetery was, accordingly, no longer used, and Bishop Julius confiscated it by illegal means, even ignoring the emperor's admonition to treat the Jews with justice.

After the expulsion from Würzburg the Jewish community of the neighboring town of Heidingsfeld flourished greatly, and to it were transferred the rabbinate of Würzburg and the Jewish court. The rabbinical office of Würzburg has always been held by prominent men, including Eliezer ben Nathan, Isaac Or Zarua', Meïr of Rothenburg, Israel Koppel Fränkel and his son Samson Fränkel, Jacob of Reckendorf, Aryeh Löb Rapoport, and Levin Fahrenbach. Under Fahrenbach's successor the Jews were again permitted to settle in Würzburg; and Rabbi Abraham Bing, who was appointed chief rabbi of Franconia in 1798, took up his residence in the city. When R. Bing retired from active service in 1839 the chief rabbinate was abolished, and a district rabbinate was created in its place. The first district rabbi of Würzburg was R. Seligmann Baer Bamberger, who died in 1878 and was succeeded by his son R. Nathan Bamberger. R. Seligmann Baer Bamberger founded various important institutions, including a Jewish school, a teachers' seminary, and a yeshibah. He also originated the movement for the establishment of a Jewish hospital. Würzburg had numerous societies which supported all forms of Jewish activity, among them being four associations for the promotion of the study of the Torah. The Jews of Würzburg numbered 4,000 out of a total population of 90,000 in 1906, and constituted one of the most important communities in Bavaria.

          
Paragraph 2    Lazarus Ottensoser was a German rabbi; born at Weimarsschmieden in 1798; died at Hochstädt Aug., 1878; son of the "Cultusbeamte" Naphtali Ottensoser of Weimarsschmieden, with whom he went in early youth to Kleinabstadt. Beginning life as a pedler, Lazarus was subsequently called as teacher to the community of Scheinfeld. In 1821 he was called as "moreh ẓedeḳ" to Aub, and in 1828 to Hochstädt. In 1861 the Bavarian government officially sanctioned the Talmud Torah which he had established.
          
Reference
Description
   JE
        
Associated Images
2 Images (Click thumbnail to view full size image):
  Order   Image   Caption
  1   Click to view full size  
  
  2   Click to view full size  
  
  
Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Germany:    Checked
  
Subject
History:    Checked
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    German
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica