Josua Heschel Kuttner
Josua Heschel Kuttner | |
---|---|
Portrait | |
Personal details | |
Born |
Września, Wielkopolskie, Poland | February 7, 1802
Died |
July 5, 1878 76) Leszno, Wielkopolskie, Poland | (aged
Occupation | Rabbi, writer |
Josua Heschel Kuttner or Kutner (Hebrew: יהושע העשיל קוטנר) (c.1803 – 5 July 1878) was a Jewish Orthodox scholar and rabbi.
He was born in Wreschen (Września) in the Grand Duchy of Posen, the son of Aron Kuttner and his wife Michle, a great-granddaughter of Rabbi Naphtali Cohen.[1] Around 1830 he settled in Lissa (Leszno), where he acted as preacher and, since before 1850, as assessor of the rabbinate and rabbi. He died in Lissa.
His son, Naphtaly Kuttner (1829–1903), was the grandfather of SF author Henry Kuttner and politician Edgar C. Levey
Bibliography
- Ha-Emunah ve-he-Hakirah (Hebrew: האמונה והחקירה; Breslau, 1847). That work contains a philosophical discussion of the thirteen articles of belief of Maimonides, and extracts from the Haggadah and writings of ancient philosophers. Appended is an essay entitled Et La'asot, on the religious conditions prevalent in the author's day.
- Ha-Emunah ve-ha-Bitahon (Hebrew: האמונה והבטחון), in German: Glaube und Gottesvertrauen: oder: Practisches Lehrbuch der mosaischen Religion: Nebst Darstellung der aus ihren Geboten hervorgehenden, moralischen Lehren (Breslau, 1853). A bi-lingual, Hebrew-German work on faith and belief as derived from the Ten Commandments, in extracts translated and introduced by Rabbi Jacob Raphael Fürstenthal.[2]
- Mishlei (Hebrew: משלי; Leipzig, 1865), as editor, with German translation and commentary.[3]
References
- ↑ Louis Lewin, Geschichte der Juden in Lissa, Pinne, 1904, p. 289
- ↑ Virtual Judaica Auctions about Glaube und Gottesvertrauen
- ↑ Virtual Judaica Auctions about Mishlei
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