• Thumbnail for Samuel Holdheim
    Samuel Holdheim (1806 – 22 August 1860) was a German rabbi and author, and one of the more extreme leaders of the early Reform Movement in Judaism. A...
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  • Thumbnail for Abraham Geiger
    intention of formulating a program of progressive Judaism. However, unlike Samuel Holdheim, he did not want to create a separate community. Rather, his goal was...
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  • Thumbnail for Reform Judaism
    applied to novel circumstances, rather than subject to change. Rabbi Samuel Holdheim advocated a particularly radical stance, arguing that the halachic...
    105 KB (14,146 words) - 12:48, 30 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Union of Progressive Jews in Germany
    Progressive – Judaism has a long history in Germany. Abraham Geiger, Samuel Holdheim and the other great Reform rabbis considered founders of the movement...
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  • Thumbnail for Shabbat
    the person considers "work" is forbidden. The radical Reform rabbi Samuel Holdheim advocated moving Sabbath to Sunday for many no longer observed it,...
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  • Thumbnail for List of people from Poznań
    Robert Buech (1870–1949), politician Roman Wilhelmi (1936–1991), actor Samuel Holdheim (1806–1860), a German rabbi and author. Stanisław Barańczak (1946–2014)...
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  • Thumbnail for Brit milah
    of all shades in Germany stated it was mandated by Jewish law; even Samuel Holdheim affirmed this. By 1871, Reform rabbinic leadership in Germany reasserted...
    100 KB (11,130 words) - 21:26, 15 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Talmud
    of the newly evolving Reform movement, such as Abraham Geiger and Samuel Holdheim, subjected the Talmud to severe scrutiny as part of an effort to break...
    142 KB (17,957 words) - 03:32, 31 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Sabbath
    produced innovations in practice, exemplied by some Reform rabbis such as Samuel Holdheim, who shifted his congregation's Shabbat services to Sundays in imitation...
    43 KB (5,893 words) - 12:45, 14 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Neolog Judaism
    1848 Revolution, Ede Horn, a disciple of the radical German rabbi Samuel Holdheim, headed the Pesth Reform Association, where he abolished circumcision...
    27 KB (3,603 words) - 00:25, 16 November 2023
  • Thumbnail for Kępno
    Rural Development of Poland. Wilhelm Freund (1806–1894), philologist Samuel Holdheim (1806–1860), reform rabbi Malbim (1809–1879), rabbi Louis Phillips...
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  • German founders of Reform Judaism, mainly Rabbis Abraham Geiger and Samuel Holdheim. While the religious philosophy he codified had its own original strains...
    20 KB (2,223 words) - 11:02, 5 May 2024
  • Yaakov Yitzchak of Lublin () Ismar Elbogen Abraham Joshua Heschel Samuel Holdheim Kaufmann Kohler Moritz Lazarus Hermann Tietz (rabbi) Joseph Case See...
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  • as the universal religion of the prophets. In 1845, Samuel Hirsch, David Einhorn and Samuel Holdheim passed a resolution at the Frankfurt Conference that...
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  • rabbi Samuel Hirsch (1815–1889), German-American philosopher of the Reform Movement Abraham Geiger (1810–1874), German Reform ideologist Samuel Holdheim (1806–1860)...
    105 KB (12,391 words) - 15:05, 2 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for History of the Jews in Germany
    in the form of the Zionist Hibbat Zion movement. Abraham Geiger and Samuel Holdheim were two founders of the conservative movement in modern Judaism who...
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  • Thumbnail for Schism in Hungarian Jewry
    Reform Judaism, as too extreme. When disciples of the more radical Samuel Holdheim established several congregations during the 1848 Hungarian Revolution...
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  • Thumbnail for Hamburg Temple disputes
    the aid of the Temple was the Samuel Holdheim, who would thereafter distinguish himself as a radical Reform rabbi. Holdheim defended two aspects of the...
    58 KB (8,465 words) - 00:07, 14 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Movement for Reform Judaism
    a disciple of the teachings of German Reformers Abraham Geiger and Samuel Holdheim. His Jewish Religious Union (JRU), the antecedent of British Liberal...
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  • Thumbnail for Conservative Judaism
    serve there. In 1843, Frankel clashed with the radical Reform rabbi Samuel Holdheim, who argued that the act of marriage in Judaism was a civic (memonot)...
    89 KB (11,946 words) - 01:38, 14 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gustav Gottheil
    receiving in the meanwhile his "hattarat hora'ah" in the former city from Samuel Holdheim, whose assistant he became (1855). He also studied under Zunz and Moritz...
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  • Thumbnail for David Einhorn (rabbi)
    afterward Landesrabbiner of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in 1847, succeeding Rabbi Samuel Holdheim, whose views were a major influence on Einhorn. An incident in which...
    14 KB (1,597 words) - 21:00, 12 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Leopold Zunz
    "the point of (Geiger's) protest against Reform was directed against Samuel Holdheim and the position maintained by this leader as an autonomous rabbi."...
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  • rabbinate for the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Here the rabbis (Samuel Holdheim and David Einhorn) were at first supposed to introduce radical reforms...
    15 KB (1,973 words) - 14:18, 7 March 2024
  • Philippson. Other attendees included Solomon Formstecher, Samuel Hirsch, Mendel Hess, Samuel Holdheim. Although he did not attend due to impending death, following...
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  • Israelit des Neunzehnten Jahrhunderts from 1839 to 1847, and, with Samuel Holdheim as co-editor, in 1847 and 1848. Hess also published two collections...
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  • Thumbnail for Joseph von Maier
    by Hofmann, Rolf. Retrieved 27 June 2022. Hermann, Klaus (2006). "Samuel Holdheim and the Prayerbook Reform in German". In Wiese, Christian (ed.). Redefining...
    10 KB (747 words) - 20:42, 18 December 2023
  • entered the University of Berlin. He remained there until 1852, when Samuel Holdheim, who took a great interest in him, recommended him to Waren in Mecklenburg...
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  • in the Phenomenology (architecture) movement See review by W. Wolfgang Holdheim, Diacritics, Vol. 9, No. 2 (summer, 1979): https://www.jstor.org/stable/464782...
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  • Thumbnail for Samson Raphael Hirsch
    Neueste Jüdische Literatur, also polemical in tendency and attacking Holdheim's Die Autonomie der Rabbinen (1843). Hirsch remained in Oldenburg until...
    36 KB (3,986 words) - 04:54, 28 May 2024