Frumet Franziska Fani Wolf

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Frumet Franziska Fani Wolf (Brilin)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Eisenstadt, Austria
Death: June 06, 1849 (78-79)
Eisenstadt, Burgenland, Austria
Place of Burial: Eisenstadt, Eisenstadt, Burgenland, Austria
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Sanwil Samuel (Shmuel) Brilin and Chana Brilin
Wife of Chajim Wolf, Segal and Joachim Chaim Wolf
Mother of Julie Pollak; Asriel Israel Wolf; Ruchama Róza Reitlinger; Fradel Tauber; Leopold Loeb Wolf and 5 others
Sister of Charlotte Sara Wanefried and Israel Ariel/Asriel Bruell

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Frumet Franziska Fani Wolf

She was a community leader. Her name appears in the Encyclopaedia Judaica.

"Die Familie Wolf" - by Ernst Wolf 1924

http://www.fpe.ch/stammbaum

see family chart

http://www.fpe.ch/stammbaum/bilder/Stammtafel_Wolf.gif

"Die Grabschriften des Alten Judenfriedhofes in Eisenstadt" by Dr. Bernhard Wchstein- no. 867



She is in the Encyclopedia Judaica under Frumet Wolf WOLF, FRUMET (Francisca née Brilin; 1770–1849), community leader. Born in Pressburg (Bratislava) into a prominent scholarly and wealthy family, she married a widower, Chajjim Joachim Wolf of Eisenstadt. An intelligent, compassionate woman, Frumet was appalled at the domination of the community by a small oligarchy of wealthy men, who were totally insensitive to the community’s needs. In 1793 she wrote a pamphlet, Pasquill Zettelech, circulated anonymously in the community, sharply critical of the wielders of power in the community and their policies. The pamphlet was confiscated and destroyed, but not before its content caused a great stir among the Jews of the city. A ban of excommunication was pronounced not only against the anonymous author, but also against anyone involved in the distribution of the pamphlet. At that point, Frumet identified herself as the authoress. She was fined and forbidden to attend synagogue for a certain time after a plea for clemency was made on the part of her husband. The issue remained a subject of public debate, involving, among others, representatives of the patron of Eisenstadt, Duke Esterházy, until it was finally resolved in 1804. After the death of her husband, Frumet Wolf continued to manage his business and even succeeded in strengthening and enlarging it. She was also well known in Eisenstadt and Burgenland as a philanthropist, assisting the poor financially and providing them with counseling in their private lives. Her will, written in German, is preserved, and is an important source for information on the cultural and economic life of the Jews of Eisenstadt. Bibliography: B. Wachstein, Die Grabinschriften des alten Judenfriedhofes in Eisenstadt, (1922), 252–62; idem, Die Inschriften des alten Judenfriedhofes in Wien, 2 (1917), 285–9; idem, Urkunden und Akten zur Geschichte der Juden in Eisenstadt…, 1 (1926), 212–22, 252–62; 2 (1926), 402–22; E. Wolf, Die Familie Wolf (1924), 119–21; O. Abeles, Zehn Juedinnen (1931), 83–93.

About Frumet Franziska Fani Wolf (עברית)

מגלות היוחסין של משפחות יהודיות הונגריות- כרך ראשון עורך- מונקאטשי pg.146

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Frumet Franziska Fani Wolf's Timeline

1770
1770
Eisenstadt, Austria
1787
May 29, 1787
Eisenstadt, Austria
1794
1794
Eisenstadt, Eisenstadt-Umgebung District, Burgenland, Austria
1798
1798
Eisenstadt, Eisenstadt-Umgebung District, Burgenland, Austria
1800
1800
Eisenstadt, Austria
1806
1806
Eisenstadt, Eisenstadt, Burgenland, Austria
1807
1807
1849
June 6, 1849
Age 79
Eisenstadt, Burgenland, Austria