Rabbi Joseph Hirsch Dünner

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Rabbi Joseph Hirsch Dünner

Hebrew: הרב יוסף צבי הירש דינר
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kraków, Kraków County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland
Death: October 13, 1911 (78)
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
Place of Burial: Muiderberg, Gooise Meren, NH, Netherlands
Immediate Family:

Son of Lazar Düner and Reisl Rywka Herschlownej
Husband of Sara Dina Dünner
Father of Jeannette de Beer; Lazar Dinner; Israel Dinner; Elias Dünner; Reizel (Roza) Davids and 6 others
Brother of Wolf Isaak Isak Dünner; Mendel Dunner; Abraham Moses Dünner and Hannah Dunner

Occupation: chief rabbi, רב ראשי להולנד
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Rabbi Joseph Hirsch Dünner

DÜNNER, JOSEPH HIRSCH:

Rabbi; born at Cracow Jan., 1833; received his rabbinical education at his native place; studied philosophy and Oriental philology at Bonn and Heidelberg. In 1862 he was called from Bonn to the rectorate of the Nederlandsch Israelitisch Seminarium in Amsterdam. His ability soon made it famous as a school of Jewish theology, ancient languages, and religious philosophy. In 1874 he was made chief rabbi of the Amsterdam community and of the province of North Holland, and though he belongs to the strictly Orthodox party, no dissension has marred his administration. The government recognized his ability and activity by decorating him with the Order of the Lion of the Netherlands.

Dünner is known by his researches on the Halakah of the period of the Tannaim, and by his disquisitions on the Tosefta. According to him the Tosefta originated after the close of the Talmud, being edited by a redactor who had before him an ancient, or at least fragments of an ancient, Tosefta. He asserts that a comparison of the texts contained in the collections of the Tannaim with the two Talmuds will substantiate his contention. Dünner has acquired a reputation as an orator. He has written: "Die Theorien über Wesen und Ursprung der Tosephtha, Kritisch Dargestellt," Amsterdam, 1874; "Glossen (Haggahot) zum Babylonischen und Palästinensischen Talmud" (in Hebrew), 4 vols., Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1896-1903; "Kritische und Erläuternde Anmerkungen zu Bedarschi's Chotham Tochnit," Amsterdam, 1865; "Leerredenen," 5 vols., ib. 1897-1901. Besides these works he has contributed to the "Joodsch Letterkundige Bijdragen," "Monatsschrift," "Weekblad voor Israeliten," and "Israelitische Letterbode."

Bibliography:

Polak, J. H. Dünner, Iets Uit Diens Leven en Werken, in Weekblad voor Israëlitische Huisgezinnen, Rotterdam, 1899-1900;

De Joodsche Courant, Nos. 18, 19, The Hague, 1903.

Source: http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/5362-dunner-joseph-hirsch

http://www.bruggenvanamsterdam.nl/weesperstraat_hoek_nieuwe_prinse.htm

http://lib.cet.ac.il/pages/item.asp?item=23604

About הרב יוסף צבי הירש דינר (עברית)

DÜNNER, JOSEPH HIRSCH:

Rabbi; born at Cracow Jan., 1833; received his rabbinical education at his native place; studied philosophy and Oriental philology at Bonn and Heidelberg. In 1862 he was called from Bonn to the rectorate of the Nederlandsch Israelitisch Seminarium in Amsterdam. His ability soon made it famous as a school of Jewish theology, ancient languages, and religious philosophy. In 1874 he was made chief rabbi of the Amsterdam community and of the province of North Holland, and though he belongs to the strictly Orthodox party, no dissension has marred his administration. The government recognized his ability and activity by decorating him with the Order of the Lion of the Netherlands.

Dünner is known by his researches on the Halakah of the period of the Tannaim, and by his disquisitions on the Tosefta. According to him the Tosefta originated after the close of the Talmud, being edited by a redactor who had before him an ancient, or at least fragments of an ancient, Tosefta. He asserts that a comparison of the texts contained in the collections of the Tannaim with the two Talmuds will substantiate his contention. Dünner has acquired a reputation as an orator. He has written: "Die Theorien über Wesen und Ursprung der Tosephtha, Kritisch Dargestellt," Amsterdam, 1874; "Glossen (Haggahot) zum Babylonischen und Palästinensischen Talmud" (in Hebrew), 4 vols., Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1896-1903; "Kritische und Erläuternde Anmerkungen zu Bedarschi's Chotham Tochnit," Amsterdam, 1865; "Leerredenen," 5 vols., ib. 1897-1901. Besides these works he has contributed to the "Joodsch Letterkundige Bijdragen," "Monatsschrift," "Weekblad voor Israeliten," and "Israelitische Letterbode."

Bibliography:

Polak, J. H. Dünner, Iets Uit Diens Leven en Werken, in Weekblad voor Israëlitische Huisgezinnen, Rotterdam, 1899-1900;

De Joodsche Courant, Nos. 18, 19, The Hague, 1903.

Source: http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/5362-dunner-joseph-hirsch

http://www.bruggenvanamsterdam.nl/weesperstraat_hoek_nieuwe_prinse.htm

http://lib.cet.ac.il/pages/item.asp?item=23604

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Rabbi Joseph Hirsch Dünner's Timeline

1833
January 11, 1833
Kraków, Kraków County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland
1867
1867
Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
1868
October 14, 1868
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
1870
July 4, 1870
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
1872
December 24, 1872
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
1874
February 22, 1874
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
1875
March 24, 1875
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands
1877
September 19, 1877
Amsterdam, Government of Amsterdam, North Holland, The Netherlands