Rabbi Aron Loebel Karfunkel, haCohen

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Rabbi Aron Loebel Karfunkel, haCohen

Hebrew: הדרה, haCohen
Also Known As: "Aaron ben Judah Leib"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Kalisz, Kalisz County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland
Death: January 15, 1816 (53)
Breslau, Silesia, Prussia
Immediate Family:

Son of Loebel Karfunkel
Husband of Esther Itzig Karfunkel
Father of Joseph Karfunkel; Rabbi Lazarus (Eliezer) Karfunkel and Lea (Helene) Lehndel Landau
Brother of Israel Karfunkel

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About Rabbi Aron Loebel Karfunkel, haCohen

The Stammbaum der Familie Karfunkel quotes Rabbi Aron Karfunkel as follows: “Ich wurde geboren am Neumond des Adar 5522 (1762) und meine Hochzeit war am 1. Nissan 5536 (1776).” The Stammbaum says further: “Dies war der Oberlandrabbiner von Schlesien, Aron Karfunkel”. Also that Aron died on Tuesday, 15 Tebeth 5576 (1816).

Reunion translates 1 Adar 5522 as 24 Feb 1762. Reunion translates 1 Nissan 5536 as 21 Mar 1776. Reunion translates 15 Tebeth 5576 as 16 Jan 1816.

https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transc...

KARFUNKEL, AARON BEN JUDAH LEIB HA-KOHEN (d. 1816), rabbi and author. Karfunkel was born in Kalisz after his father had died, and his mother died in childbirth. As a result he was brought up in the home of his brother, Israel. According to his own statement he served as rabbi in different Polish communities, for example in Lask as av bet din – though his name is not mentioned in the list of rabbis of the Lask burial society – and in Daspirshi (a community otherwise unknown). He complains bitterly about his economic position in these communities, stating that he faced starvation until he was compelled to leave his wife and children, who were maintained by his father-in-law. In 1801 he was appointed rabbi of Nachod in Bohemia and in 1807 as deputy to Levin Saul Frankel, whom he later succeeded as regional rabbi of Silesia. Karfunkel was the author of the Sheiltot Avyah (being the acronym from his given names), notes and novellae on the Talmud in the form of responsa to questions which he himself posed. The work comprises 12 parts, each of which is named after one of the stones of the *ephod. Two parts only, Nofekh and Bareket, were published (Berlin, 1806), with one commentary entitled Millu'at Even, and another entitled Meshu'aḥ Milḥamah on difficulties in the views of the rishonim. His other works, Avnei Zikkaron, responsa, and Ẓanif Tahor, on the Book of Ecclesiastes, are still in manuscript in the British Museum. He also wrote the introduction to the constitution of the Nachod burial society and rabbinate. bibliography:

A. Karfunkel, Sheiltot Avyah (Berlin, 1806), introd.; Fuenn, Keneset, 86f.; D. Weinryb, in: Tarbiz, 9 (1938), 97 n.; M. Brann, in: Jubelschrift… H. Graetz (1887), 266, 277.

[Itzhak Alfassi] Encyclopaedia Judaica

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Rabbi Aron Loebel Karfunkel, haCohen's Timeline

1762
February 24, 1762
Kalisz, Kalisz County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland
1794
1794
Breslau, Silesia, Prussia
1803
February 18, 1803
Sohrau, Upper Silesia, Prussia
1803
1816
January 15, 1816
Age 53
Breslau, Silesia, Prussia