Rabbi Shlomo Gins Schlesinger Eger

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Rabbi Shlomo Gins - Schlesinger-Eger (Eiger)

Hebrew: ר' שלמה איגר, הרב שלמה איגר מחבר גליון מהרש"א
Also Known As: "Shlomo Eiger", "Salomon-Solomon", "שלמה איגר", "גליון מהרש"א"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Leszno, Greater Poland, Poland
Death: January 03, 1852 (66-67)
Lissa, Poland
Place of Burial: Poznań, Greater Poland, Poland
Immediate Family:

Son of Rabbi Akiva Eger and Glueckchen Margalies, [1st wife]
Husband of Golda Rywka Eiger
Father of Itzchak (/Itzig) Faywel Eger; Moshe Eger-Eiger; Tzvi Hirsch Eger-Eiger; Gittel Rokeach; Rabbi Yehuda Leib Eiger, of Lublin and 7 others
Brother of Sheindel Davidson; Rabbi Avraham Eger, Rabbi of Rawitch; Sorel-Sarah Schreiber-Sofer, Kalischer and Zipora Zipre Eger
Half brother of Moses Jakob Eiger; Hadassah Rosanes; Rodisch Schiff (Eger); Benjamin Wolf Eger (Günsz); Feivelman Eger and 9 others

Occupation: (in Warsaw registered as born 1773)
Managed by: Malka Mysels
Last Updated:

About Rabbi Shlomo Gins Schlesinger Eger

Wikipedia: Solomon Eger & שלמה איגר.

R. Solomon b. Akiva Eger (1785–1852), rabbi and rosh yeshivah, was born in Lissa, he was the son of R. Akiva Eger the Younger, under whom he studied.

R. Eger became a merchant in Warsaw, but after losing his fortune in the Polish rebellion in 1831, he accepted the rabbinate of Kalisz.

In 1839 he was appointed to succeed his father in Posen. Active in communal affairs, Eger sought to direct the Jews from commerce to farming, and in 1844 appealed to Frederick William IV, king of Prussia, to assist Jews in founding an agricultural village in the province of Posen. The request was granted, and Eger took active steps to implement the plan.

In 1846 he founded an organization for agricultural settlement with the consent and formal support of 21 local communities, with promises of support. The project was, however, brought to an end by the disturbances of 1848.

R. Eger was also active in soliciting contributions for Erez Israel and in assuring their fair disbursement. He also took a prominent part in the campaign for emancipation of the Jews in his country.

A strong advocate of traditional Judaism in its strictest interpretation and an outspoken opponent of the Reform movement, he sided with R. G. Tiktin of Breslau in his controversy with A. Geiger and was influential in restoring R. Tiktin to his position.

Many of his responsa are included among those of his father, particularly those which he published together with his older brother, R. Abraham.

His own published works include Gilyon Maharsha, notes on the Talmud and on Alfasi's Code appended to the Vilna Talmud (1859); Gilyon Rasha, notes on Yoreh De'ah (Koenigsberg, 1859) and republished with additions in the Vilna Talmud. His letters were published in Iggerot Soferim (1929), pp. 62–86.

Reference

Description

Bloch, in: Jeschurun, ed. by B. Koenigsberger, 1 (1901), 5–8, 75–79, 104–8; Wreschner, in: JJIG, 2 (1904), 47–48; L. Lewin, Geschichte der Juden in Lissa (1904), 245–8; EJ; JE

1913--1996- The Eger Family Association- pg.8,14-16


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Rabbi Shlomo Gins Schlesinger Eger's Timeline

1785
1785
Leszno, Greater Poland, Poland
1809
1809
Ul. Franciskanska, Dom №1808, Warszawa, Mazovia, Polska, Kingdom of Poland
1810
1810
Ul. Franciskanska №1808, Warszawa, Mazovia, Polska, Kingdom of Poland
1811
1811
Warszawa, Mazovia, Polska, Kingdom of Poland
1814
1814
1817
July 1, 1817
Warsaw, Ul. Krolewska , Dom №1066, Poland
1818
1818
Warszawa, Województwo Mazowieckie, Poland, Russian Empire
1821
1821
Warsaw
1824
1824
Cyrkul VII, Ul.Krolewska , Dom№ 1069, Warszawa, Mazovia, Polska, Kingdom of Poland