LONZANO, ABRAHAM BEN RAPHAEL DE
- LONZANO, ABRAHAM BEN RAPHAEL DE
- LONZANO, ABRAHAM BEN RAPHAEL DE (late 17th–early
18th century), kabbalist and Hebrew grammarian. It seems that
he was a descendant of the renowned kabbalist menahem de lonzano .
Abraham became well known through his Kinyan Avraham
(Zolkiew, 1723) on Hebrew grammar, from which it appears that he came
from Zakinthos (Zante), one of the Greek isles. Following the attacks of
the local inhabitants against the Jews, many troubles befell him and he
began to wander from country to country. He studied at the yeshivah Eẓ
Ḥayyim in Amsterdam. At a later date, he appears to have been in
Prague where he was persecuted by the scholars of the yeshivah because
he criticized them sharply for studying Torah without a knowledge of the
Hebrew language. He wrote a declaration against Neḥemiah Ḥiyya
Ḥayon in Genoa in 1715 (published in Sefunot; see
bibliography). He was in Lemberg in about 1723. In one of his poems,
which appeared in his book, he angrily attacked those who regard
themselves as poets without having any knowledge of even the form and
arrangement of a poem. He also wrote Ḥamishah Kinyanim
(unpublished), a commentary to the Sefer Yeẓirah. He
subsequently converted to Christianity in the Prussian town of Idstein
and adopted the name Wilhelm Heinrich Neumann.
-BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Steinschneider, Handbuch, 85 no. 1201; J.F.A. de le Roi, Die
evangelische Christenheit und die Juden, 1 (1884), 393; M.
Friedman, in: Sefunot, 10 (1966), 602–6; Frumkin-Rivlin, 2
(1928), 156–7.
(Abraham David)
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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