OTTOLENGHI

OTTOLENGHI
OTTOLENGHI (Ottolengo), Italian family of Piedmont, apparently originating in Germany, the name being an Italian form of Ettlingen. Its prominent members include: joseph b. nathan ottolenghi (d. 1570), rabbi of Cremona; samuel david b. jehiel ottolengo (d. 1718), scholar and kabbalist, born in Casale Monferrato. ABRAHAM AZARIAH (BONAIUTO) OTTOLENGHI (1776–1851), rabbinical scholar born in acqui . When the French revolutionary army entered Acqui in 1796, he gave a public address on the significance of the tree of liberty erected in Acqui, as everywhere else, as a symbol of the new era. With the defeat of the French following the battle of Novi in 1799, Abraham had to flee to Genoa. After the return of the French in 1800, he returned to Acqui, and was appointed rabbi of the community, which position he held until his death. He wrote Shir li-Khevod ha-Torah (Leghorn, 1808). NATHAN (DONATO) OTTOLENGHI (1820–1883), the last outstanding member of the once-famous community of Acqui. On friendly terms with noted political figures of the period, including Massimo d'Azeglio , Vincenzo Gioberti, and Cesare Balbo, he did much to better the position of both Jews and non-Jews and to improve the condition of the poor. ELEAZAR (LAZZARO) OTTOLENGHI (1820–1890), rabbi, born in Acqui. He held rabbinical office in Turin, Moncalvo, and Acqui, settling in Rome a year before his death. Author of a number of piyyutim, he also wrote a comedy, Matrimoniomisto (1870), and Dialoghi religiosomorali (1873). In his youth, he also wrote several tragedies, one of which, Etelwige, was presented in Acqui in 1852. EMILIO OTTOLENGHI (1830–1908), philanthropist, born in Acqui. In 1848 he moved to Alessandria and was elected member of the municipal council in 1882. He served as president of the community for a long period and was made a count by King Humbert I in 1883. giuseppe ottolenghi (1838–1904), was an Italian general, minister of war in 1902–03, veteran of the Italian War of Liberation. moses jacob ottolenghi (1840–1901) was a writer and educator. JOSHUA (SALVATORE) OTTOLENGHI (1861–1934), physician. He studied in Turin, was assistant of cesare lombroso , and taught at Rome University. A pioneer in modern criminology, Ottolenghi founded (1902) the Scuola di Polizia Scientifica in Rome, the first of the kind in Italy. DONATO OTTOLENGHI (1874–?1940) was professor of general pathology and hygiene at the universities of Pisa, Cagliari, and Bologna. ADOLFO OTTOLENGHI (?1880–1943) served as rabbi in Venice from 1919 to 1943. During the Holocaust he was arrested by the Nazis and deported to Germany, where he perished. He was remembered in his community for his sincerity and his devotion to their needs. He wrote several historical essays, including Leon da Modena e spunti di vita ebraica del ghetto nel sec. XVII (1929) and Abraham Lattes nei suoi rapporti colla republica di Daniele Manin (1930). RAFFAELE OTTOLENGHI (?1887–1917), lawyer and publicist, devoted to the Jewish cause and to Zionism. He wrote Voci d'Oriente (2 vols.), a study of Oriental influences in literature and of Hebrew proselytism. MARIO OTTOLENGHI (1904–1978), economist and secretary of the Italian Zionist Federation (1933–39), settled in Israel   in 1938. His son MICHAEL (1934– ) was professor of physical chemistry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: Mortara, Indice, 46; E. Foa, in: Il Vessillo Israelitico, 31 (1883), 327–9, 343ff.; F. Servi, ibid., 38 (1890), 137–9; Ghirondi-Neppi, 330, 332; Roth, Italy, index; Milano, Italia, index.

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

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  • Ottolenghi — ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Emanuele Ottolenghi (* 1969), italienischer Politikwissenschaftler und Publizist Giuseppe Ottolenghi (1838–1904), italienischer General Salvatore Ottolenghi (1861–1934), italienischer Mediziner Dies …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Ottolenghi — Ottolenghi, Giuseppe, ital. General, geb. 25. Dez. 1838 in Sabbioneta, Provinz Mantua, aus einer jüdischen Familie, gest. 2. Nov. 1904 in Turin, trat 1858 als Freiwilliger in die Militärakademie zu Turin und verließ sie 11. April 1859 als… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • OTTOLENGHI, GIUSEPPE — (1838–1904), Italian general and minister of war. Born in Sabbioneta, Lombardy, Ottolenghi studied at the Turin military academy and fought with the Italian army in the war against Austria in 1859. In the following year he was transferred to the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • OTTOLENGHI, JOSEPH BEN NATHAN — (d. 1570), rabbi of cremona , Italy. As head of the yeshivah, he made Cremona famous as a center of talmudic learning. Between 1558 and 1562 Ottolenghi published about 20 Hebrew works at the celebrated Riva di Trento press. He wrote novellae on… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • OTTOLENGHI, MOSES JACOB — (1840–1901), Italian Hebrew writer and educator and pupil of elijah benamozegh . He was born in Leghorn and died in Salonika. His works include Degel ha Torah (an entertainment in seven acts, to be played on commencement day in houses of learning …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Ottolenghi, Davide — vero nome di Dix, Gioele …   Sinonimi e Contrari. Terza edizione

  • Giuseppe Ottolenghi — est un général et homme politique italien né le 26 décembre 1838 à Sabbioneta (Lombardie) et mort le 2 novermbre 1904 à Turin. Sommaire 1 Biographie …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Giuseppe Ottolenghi — (* 26. Dezember 1838 in Sabbioneta; † 2. November 1904 in Turin) war ein italienischer General. Er war der erste italienische Jude, der in den Generalstab aufgenommen wurde und erhielt Auszeichnungen in mehreren Kriegen. Von 1902 bis 1903 war er… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Emanuele Ottolenghi — (* 1969 in Bologna) ist ein italienischer Politikwissenschaftler und Publizist. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Werdegang 2 Tätigkeiten 3 Werke 4 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Arturo Martini — (* 11. August 1889 in Treviso; † 22. März 1947 in Mailand) war ein italienischer Bildhauer. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Werke (Auswahl) 3 Literatur …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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