HAMBURG, ABRAHAM BENJAMIN
- HAMBURG, ABRAHAM BENJAMIN
- HAMBURG, ABRAHAM BENJAMIN (Wolf; 1770–1850),
German talmudic scholar. Hamburg was born in Fuerth and studied at the
yeshivah of R. Meshullam-Solomon Kohn, the chief rabbi of Fuerth. He
succeeded his teacher as head of the yeshivah, and in 1820 was appointed
moreh-ẓedek ("spiritual leader") of the congregation, serving
also as cantor and mohel. The appointment of a new chief
rabbi, however, was indefinitely postponed and Hamburg was hard put to
combat the inroads of the Reform movement into the community. In his
correspondence with moses sofer , who describes Hamburg as a
"great man of high stature," he talks of his difficulties in building a
communal mikveh (see M. Sofer , Hatam Sofer,
Yoreh De'ah (19582), no. 214; Even ha-Ezer,
1 (19582), no. 82). By 1830, the adherents of the Reform
movement had obtained a majority in the communal administration and had
him removed from all his positions, except from that in the Klaus
synagogue in which he had vested rights (it had been founded by one of
his ancestors, Baermann Fraenkel). His yeshivah was closed and his
opponents enlisted the help of the police in expelling his students, who
numbered more than 100, from Fuerth. Ultimately, Hamburg himself was
driven from the city and died heartbroken.
Hamburg's published works include sermons, responsa, talmudic novellae,
and memorial addresses. Sha'ar Zekenim (Sulzbach, 1830)
consists of sermons, eulogies, and ethical tracts. The latter half of
the work also contains responsa addressed
to former pupils and rabbinical
contemporaries. Simlat Binyamin (Fuerth, 1840–41), Hamburg's
other major work, is in three parts. The first contains responsa on
Oraḥ Ḥayyim and Yoreh De'ah, and the second under
the title Naḥlat Binyamin on Even ha-Ezer and
Ḥoshen Mishpat, as well as aggadot; this section
deals at length with the laws of circumcision. In the third section
under the title Sha'ar Binyamin (unpublished) the author
includes his own interpretations, additions, and novellae. One of his
eulogies is in honor of his teacher, Solomon Kohn (Kol
Bokhim…, Fuerth, 1820). He also paid homage to
sir moses montefiore in a poem on his visit to Fuerth in 1841
together with Adolphe Crémieux , on their return from the
Orient. Hamburg taught and inspired a number of eminent disciples, among
them seligmann-baer bamberger , and Moses Sofer.
-BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Fuenn, Keneset, 304–5; Loewenstein, in: ZGJD, 2 (1888),
90; idem, in: JJLG, 6 (1909), 209–14, 225.
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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