- Source: Raphael Kirchheim
Raphael Kirchheim (born in Frankfurt am Main 1804; died there September 6, 1889) was a German Jewish scholar.
Life
Kirchheim was of a pugnacious disposition and took a very active part in the general attack on the Amsterdam administration of the Ḥaluḳḳah in 1843-44, which was especially directed against Hirsch Lehren of Amsterdam, president of the board of administration. Kirchheim severely criticized Samson Raphael Hirsch's Der Pentateuch in a pamphlet entitled Die Neue Exegetenschule: Eine Kritische Dornenlese (Breslau, 1867).
Kirchheim left a valuable collection, of Hebraica and Judaica, to the religious school of the M. Horovitz Synagogue at Frankfort.
Works
He published many articles in German magazines. Kirchheim edited or published:
S. L. Rapoport's "Tokaḥat Megullah, Sendschreiben an die Rabbinerversammlung zu Frankfurt-am-Main" (Hebr. and German, the translation being by Kirchheim himself), Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1845
Azulai's "Shem ha-Gedolim" and "Wa'ad la-Ḥakamim" with the annotations of A. Fuld and E. Carmoly, ib. 1847
"Karme Shomeron," an introduction to the Talmudical treatise "Kutim," with an additional letter by S. D. Luzzatto, ib. 1851 (the appendix gives the seven smaller treatises of the Jerusalem Talmud, according to a Carmoly manuscript)
Eliezer Ashkenazi's "Ṭa'am Zeḳenim," ib. 1854
B. Goldberg's edition of Jonah ibn Janah's "Sefer ha-Riḳmah," with additional notes of his, ib. 1856
"Perush 'al Dibre ha-Yamim, Commentar zur Chronik aus dem X Jahrhundert," ib. 1874
Abraham Geiger's "Nachgelassene Schriften," v. 1, Berlin, 1877.
He wrote also additional notes to:
A. Ginzburg's "Perush ReDaK 'al ha-Torah," Presburg, 1842
S. Werblumer's edition of Joseph ibn Caspi's "'Ammude Kesef," ib. 1848
Filipowski's "Sefer Teshubot Dunash ben Labraṭ."
References
Allg. Zeit. des Jud. 1889, p. 587;
S. Bernfeld, Toledot ha-Reformaẓion, p. 214;
William Zeitlin, Ḳiryat Sefer, p. 171;
Joseph Zedner, Cat. Hebr. Books Brit. Mus. p. 413
External links
Jewish Encyclopedia: "Kirchheim, Raphael" by Isidore Singer & Max Schloessinger (1906).