- AZDJ
- abbr.the A to Z of Disc Jockeys
Dictionary of abbreviations. 2012.
Dictionary of abbreviations. 2012.
MANNHEIMER, ISAAC NOAH — (1793–1865), Vienna preacher and creator of a moderate, compromise Reform ritual. Born in Copenhagen, he was the son of a Hungarian ḥazzan. He received his general education at the local secular school and studied Hebrew literature and Talmud… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Adam Mickiewicz — Born Adam Bernard Mickiewicz, December 24, 1798(1798 12 24), Zaosie, Russian Empire Died … Wikipedia
ALTSCHUL, EMIL — (Elias, Uri; 1797–1865), physician in Prague; professor of homeopathy at Prague University from 1849, author of medical and pharmaceutical works, and editor of a homeopathic periodical from 1853. Altschul attended the yeshivah of Bezalel Ronsburg … Encyclopedia of Judaism
ARNHEIM, FISCHEL — (1812–1864), German politician and attorney. Arnheim was a well known lawyer in his native Bayreuth and became interested in constitutional problems. In 1848 he was elected to the Bavarian Landtag (parliament), where by virtue of his legal… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
ASHER, DAVID — (1818–1890), German philosophical writer and journalist. Born in Dresden, he went to England as a young man. There he published a catechism Outlines of the Jewish Religion (1845). He became headmaster of the Hebrew Association School of… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
AUB, JOSEPH — (1805–1880), German moderate Reform rabbi. Aub was rabbi in Bayreuth from 1830 to 1850, in Mainz, and in Berlin from 1865. He was among the first rabbis in Bavaria to preach in German. Aub published a polemical tract on the Bavarian edict… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
AUERBACH, ABRAHAM BEN SELIG AVI'EZRI — (1763–1845), Alsatian rabbi. Auerbach, a nephew of david sinzheim , was born in Bouxwiller. He was in charge of the affairs of the Strasbourg community, subsequently serving as rabbi of Forbach (Alsace), Neuwied, Coblenz, and Bonn. During the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
AUERBACH, BERTHOLD — (1812–1882), German author and a leader of Jewish emancipation. His work is marked by the constant attempts to reconcile his different identities as a religiously free thinking Jew, as a writer from southwest Germany with strong regional bonds,… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BAER, SELIGMAN ISAAC — (1825–1897), Hebrew grammarian, masorah scholar, and liturgist. Born at Mosbach (Baden, Germany), Baer was a pupil of wolf heidenheim , who left him many of his manuscripts. At the age of 19 he turned to masoretic studies. franz delitzsch was… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
BUCHAREST — (Rom. Bucureşti), capital of Romania. Before the union of the Danubian principalities (Moldavia and Walachia) in 1859, it was the capital of the principality of Walachia. Up to the 19th century almost the entire Jewish population of Walachia was… … Encyclopedia of Judaism