Colenda Digital Repository

Isaac Baer Levinsohn Isaac Baer Levinsohn (RIBAL) letters, 1827-1859

Creator:
Levinsohn, Isaac Baer, 1788-1860 (creator)
Timespan:
1801-1917
Date:
1827/1859
Description:
This collection consists of thirty-seven "letters" written by Isaac Baer Levinsohn, one of the founders of the Russian Haskalah (enlightenment). While it appears that most of the documents were intended for a recipient, it also appears that many were not traditionally letters and were instead scholarly or literary writings, possibly to be mailed. Letters were addressed to Yudel HaLevi Epstein, Yosef Hayyim, Rabbi Hirsch (possibly Samson Raphael Hirsch), Aaron Reich, and Yaakov Reifman, as well as "my dear," "my friends," and "wise men of our people." There is one letter that appears to be written to Nachman Krochimal. In some cases, the recipient is referred to by acronyms or only part of the name is clear; those letters can be found in the folder of "unidentified recipients." While the content of most of the letters is unknown at the time of processing, some topics addressed include notes about his published works, especially Bet Yehudah and Te'udah be-Yisrael; Rabbi S.J. Rapoport; and the short Talmud Yerushalmi and Bavli Book. Researchers interested in this collection should be aware that Levinsohn's handwriting is difficult to decipher. The letters are often formed in a way that the ink creates additional swirls, making them look like other letters. Levinsohn wrote in the margins, upside down, and in a combination of script and print. Furthermore, many of the documents are partially or entirely crossed out.
Language:
Hebrew
Provenance:
Sold by Kestenbaum & Company, 2016.
Relation:
Finding aid: https://findingaids.library.upenn.edu/records/UPENN_CAJS_CJS.ARCMS60; The Rare Judaica Acquisitions Fund Home Page: http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017.12/1229058
Subject:
Haskalah; Jews, Russian; Jews -- Europe, Eastern; Jews -- Social life and customs; Judaism -- Study and teaching; Religion
Resource Type:
Text
Form/Genre:
manuscripts (documents); correspondence; writings (document genre)
Physical Description:
1 box (.2 linear foot)
Geographic Subject:
Russia -- History -- 1801-1917
Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/
Notes:
Isaac Baer Levinsohn (RIBAL), a Russian-Hebrew scholar and writer, was born on October 13, 1788, in Kremenetz. From an early age, Levinsohn excelled academically, learning "Talmudic lore, ... the Old Testament, ... the Russian language, ... and rabbinical literature," (Rosenthal). Over the years, he supported himself and his wife by teaching, translating for the Russian forces during the French invasion, and working as bookkeeper, as well as continuing his studies until he passed his teacher's examination and was hired to teach Hebrew, first at the gymnasium of Tarnopol and later at the Hebrew College of Brody. His studies and career provided the opportunity to meet other scholars and academics, including Dr. Isaac Erter, Nachman Krochmal, Joseph Perl, and S.J. Rapoport who influenced his thinking. He began writing on the topics of Haskalah (enlightenment), "the many problems of contemporary Jewish life in Russia," (Rosenthal), and Hebrew etymology. He authored a satire on the Hasidim, Divre tsadikim and Te'udah be-Yisrael, published in 1828, which urged Jews to study Scriptures, learn secular languages, and work in agriculture and industry. His book, Bet Yehudah, was completed in 1829 and published in 1838 and served as "a plan of action to the progressive element in the Russian Jewry," (Rosenthal). Among his other writings are Efes damin (1837), Ahiyah Shiloni ha-Hozeh (1841), Ta'ar ha-Sofer (1863), and Zerubbabel (1863 and 1867). Thomson Gale states, "Levinsohn's literary work was mainly polemical and propagandistic ... [and] it dealt with the social, internal, and external position of the Jews in Eastern Europe." According to Rosenthal, "Levinsohn labored assiduously for the well-being of his coreligionists in Russia, [for] the amelioration of the condition of the Jews, ... the establishment of Jewish agricultural colonies in Bessarabia in 1838 t0 1839, and later the organization of Jewish educational institutions." While many were supporters of Levinsohn, he faced "the fury of his fanatical opponents" (Gale) too. Today, he is known as one of the founders of the Haskalah movement in the Russian Empire. Throughout the 1840s and 1850s, Levinsohn's health was poor, and he died on February 12, 1860, in Krementz. There are numerous spellings of Levinsohn's name, including Yitshak Ber Levinsohn, Yitzchak Ber Levinsohn, Yitzhak Ber Levinsohn, Isaac Ber Levinson, Isaac Ber Levinsohn, Isaac Baer Levinsohn, and RIBAL (an acronym for Rabbi Isaac Baer Levinsohn).; In Hebrew.; Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Rare Judaica Acquisitions Fund.; Kestenbaum sale no. 70, lot 110, Sept. 22, 2016.
Physical Location:
Library at the Katz Center, Archives Room, ARC MS60
Collection:
Rare Judaica Acquisitions Fund