Ludwig Lichtschein
Appearance
Ludwig Lichtschein Hungarian: Lichtstein Lajos, Lichstein Lajos[1] (died 1886, Ofen) was a Hungarian rabbi.
Lichtschein was born Komorn, studied at Pápa, and was rabbinical assessor of Austerlitz, Nagykanizsa, and Esztergom.[1] From 1876 until his death he was rabbi at Somogy-Csurgó.[1]
Lichtschein was the author of the following works:
- A Zsidók Kőzép és Jelenkori Helyzetők (Gross Kanizsa, 1866), on the condition of the Jews in medieval and modern times
- Die Dreizehn Glaubensartikel (Brünn, 1870), a sermon
- Der Targum zu den Propheten (in Stern's Ha-Meḥaḳḳer, i)
- Der Talmud und der Socialismus (ib. iii); Kossuth Lajos és a Sátoraljaúhelyi Rabbi (in Magyar Zsidó Szémle, 1885), on Kossuth and the rabbi of Sátoralja-Ujhely.
References
[edit]- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "LICHTSCHEIN, LUDWIG". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.