Moses Lemans
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (July 2018) |
Moses Lemans | |
---|---|
Born | November 5, 1785 Naarden, Netherlands |
Died | October 17, 1832 Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Moses Lemans (November 5, 1785, Naarden, Netherlands – October 17, 1832, Amsterdam, Netherlands) was a Dutch-Jewish Hebraist and mathematician, and a leader of the Haskalah movement in Holland. He was a founder of the Jewish Mathematicians' Association, Mathesis Artium Genetrix, and published a number of works on Hebrew grammar and mathematics.[1]
Born in Naarden, Lemans was educated by his father and (in mathematics) by Judah Littwack. He helped found Hanokh la na'ar al pi darkho, a society for reform in Jewish education, for which he published a number of Hebrew textbooks. In 1818 he was appointed head of the first school for needy Jews in Amsterdam, and in 1828 teacher of mathematics in the Amsterdam gymnasium.
Works
[edit]In 1808 he published Ma'amar Imrah Ẓerufah (Article on Pure Speech), in which he advocated for the abandonment of Ashkenazi pronunciation of Hebrew in favour of the Sephardi one,[2] and some years later a Hebrew grammar, Rudimenta (1820). In collaboration with Samuel Israel Mulder he published a Hebrew-Dutch dictionary in 1829-1831. The most notable of his Hebrew poems is an epic on the Belgian Revolution.
Lemans was also involved in efforts to propagate among Jews of the Netherlands a knowledge of the Dutch language, by translating prayer-books into Dutch.
References
[edit]- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Isidore Singer and E. Slijper (1901–1906). "Lemans, Moses". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
- ^ "Lemans, Moses". Encyclopaedia Judaica.
- ^ Rädecker, T. S. (2015). "Making Jews Dutch: Secular discourse and Jewish responses, 1796-1848". Groningen: University of Groningen.
Further reading
[edit]- A. Dellavilla (1852), Allon Muẓẓav.
- Michman-Melkman (1967), Leshonenu la-Am, 18, 76–90, 120–35.
- Teisjure l'Ange (1833), Algemeene Konst-en-Letterbode, ii., Nos. 37, 38.
- Ulman (1836), Jaarboeken voor de Israëliten in Nederland, 2 (1836), 297–312.