Joseph Hertzberg (Hebrew: יוסף הערצבערג; d. 1870) was a Russian Jewish writer and translator.

Joseph Hertzberg
BornMogilev, Podolian Governorate
Russian Empire
Died1870
Mogilev, Podolian Governorate
Russian Empire
OccupationWriter and translator
LanguageHebrew

Biography

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Hertzberg was born in Mogilev in the Pale of Settlement at the beginning of the nineteenth century. There he received a sound education, and mastered the Russian, German, French, and English languages.

He contributed largely to Hebrew periodicals, and wrote a popular Hebrew translation of Jacques-Henri Bernardin de Saint-Pierre's Harmonie de la Nature, published in Vilna as Sefer sulem ha-teva (1850) with an approbation by Isaac Baer Levinsohn.[1] Hertzberg also translated into Hebrew Moses Mendelssohn's Morgenstunden, oder Vorlesungen über das Dasein Gottes, Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, Salomon Munk's Palestine, and some volumes of Heinrich Graetz's Geschichte der Juden.[2] He left in manuscript a volume of poems entitled Alummat Yosef.

References

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  Rosenthal, Herman; Rosenthal, Vasili (1904). "Hertzberg, Joseph". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 364.

  1. ^ Ostle, Robin, ed. (1991). Modern Literature in the Near and Middle East, 1850–1970. London: Routledge. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-315-51267-9.
  2. ^ Zalkin, Mordechai (2005). "Scientific Literature and Cultural Transformation in Nineteenth-Century East European Jewish Society". Aleph. 5: 265–266. doi:10.2979/ALE.2005.-.5.249. JSTOR 0385836. S2CID 170475195.
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