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  1. Samuel Adler was born on December 3, 1809, in Worms, [1] Confederation of the Rhine (present-day Germany). He received his early religious education from his father Isaac, who was one of the associate rabbis in Worms and instructed him in Hebrew and the Biblical and Rabbinic literature of the Jews. [2] When Rabbi Isaac Adler died on December 23 ...

  2. ADLER, SAMUEL (1809–1891), rabbi and pioneer of the Reform movement. Adler, born in Worms, was the son of Rabbi Isaac Adler, who gave him his early education. He received a traditional education at the Frankfurt Yeshivah and studied privately with Rabbi Jacob Bamberger. He also received a secular education at the University of Bonn and ...

  3. Dr. Adler must have been reminded again in 1907 that the world was far from his broad non-sectarian outlook, when he was appointed Roosevelt exchange professor to Germany, and there was some ...

  4. By: Bernhard Friedberg. German-American rabbi, Talmudist, and author; born at Worms, Germany, Dec. 3, 1809; died in New York, June 9, 1891. From his father, Isaac Adler, who had been one of the dayyanim, or associate rabbis, in Worms, young Adler received his first instruction in Hebrew and in the Biblical and post-Biblical literature of the Jews.

  5. Adler published widely, including his 1864 book, A Guide to Instruction in Israelite Religion. He continued to the lead Temple Emanu-El until 1874, when the congregation—whether because they found him overly scholarly, were displeased with some of his liberalizing reforms, or just seeking a change—voted to make Adler rabbi emeritus.

  6. Samuel Hans Adler (born March 4, 1928) is an American composer, conductor, author, and professor. During the course of a professional career which ranges over six decades he has served as a faculty member at both the University of Rochester 's Eastman School of Music and the Juilliard School .

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  8. Adler lectures regularly on Jewish and general musical topics at universities and synagogues throughout America, and he is a frequent scholar-in-residence at various congregations. He is the author of three books: Choral Conducting (1971); Sight Singing (1979, 1997); and The Study of Orchestration (1982, 1989), reissued in an expanded edition ...

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