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  1. Samuel Adler (December 3, 1809 – June 9, 1891) was a leading German-American Reform rabbi, Talmudist, and author.

    • Henrietta Frankfurter
  2. Born in Worms, Samuel Adler came from a rabbinic family. His father, Rabbi Sirig Adler, was a rabbinic judge in Worms, Rabbi Nathan Adler head of the rabbinic academy in Frankfurt am Main, and Nathan Marcus Adler chief rabbi of the British Empire.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Samuel_AdlerSamuel Adler - Wikipedia

    Samuel Adler may refer to: Samuel Adler (rabbi) (1809–1891), Reform rabbi. Samuel Adler (composer) (born 1928), composer and conductor. Samuel Adler (artist) (1898–1979), American artist.

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  7. Samuel Adler. American History > Immigration > Samuel Adler wasborn in Worms, Germany in 1809. He was a rabbi in Germany (1842-57) before emigrating to the United States in 1857. He was rabbi of the Temple Emanu-El in New York and played a leading role in the reform movement. Adler, who revised the prayer book, died in 1891.

  8. Drawing on the life and work of Samuel Adler (1809–1891), this chapter explores the entanglements of German-Jewish and American-Jewish education in the nineteenth century. Immigrant rabbis like Adler served the needs of a fast-growing American Judaism, that significantly expanded between ca. 1820 and 1880 through the immigration of mostly ...

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