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  1. The Hildesheimer Rabbinical Seminary (officially in German: Rabbinerseminar für das orthodoxe Judenthum in Berlin until 1880, thereafter Rabbiner-Seminar zu Berlin; in Hebrew: בית המדרש לרבנים בברלין, Bet ha-midrash le-Rabanim be-Berlin) was founded in Berlin on 22 October 1873 by Rabbi Dr. Israel Hildesheimer ...

  2. yivoencyclopedia.org › article › Hildesheimer_EsrielYIVO | Hildesheimer, Esriel

    Hildesheimer considered his Berlin Rabbinical Seminary—where students were exposed to both traditional and critical approaches to the study of Jewish texts and history—to be his most important and lasting contribution. Indeed, most German Orthodox rabbis in the period up to the Nazi regime received their training in Berlin.

  3. 11 de may. de 2023 · An all-star list of rabbinical luminaries with general educational backgrounds served as the faculty and taught traditional and non-traditional topics, such as Bible, religious philosophy, theoretical and practical homiletics, Jewish history and geography of “Palestine” (pre-state Israel).

  4. Azriel Hildesheimer (also Esriel and Israel, Yiddish: עזריאל הילדעסהיימער; 11 May 1820 – 12 July 1899) was a German rabbi and leader of Orthodox Judaism. He is regarded as a pioneering moderniser of Orthodox Judaism in Germany and as a founder of Modern Orthodox Judaism .

  5. Hildesheimer's approach was to establish a rabbinical seminary, for he believed that Orthodoxy would only survive in modern times if there were spiritual leaders who were thoroughly conversant with the era they were living in. Originally he intended to establish this seminary in Hungary, where he had earlier founded a yeshivah that incorporated

  6. 25 de may. de 2011 · Much has been written about the life, times, and impact of Rabbi Esriel Hildesheimer (1820–1899) on Western European Jewry. 1 To date, however, the American legacy of this towering figure has not been explored.

  7. German rabbi, and leader of Orthodox Judaism; born at Halberstadt May 20, 1820; died at Berlin July 12, 1899; son of R. Löb Glee Hildesheimer. He attended the "Hasharat-Ẓewi" school in Halberstadt, and, after reaching the age of seventeen, the Talmudic school of Rabbi Ettlinger in Altona.