David Oppenheim
1664 CE–1736 CE · Acharonim · Worms (Rhineland)
Rabbi David Oppenheim (1664–1736) was chief rabbi of Nikolsburg and then of Prague, and one of the most powerful Talmudic authorities of his generation. He is equally renowned for assembling the greatest private library of Hebrew books and manuscripts of his age — some 7,000 volumes — which today forms a cornerstone of Oxford's Bodleian Library. A senior arbiter whose approval was sought across Europe, he stood at the center of rabbinic authority during the era's bitter struggles over Sabbateanism.
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Worms (Rhineland)וורמייזאRhineland, Germany
What they did here
Born in Worms into a distinguished rabbinic family.
About Worms (Rhineland)
# Worms Along the Rhine River in the Rhineland, Worms was a thriving medieval trading town under the rule of the Holy Roman Empire, its fortunes tied to the vital commerce flowing along Europe's greatest waterway. The city's climate was temperate but often gray, the Rhine's mists mingling with smoke from forges and workshops that made Worms a center of metalwork and wine production. Its Jewish community, though small compared to the Christian majority, was exceptionally learned and prosperous, protected by imperial charters that granted them unusual autonomy and trading privileges. Jews lived in a distinct quarter near the Rhine, their position as moneylenders and merchants giving them wealth and—paradoxically—both security and resentment from Christian neighbors. Worms became a beacon of Torah learning, its yeshivas drawing students from across Europe, and its scholars were consulted on matters of Jewish law from distant communities. The city's great Jewish synagogue, with its Romanesque stone arches and carved reliefs, stood as a architectural declaration of the community's permanence and pride, a monument to learning that would survive centuries of upheaval.
In Worms (Rhineland) at the same time
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with David Oppenheim’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
In the same tradition
Chavot Yair, Eliyahu Spira (Eliyahu Rabbah), Yonah Landsofer, Nesanel Weil, Yonatan Eybeschutz
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with David Oppenheim’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Christian world
Buddhist world
Islamic world
Hindu world
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.