Seckel Isaac Fränkel Explained

Seckel Isaac Fränkel (1765–1835) was a German-Jewish communal activist and scholar. In 1818, when the new Hamburg Temple was formally inaugurated, Fränkel, with Meyer Israel Bresselau, published a new prayer book for the Temple, considered the first Reform liturgy.[1] [2]

He was also translated most of the Jewish apocrypha from Greek into Hebrew (1830).

Works

Notes and References

  1. Michael A. Meyer, The Origins of the Modern Jew: Jewish Identity and European, p. 212, 1979: "Especially Bresselau, and Seckel Isaac Frankel, Schutzschrift des zu Hamburg erschienenen Israelitischen Gebetbuchs."
  2. Michael A. Meyer, Response to Modernity: A History of the Reform Movement in Judaism, 1995, p. 54: "Two members of the directorate, Seckel Isaac Frankel (1765-1835) and Meyer Israel Bresselau (1785–1839), devoted themselves to the cause of the new association with particular intensity."