Samuel David Luzzatto

1800–1865

The poet, rabbi, and scholar Samuel David Luzzatto, also known as Shadal, was born in Trieste. He began writing poetry from a young age, and later penned academic works on Jewish history and the Bible. He translated the Ashkenazi prayer book into Italian in 1821–1822, and the Italian rite in 1829. Luzzatto joined the faculty of the Padua rabbinical college in 1829, where he taught until his death. A strong critic of Jewish mysticism, he upheld the value of Jewish traditions, believing that Judaism expressed universal humanist morals. Posthumously, Luzzatto’s correspondence with other Jewish intellectuals, his early manuscripts, and varied writings were compiled and published by his son.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Lessons of Jewish Moral Theology

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These lessons (of which the first forty-seven paragraphs were already published in the Rivista israelitica) were written in 1832 for the use of those youth who, upon completing their primary and…

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Igerot Shadal (Letters of Samuel David Luzzatto)

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I am a friend to all lovers of Torah and wisdom and my only desire and my complete salvation rest in disseminating the sources of the Torah in order that the earth will be full of the knowledge of God…

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Introduction to the Pentateuch

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It has been a belief universally shared by Israelites of all times that the Pentateuch was exclusively and entirely authored and redacted by the great prophet Moses; only the last chapter of…