David de Isaac Cohen Nassy

1747–1806

A champion of Jewish emancipation, David de Isaac Cohen Nassy belonged to a leading family in the Dutch colony of Suriname. In 1792 he moved for a short time to Philadelphia, where he was elected to the American Philosophical Society in recognition of his work as a physician. A man of contradictions, he owned a plantation and held slaves although he saw himself as a proponent of Enlightenment ideals. Upon his return to Suriname, he was active in promoting the enlightenment of the Portuguese Jewish community, cofounding a learned society as well as a college of letters. Over his career he played a variety of roles, including pharmacist, journalist, and historian.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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History of the Colony of Suriname

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We will briefly mention several of his more important military expeditions. In the year 1731, Mr. Boeyé, Officer of the Christian Citizens Militia, received an order from the Council to carry out a…