David Ganz

1541–1613

Born in Lippstadt (now North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany), David Ganz was a chronicler, mathematician, historian, astronomer, and astrologer. He studied at two of the great yeshivas of his time, those of Moses Isserles and of Sinai ben Bezalel, brother of the Maharal of Prague. Ganz first became interested in astronomy in his youth and encountered both Johannes Kepler and Tycho Brahe. Most of his writings have been lost. He is best known for his historical work—the only full-length work published in his lifetime—Tsemaḥ David (The Sprout of David). The book is divided into two parts, the first dedicated to the history of the Jews, the second to non-Jewish history. His book on astronomy, Neḥmad ve-na’im (Nice and Pleasant), was published in 1743, more than a century after his death.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Illustration of the (Aristotelian) Cosmos

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This illustration of the (Aristotelian) cosmos appears in an eighteenth-century manuscript of Neḥmad ve-na‘im (Nice and Pleasant), David Ganz’s posthumously published book on astronomy.

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Tsemaḥ David (The Sprout of David): Introduction to the Second Part

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Nevertheless, I saw from the first that many people would open their mouths wide against me [see Psalms 22:14] and speak arrogantly against me and think it a sin on my part for my having written based…

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Tsemaḥ David (The Sprout of David): On the Invention of the Printing Press

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The printing of books: began [lit. “was located”] in the city of Mainz, by a Christian man named Johannes Gutenberg of Strasbourg, and this was in the first year of the pious emperor, Friedrich, in…

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Neḥmad ve-na‘im (Nice and Pleasant)

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Nicolaus Copernicus, from [Polish] Prussia, was a great man, who was more proficient in the field of astronomy than all the wise men of his age. Indeed, all the wise men of our time unanimously attest…