Uri ha-Levi

1625–1715

Born in Amsterdam, Uri ben Aaron ha-Levi was the grandson of a founder of the Portuguese Jewish community in Amsterdam; Uri’s father was the ḥazan of the Neveh Shalom congregation there. Uri ha-Levi (also known as Witzenhausen) was a member of the Sephardic congregation and governor of the charitable Honen Dalim society in 1683/4; he also had numerous connections among the Ashkenazi community. He established a press that printed Hebrew and Yiddish religious and rabbinic works between 1658 and 1689, including the first full Yiddish translation of the Bible. Ha-Levi also printed the first Yiddish newspaper (Dinstagishe un Freytagishe Kuranten), which appeared on Tuesdays and Fridays. After receiving an invitation from the Polish king to establish a Hebrew press in Poland, he and his family settled in Żółkiew in 1692. In 1705, he returned to Amsterdam, where he composed a short work describing the first Portuguese Jews to settle in the city, highlighting his grandfather’s role.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

Narraçāo da vinda dos Judeos espanhões a Amsterdam (Account of the Coming of the Spanish Jews to Amsterdam)

Public Access
Text
The illustrious gentlemen, ḥakham R. Mosseh Ury ha-Levi (of blessed memory) and his son, R. Aaron Ury ha-Levi, my father and master: both were residents of Emden, in the province of Oost-Friesland…