David Tsvi Hoffmann

1843–1921

The son of the av bet din (head of a Jewish legal court) of Verbó, Austro-Hungary (today Vrbové, Slovakia), David Tsvi (Zvi) Hoffmann attended several yeshivas around his ancestral town. Displaying prodigious scholarly ability, Hoffmann studied with several prominent rabbis of the region, most notably Moshe Schick and Azriel Hildesheimer. In 1873 he moved to Berlin and joined the faculty of the Rabbinical Seminary, where, in 1899, he would become rector. A leader of proto-Modern Orthodoxy, Hoffmann created scholarship that included secular subjects alongside traditional rabbinic fields, using the modern text-critical techniques associated with the Wissenschaft des Judentums movement to reinforce traditional exegesis. In 1918, he became one of only a few Jewish scholars to be given the title of professor by the German state. Much of Hoffmann’s polemical energy was spent defending traditional Jewish views of the Torah’s divine authorship against the emerging “documentary hypothesis,” which sought to pinpoint various authorial voices in the text on the basis of linguistic, stylistic, and ideological differences.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

Primary Source

The Book of Leviticus, Translated and Explained

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Text
The present commentary on Leviticus is based on my lectures on Leviticus given at the Rabbinical Seminary in Berlin in 1873/4 and 1876/7. This fact explains the approach and the economy of my…

Primary Source

Responsum: On Civil Marriage

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Text
Question: Whether in those marriages contracted under civil marriage law—without betrothal according to the rite of Moses and Israel—the woman can leave without a get [Jewish religious writ of divorce…