Yehoshua Hana Rawnitzki
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Yehoshua Rawnitzki | |
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Photograph of Rawnitzki by Zoltan Kluger Photograph of Rawnitzki by Zoltan Kluger | |
Born | (1859年09月13日)September 13, 1859 Odessa, Russian Empire |
Died | May 4, 1944(1944年05月04日) (aged 84) Tel Aviv, Mandatory Palestine |
Language | Hebrew, Yiddish |
Yehoshua Ḥana Rawnitzki (Hebrew: יהושע חנא רבניצקי; 13 September 1859 – 4 May 1944) was a Hebrew publisher, editor, and collaborator of Hayim Nahman Bialik.
Biography
[edit ]Yehoshua Ḥana Rawnitzki was born to a poor Jewish family in Odessa in 1859. He began his journalistic career in 1879, by contributing first to Ha-Kol, and then to other periodicals.[1] He was the editor and publisher of Pardes, a literary collection best known for publishing Hayim Nahman Bialik's first poem, "El ha-Tzippor," in 1892. With Sholem Aleichem (under the pseudonym Eldad), Rawnitzki (under the pseudonym Medad) published a series of feuilletons entitled Kevurat Soferim ("The Burial of Writers").[1] From 1908 through 1911, Rawnitzki and Bialik published Sefer Ha-Aggadah ("The Book of Legends") a compilation of aggadah from the Mishnah, the two Talmuds and the Midrash literature.[2]
Rawnitzki moved to Palestine in 1921, where he took part in the founding of the Dvir publishing house.[3] He died there in May 1944.
References
[edit ]- ^ a b Kressel, Getzel (2007). "Rawnitzki, Yehoshua Ḥana". In Berenbaum, Michael; Skolnik, Fred (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4.
- ^ Bialik, H. N.; Ravnitzky, Y. H., eds. (1992) [1908–1911]. The Book of Legends: Sefer Ha-Aggadah. New York: Schocken Books.
- ^ Sokolow, Nahum (1889). Sefer zikaron le-sofrei Israel ha-ḥayim itanu ka-yom [Memoir Book of Contemporary Jewish Writers]. Warsaw. p. 105.
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External links
[edit ]
- Ukrainian journalists
- Israeli journalists
- Ukrainian folklorists
- Israeli folklorists
- Russian folklorists
- 1859 births
- 1944 deaths
- People from Odesa
- Odesa Jews
- 19th-century publishers (people)
- 19th-century journalists
- Hebrew-language writers
- Ukrainian emigrants to Mandatory Palestine
- Journalists from the Russian Empire
- Writers from the Russian Empire
- Israeli writers
- Jewish folklorists
- Jewish Russian writers
- Jewish Ukrainian writers
- Members of the Assembly of Representatives (Mandatory Palestine)
- Yiddish-language journalists
- Burials at Trumpeldor Cemetery
- Israeli people stubs
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