Chaim David Lippe (Yiddish: חיים דוד ליפפא; December 22, 1823 – August 26, 1900) was an Austrian-Jewish publisher and bibliographer.
Chaim David Lippe | |
---|---|
Born | Stanisławów, Galicia | December 22, 1823
Died | August 26, 1900 Vienna, Austria-Hungary | (aged 76)
Literary movement | Haskalah |
Biography
editChaim David Lippe was born in 1823 in Stanisławów, Galicia (today Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine). He later relocated to Tschernowitz (today Czernowitz, Ukraine) and Eperies (today Prešov, Slovakia), where he took on the roles of teacher and cantor.[1]
In 1873, Lippe settled in Vienna, where he ran a Jewish publishing-house, which issued several popular works. He himself edited a bibliographical lexicon of modern Jewish literature, Ch. D. Lippe's Bibliographisches Lexicon der Gesammten Jüdischen Literatur der Gegenwart und Address-Anzeiger (Vienna, 1881; 2nd edition, 1900).
His brother was the Zionist activist Dr. Karpel Lippe.[1]
References
editThis article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; Jelinek, Emil (1904). "Lippe, Chaim David". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 8. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 99.
- ^ a b "The Buffer Zone: Ottoman Maskilim and their Austro-Hungarian Counterparts: A Case Study". Quest: Issues in Contemporary Jewish History (17): 146–179. 2020. doi:10.48248/issn.2037-741X/1743.