(Redirected from Liepmann Cohen)'Leffmann Behrends' (or 'Liepmann Cohen', c.
1630 -
January 1,
1714,
Hanover) was the German financial agent of the dukes and princes of
Hanover.
His honorable position is lauded by
Mannasseh ben Israel in his ''Hope of Israel''. Behrends frequently used his influence in favor of his coreligionists. His father, 'Issachar Bärmann' by name (died
August 23,
1675), was the son of the
Talmudic scholar 'Isaac Cohen of Borkum'; and the name "''Behrends''" was adopted by ''Liepmann'' in honor of his father. His first wife, Jente (died
1695), was a daughter of Joseph Hameln, president of the congregation; his second, Feile (died
1727), a daughter of Judah Selkele Dilmann. Liepmann had the following children by his first marriage: Naphtali Hirz (died
1709), who became president of the congregation; Moses Jacob (died
1697), praised as a Talmudic scholar and philanthropist; Gumpert and Isaac, who, in
1721, were accused of an attempt at fraudulent bankruptcy, in consequence of which they were compelled to leave Hanover (
1726). Behrend's daughter Genendel became the wife of the chief
rabbi of
Prague,
David Oppenheimer. She died at Hanover
June 13,
1712.
Behrend's services as president of the congregation, in his endeavors to preserve the congregational cemetery, and to secure a special rabbinate and other privileges for Hanover, were valuable in the extreme. In 1683 Duke Rudolph August appointed him chief supervisor of the bleacheries of his community in the Harz. He stood in close relation to a number of princes, assisted Talmudic scholars, and established a "bet ha-midrash" in his own house. The library of his son-in-law David Oppenheimer, which he had himself enlarged, and which his son-in-law, owing to the censorship and other reasons, did not wish to keep at Prague, was removed by Behrendsto Hanover, thus enabling the pastor Johann Christian Wolf of Hamburg to avail himself of it in preparing the ''Bibliotheca Hebræa''. Together with his son Naphtali Hirz, Liepmann in
1703 had a new
synagogue erected upon the site of the old one, which, constructed by order of the duke of Hanover in
1609, had been torn down four years after its erection. The fate of Liepmann's two sons Gumbert and Isaac is related in a family "megillah", published by Jost in the second volume of the ''Jahrbuch für die Geschichte der Juden''.
References
★
Wiener, ''Liepmann und Seine Söhne, in Monatsschrift, xiii''. 161 et seq.;
★ idem, in ''Hannoversches Magazin'',
1863, i.-ii.;
★ idem, in ''Berliner's Magazin'',
1879, pp. 48-63.
Article references
★
JewishEncyclopedia