Simon Bondi (Yiddish : שמעון באנדי , romanized : Shimʻon Bondi ; 1774 – 20 December 1816)[2] was a German maskil and lexicographer of the Talmud .
Title page of Or Ester (1812). He wrote, together with his brother Mordecai (Marcus) [Wikidata ] , the Or Ester ('Light of Esther'), a Hebrew dictionary of the Latin words occurring in the Talmud, targumim and midrashim (Dessau, 1812). They also wrote a similar work on the Greek words, which was never printed.[3] The periodical Jedidja (i. 117–125) contains a biographical obituary of Simon by his brother Mordecai.[4]
Bondi was related to the author Bernhard Beer [de ] and the court factor and banker Simon Isaac Bondi.[5] [6] His sister Sophie married into the Warburg family of Hamburg .[6]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Ginzberg, Louis; Berlin, Israel (1902). "Bondi, Simon" . In Singer, Isidore ; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia . Vol. 3. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 304.
^ Schapkow, Carsten (2015). Role Model and Countermodel: The Golden Age of Iberian Jewry and German Jewish Culture during the Era of Emancipation . Lexington Books. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-4985-0803-2 .
^ Zunz, Leopold (1872). Die Monatstage des Kalenderjahres: ein Andenken an Hingeschiedene (in German). Berlin: M. Poppelauer. p. 67.
^ Waller, J. F. (ed.). "Bondi, Simon ben Wolf" . Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography . Vol. 1. Glasgow: W. Mackenzie . p. 667.
^ Ginzberg, Louis; Berlin, Israel (1902). "Bondi, Simon" . In Singer, Isidore ; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia . Vol. 3. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 304.
^ Singer, Isidore (1902). "Beer, Bernhard" . In Singer, Isidore ; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia . Vol. 2. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 633.
^ a b Lohmann, Ingrid; Wenzel, Rainer; Lohmann, Uta, eds. (2014). Naphtali Herz Wesselys Worte des Friedens und der Wahrheit: Dokumente einer Kontroverse über Erziehung in der europäischen Spätaufklärung (in German). Münster: Waxmann. p. 705. ISBN 978-3-8309-8136-7 .