Jetty Wohllerner

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Jetty Wohllerner
BornJetty Kehlmann
1813 (1813)
Lemberg, Galicia, Austrian Empire
Died1891 (aged 77–78)
Lemberg, Galicia, Austria-Hungary
LanguageHebrew

Jetty Wohllerner (Yiddish: יענטא וואָהללערנער; 1813–1891) was a Galician Jewish writer.

Biography[edit]

Jetty Wohllerner was born in Lemberg into a poor Jewish family. At the age of eight, after having passed her examination in primary instruction, she was taken by her father, Michael Kehlmann, into his office as an accountant. She meanwhile attended the Hebrew lessons given to her brothers, and in her spare moments read the Bible in Hebrew. Inspired by the Hebrew writings of Anna Maria van Schurman, and she persuaded her father to hire a Hebrew teacher for her. The Polish physician Goldschmied, then a student at Lemberg, was entrusted with her Hebrew education.[1]

At the age of fourteen she was betrothed to L. Rosanes of Brody, and carried on a correspondence in Hebrew with him. Her fiancé died, however; and she was married several years later to Samson Wohllerner.[1][2]

Wohllerner published Hebrew poems and essays in various maskilic journals.[3] The greater portion of her correspondence, noteworthy for its style and purity of language, was published in Kokhevei Yitzḥak and Ha-Boker Or, while two letters, one to Meyer Kayserling and one to Goldschmied, are found in Otzar ha-Sifrut.

References[edit]

 Singer, Isidore; Seligsohn, M. (1906). "Wohllerner, Jetty". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. pp. 546–547.

  1. ^ a b Remy, Nahida (1895). The Jewish Woman. Translated by Mannheimer, Louise. Cincinnati: C. J. Krehbiel & Company. pp. 171–172.
  2. ^ Gelber, N. M., ed. (1956). Encyclopedia shel galuyot: Lvov [Encyclopaedia of the Jewish Diaspora: Lwów] (in Hebrew). Vol. 1. Jerusalem & Tel Aviv: Hotsa'at ḥevrat "Encyclopedia shel galuyot". pp. 245–246, 372 – via JewishGen.
  3. ^ Bell, Dean Phillip, ed. (2019). The Routledge Companion to Jewish History and Historiography. Abingdon: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-85917-5.