Joseph von Maier


Joseph von Maier was a German rabbi, who served as Oberkirchenrath of the Kingdom of Württemberg.

Biography

Joseph Maier Rosenthal was born to Sara and Meier Rosenthal in 1797 in the town of Laudenbach-Fruchtlingen, near Bad Mergentheim. He attended ḥeder as a child, and went on to become a pupil at the yeshivas of Fürth and Mainz.
From the 1820s, he began working as a religious teacher, eventually in Frankfurt. After receiving his rabbinical ordination in 1827, he worked as Hausrabbiner to the Kaulla banking family in Stuttgart. In 1832 he became Bezirksrabbiner of that town, a position he held until his death. He was president of the first rabbinical conference held at Brunswick in 1844, and he was also a member of the Jewish Consistory of Württemberg.
In recognition of religious and philanthropic activities, he was ennobled by King Charles of Württemberg on his seventieth birthday in 1867, and decorated with the Order of [the Crown (Württemberg)|Ritterkreuz des Württembergischen Kronordens]. This gave him the distinction of being the first German rabbi belonging to the nobility.

Partial bibliography

Books and pamphlets

*

Published eulogies

*