Solomon Eger
Rabbi Solomon Eger '' was an influential rabbi and successor of his father as the rabbi of Posen, then in Germany.
Life
He was born to Rabbi Akiva Eger and his first wife, Glickel. His older brother, Abraham Eger was also a rabbi in Rawicz. He studied with his father, and afterwards he started working as a merchant in Warsaw, but in 1831 he lost his fortune due to the November uprising. Later he became the rabbi of Kalisz and, after the death of his father in 1837, in 1839 he was appointed rabbi of Posen. In 1844 he asked the permission of King Frederick William IV to establish an agricultural village in the province of Posen, but in 1848 his initiative was halted due to another uprising. He was a staunch opponent of Reform Judaism, and, when in 1838 a controversy broke out in Breslau about who should be elected as local chief rabbi, Rabbi Gedaliah Tiktin was eventually confirmed by the king not independently of Eger's support. Following the Rabbinical Conference of Brunswick and Frankfurt he decided to issue a ban on Reform Judaism, and even travelled to Rabbi Jacob Ettlinger to Altona and to Rabbi Nathan Marcus Adler to Hannover to gain support for his initiative, but, despite agreeing with Eger's reasoning, they were wary to fully support his proposal.Many of Eger's letters appeared in his father's collected [History of History of responsa in Judaism|responsa in Judaism|responsa],
but he was in correspondence with other leading rabbis of his generation as well.
He took his father's side during the debate between the Romm publishing house in Vilna and the Shapiro press in Slavita, which was a part of the long-standing feud between the Misnagdim and Chasidim movements. The latter party accused Eger of having influenced his father by dishonest means: