Solomon Hanau
German Jewish grammarian and textual critic
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Birthplace
Shlomo (Zalman) ben Yehuda Leib Katz was born in Hanau (also known as Henna[2]), Germany and lived in part in Frankfurt, Hamburg, Amsterdam, Berlin and Hanover. At the age of 21 he composed his first dikduk work, "Binyan Shlomo". He was fiercely criticized by Jacob Emden, though Emden's father, Tzvi Ashkenazi, authored an approval letter to Hanau for his textual work. Recent study suggests that Shneur Zalman of Liadi followed many of Solomon's variations when composing his Chabad Nusach of Jewish prayer (Nusach Ari).[citation needed]
Family
He had a son Simson b. Salomo[9] who worked as a printer in Homburg vor der Höhe until 1730.[10][11] He printed an edition of the Ma'assebuch in 1727.[12]
Hebrew works
- Binyan Shlomo (Frankfurt)
- Hateivah
- Sha'arei Tefillah, (The gates of prayer) (Isnitz)
- Baith Tfilah
- Nikkud basics (Amsterdam)
- Exchange Torah (Hamburg)