Elcan Durlacher

Elcan Durlacher
Native name
Yiddish: אלחנן בן נתנאל דורלאכער
Born1817 (1817)
Karlsruhe, Grand Duchy of Baden, German Confederation
Died21 December 1889(1889-12-21) (aged 71–72)
LanguageFrench

Elcan Durlacher (Yiddish: אלחנן בן נתנאל דורלאכער; 1817 – 21 December 1889) was a German Hebraist and publisher, best known for his translations of Jewish liturgy into French.

Durlacher was born in Karlsruhe, Baden in 1817. He went to Paris in 1845 as a teacher of languages, and founded a Hebrew publishing-house, which was continued, after his death, by his son. He compiled a Hebrew reader and an almanac, and wrote a small book entitled Joseph and His Brothers. His two most notable works are a French translation of the German maḥzor, and another of the siddur, which he made with the assistance of L. Wogue, whose edition of the Pentateuch he published.[1][2]

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