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  1. Isaak D’Israeli (auch Isaac D’Israeli; * 11. Mai 1766 in Enfield, Middlesex; † 19. Januar 1848 in Bradenham, Buckinghamshire) war ein englischer Schriftsteller und Literaturhistoriker. Isaak D'Israeli war der einzige Sohn von Benjamin D'Israeli (1730–1816), einem Großhändler, der aus der italienischen Stadt Cento stammte und sich 1748 ...

  2. Isaac D'Israeli (11 May 1766 – 19 January 1848) was a British writer, scholar and the father of British prime minister Benjamin Disraeli. He is best known for his essays and his associations with other men of letters.

  3. Isaak D’Israeli (auch Isaac D’Israeli; geb. 11. Mai 1766 in Enfield, Middlesex; gest. 19. Januar 1848 in Bradenham, Wycombe, Buckinghamshire) war ein englischer Schriftsteller und Literaturhistoriker.

  4. English author; born at Enfield, Middlesex, May, 1766; died at Bradenham Jan. 19, 1848. He was the only son of Benjamin D'Israeli, and after completing his studies and travels, he first appeared in print (Dec., 1786) with a vindication of Dr. Johnson's character in the "Gentleman's Magazine."

  5. (1766–1848), father of B. Disraeli, was the author of several discursive collections of literary history including Curiosities of Literature (1791–1834). His most remarkable and original work was The Literary Character (1795), in which he attempts to identify the qualities of temperament common to creative writers.

  6. economist, Herschel, the astronomer, and Isaac D'Israeli. D'Israeli's parents, Benjamin D'Israeli the elder and his second wife Sarah Shiprut de Gabay, were both of Italian extraction, and Isaac was their only child.3 Benjamin, a successful business man and stockbroker, intended his son to take up a business career, whereas

  7. 10. Sept. 2007 · Israeli was one of the earliest medieval Jewish Neoplatonist writers, though not as original in his thinking as later Jewish philosophers such as Solomon Ibn Gabirol (Avicebron), Moses Maimonides and Gersonides. His work reflected and encapsulated the prevailing philosophical paradigm, namely, Aristotelian thought read through a Neoplatonist lens.