Baruch Lindau

Baruch ben Jehuda Löb Lindau (Hebrew: בָּרוּךְ‬ בֶּן יְהוּדָה לֵייבּ לינדא; 1759, Hanover, Holy Roman Empire – 5 December 1849, Berlin, Prussia) was a Jewish-German mathematician, science writer, and translator.

Lindau became a member of the maskilim circle in Berlin, publishing articles on science and scientific instruments in ha-Me'assef. He was a counselor of the maskilic association Chevrat shocharai Ha'tov ve'hatushiya and translated several haftarot into German for Mendelssohn's Bi'ur project.[1]: 287 

In 1789, he published Reshit Limmudim [he], his most successful work. It was a Hebrew scientific textbook containing sections on astronomy, physics, biology, and geography. The second part, Reshit Limmudim, was published in 1810 and devoted to physics, chemistry, and mechanics.[1]: 286  The work remained a popular scientific encyclopedia among European Jews for nearly a century.[2]

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