Jacob Werber (Hebrew: יעקב ווערבער, romanized: Ya'akov Verber; 4 February 1859 – 20 August 1890) was a Galician Jewish editor and writer.
Biography
Jacob Werber was born in Brody, Galicia in 1859, the only son of Barukh Werber.[1] His father was a Hebrew scholar who, from 1865, published the Hebrew-languageweeklyHa-Ivri [he] (known also as Ivri Anokhi; its title alternated for tax reasons).[2][3] By age 15 Werber could read and speak Hebrew fluently, and in 1874 he published the novelette "Galgal ha-Ḥozer ba-Olam" in his father's periodical. He also wrote articles on natural science for Ha-Maggid (1875, 1876) and Ha-Tzfirah (1876).
Upon the death of his father in 1876, Werber became the editor of Ha-Ivri.[4] He was a member of the Brody relief committee during the wave of pogroms in 1881–2.[5] Werber contracted a severe illness in 1890 and died shortly thereafter, at the age of 31. Before his death he wrote his own obituary, which appeared in the last number of Ha-Ivri three days before his death.
^Manekin, Rachel (2006). "Die hebräische und jiddische Presse in Galizien". In Rumpler, Helmut; Urbanitsch, Peter (eds.). Die Habsburgermonarchie 1848–1918 (in German). Vol. VIII. Vienna: Austrian Academy of Sciences. pp. 2341–2365. ISBN978-3-7001-3568-5. OCLC920544.