Jump to content

Christian Wilhelm von Dohm

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Davey2010 (talk | contribs) at 17:36, 17 October 2023 (v2.05 - Fix errors for CW project (Reference list missing - Spelling and typography)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Christian Wilhelm von Dohm; portrait by Karl Christian Kehrer (c.1795)

Christian Wilhelm von Dohm (German: [doːm]; 11 December 1751 – 29 May 1820) was a German historian and political writer.

Biography

Dohm was born in Lemgo on 11 December 1751. The son of a Lutheran pastor at Lemgo's St. Mary's Church [de], he was a radical advocate for Jewish emancipation. He entered Prussian officialdom in 1779, first as archivist in Berlin. In 1781, Dohm published a two-volume work entitled Ueber die bürgerliche Verbesserung der Juden ("On the Civil Improvement of the Jews"), which argued for Jewish political equality on humanitarian grounds. It was widely praised by the Jewish communities in Berlin, Halberstadt, and Suriname. In 1786 he was ennobled (untitled nobility), gaining him the nobiliary particle von before his surname.

Dohm died on his Pustleben [de] estate near Nordhausen on 29 May 1820.

Jewish emancipation

Many Englightenment thinkers were skeptical about Jewish commitment to Englightenment ideals. Enlightenment philosphers generally believed that man had power over his own nature, and so, saw pathways for Jewish assimilation which often involved the shedding of some aspects of Jewish identity.

Dohm was one of these liberal minded Enlightenment advocates. Based on his friendship with Moses Mendelssohn, Dohm advocated for emancipation. Dohm acknowledged many of the "negative characteristics" that were troubling to liberal minded Enlightenment philosophers - moral corruption, clannish and unsociable behaviors, unproductive and primarily commercial occupations - but he argued these traits were the product of centuries of oppression by Christians and the coercive power of Talmudic Judaism over the Jewish community. Dohm believed emancipation would pave the way for Jewish assimilation into Enlightenment society.[1]

References

  1. ^ Brustein, William; Roberts, Louisa (2015). The Socialism of Fools: Leftist Origins of Modern Anti-Semitism. United States: Cambridge University Press. p. 19.