Kohen, Naphtali, rabbi, 34.
Kohen, Shabbatai, rabbi and historian, 35-36.
Kohn’s Hut ha-Meshullash, 244.
Kol Mebasser, 242.
Koenigsberg, 33, 79, 90, 120, 126, 132.
Kontrabandisti, by Levin, 303.
Koerner, on Maimon, 89.
Korobka, 129.
Korolenko’s Skazanye O Florye Rimlyaninye, 302.
Kovno, Government of, 20;
city of, 21;
Talmudists of, 34;
Maskilim in, 201, 246;
Mussarnikes in, 280;
referred to, 288, 294.
Kramsztyk, Isaac, rabbi, 247.
Krochmal, Nahman, philosopher, 205.
Kruedener, Baroness, 127, 129, 251.
Kruzhevan, 276.
Kryloff, 175, 189.
Kuritzin, Theodore, proselyte, 26.
Kusselyevsky, physician, 127.
Ladi, Shneor Zalman of, 116, 122-123.
Landau, Ezekiel, rabbi, 78, 133.
Landau, Moses, educator, 164.
Lassalle, 257, 293, 297.
Lebensohn, Abraham Dob Bar, poet, 98, 212, 244.
Leczeka, Abba, “the Glusker Maggid,” 132, 302.
Leibnitz, 79, 88.
Leibov, Baruch, martyr, 57.
Lemberg, court of, 44;
fair at, 49.
Leo, the court physician, 23, 39, 55.
Lermontoff’s spy, 224.
Leroy-Beaulieu, Anatole, on Maimon, 130;
on university restrictions, 276-277;
referred to, 303.
Lessing, Ephraim, on Israel Zamoscz, 77;
on Behr, 90;
referred to, 192.
Letteris, Meir Halevi, poet, 205.
Letzte Nachrichten, 293.
Levanda, Lyev, novelist, 203, 279.
Levin, Judah, merchant, 204.
Levin, Mendel, Hebrew and Yiddish author, 99-101, 116, 119, 195, 217.
Levin’s Kontrabandisti, 303.
Levinsohn, I.B., and Haskalah, 13;
on the settlement of Jews in Russia, 18;
on the effect of Chmielnicki’s massacres,
52;
his life, 204-213;
Te’udah be-Yisrael, 205-207,
209, 210, 221;
Efes Dammim, 208, 213;
Bet Yehudah, 209-210;
Zerubbabel, 210-211, 213;
referred to, 219-220.
Liboschuets, Jacob, physician and philanthropist, 91.
Liboschuets, Osip Yakovlevich, court physician, 126.
Lichtenstadt, Moses, communal worker, 165.
Lieberman, Aaron ("Arthur Freeman"), socialist, 256.
Lieven, Prince Emanuel, 209.
Lilien, Ephraim Moses, artist, 291.
Lilienblum, Moses Loeb, skeptic, 232-234;
attacks the Talmud, 242;
repentant, 279;
Zionist, 289-290.
Lilienthal, Max, referred to, 14, 117, 151, 164, 183,
277;
opens school in Riga, 165, 170;
his personality, 171-172;
his Maggid Yeshu’ah and his
efforts in behalf of Russian Jews, 174-176;
his disillusionment, 177-180;
his opinion on Russia, 179;
how regarded by Maskilim, 172-173, 180-181;
on the Jews of Courland, 194;
on the Jews of Odessa, 196;
his supporters, 198-199, 200;
Guenzburg on, 216.