Goudsmit & Goldschmidt -- a geneasequel - Person Sheet
Goudsmit & Goldschmidt -- a geneasequel - Person Sheet
NameIsaak/Itsek b’ Jakef Kann (Bingen) z bunten Kanne
Birthabt 1635, D, Frankfurt
Death19 Oct 1700, D, Frankfurt
BurialFrankfurt (Battonnstrasse) (ffb-0495)
Spouses
Birthabt 1635, D, Frankfurt
Death25 Sep 1656, D, Frankfurt
BurialFrankfurt (Battonnstrasse)
Memonot in Epidat
MotherGutle b’ Moshe Bonn (~1610-1681)
ChildrenJudle b’ Itsek (~1655-1710)
Birthabt 1640, D, Frankfurt
Death26 Mar 1711, D, Frankfurt
BurialFrankfurt (Battonnstrasse) (ffb-0473)
MotherGutle b’ Moshe Bonn (~1610-1681)
ChildrenSheinchen b’ Isaak (~1660-1725)
 Jakef/Jacob b’ Isaak (~1665-1700)
 Shprints b’ Isaak (~1665-1725)
 Leib b’ Isaak (~1670-1719)
Notes for Isaak/Itsek b’ Jakef Kann (Bingen) z bunten Kanne
Gove, Shtadlan — “…der Vornehme, der Kastenmeister und Fürsprecher der Gemeinde, ….” [text on his tombestone; cf Epidat]
House “bunte Kanne”
he second married to Reisle, the sister of his early deceased first wife Hindchen
6 children [most from his second marriage, but not clear who]:
# Beile b’ Itsek Kanne (d. 13.8.1677; ffb-0472 — unmarried)
# Leib b’ Itsek Kanne z bunten Kanne z Fleischschirn (d.29.9.1719) >>
# Jakef b’ Itsek z bunten Kanne (d. 19.1.1700) >>
# Sheinchen b’ Itsek Kanne (d. 10.3.1725) >>
# Shprints b’ Itsek Kanne (d. 21.9.1725) >>
# Judle b’ Itsek Kanne (d. 3.3.1710 in Mannheim), married to Awrom b’ Jacob Rost z goldenen Bär (d. 17.10.1690 in Mainz) — 2 children: ## Hindchen (d. 5.6.1728), married (abt 1712) to der alte Moshe b’ Awrom Oppenheim-Beer z goldenen Bär (d. 30.5.1764) [cf]— ## and die alte Mirjam (d. 11.5.1764), married (abt 1703) to Michel b’ Herts Wol Wohl z weissen Schwan (d. 18.6.1742)

NB — Quote from Frankfurt Jewish Museum website:

The DrachKann disputes is the name given to the struggle for dominance within Frankfurt's Jewish community from 1669 to the mid 1680s between Isaak Kann and his supporters and the highlyregarded Abraham Drach. Through his supporters, who included some people with very bad reputations, such as Amschel Schuh, Kann spread false accusations against Drach. Among other things, he accused him of reconverting Jews who had converted to Christianity, which the Christians of the time regarded as a serious crime. The accusations proved baseless.
Kann's supporters succeeded in involving external authorities in the disputes, such as the Church court in Mainz, the emperor, the Frankfurt city council and the imperial court of justice. Many of these institutions were engaged in a struggle for power with each other, and it was possible through bribery in particular to play them off against each other and obtain their support. In this way the Kann faction succeeded in having Drach imprisoned in Mainz for some time. After years the dispute was finally settled in 1684 by the imperial council in favour of Abraham Drach. Both parties suffered: Isaak Kann was sentenced to a fine of 100,000 talers, a huge sum in those days, but Drach's fortune was also severely reduced by the dispute, and he had little success with his claims for damages. Kann on the other hand quickly managed to regain his position as one of the richest men in the Frankfurt Jewish community” — cf:
Abraham Samuel Drach (Bacharach) z Rost z Drachen (ca 1615-1687)

“The Kann family continued to play a leading role among the Frankfurt Jews. Several decades later, in the mid-18th-century, the family became involved in another major power struggle within the community, which has gone down in Frankfurt history as the KulpKann dispute.” — cf; his grandson Beer Leib Isaak Kann z Halbmond (ca 1695-
1754)
Last Modified 27 Dec 2021Created 2 May 2024 by JG
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