The Library of Congress > LCCN Permalink

View this record in:  MARCXML | LC Authorities & Vocabularies | VIAF (Virtual International Authority File)External Link

Frank, Jacob, approximately 1726-1791

LC control no.n 79007205
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingFrank, Jacob, approximately 1726-1791
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Dobrucki, Jakób Józef, Baron von Frank-, approximately 1726-1791
Frank-Dobrucki, Jakób Józef, Baron von, approximately 1726-1791
Frank, Jacob, ca. 1726-1791
Frank, Jakob, approximately 1726-1791
Frank, Yaʻaḳov, approximately 1726-1791
Frank, Yakov, approximately 1726-1791
Leibowicz, Jakob, approximately 1726-1791
Wise Jacob, approximately 1726-1791
Yakov ben Lev, approximately 1726-1791
Yankiev Leivitch, approximately 1726-1791
Frank, Jakub Lejbowicz, approximately 1726-1791
Frank, Józef, approximately 1726-1791
Lejbowicz, Jakub, approximately 1726-1791
פראנק, יעקב, 1726 approximately-1791
פראנק, יעקב, בער' 1726-1791
פרנק, יעקב, בערך 1726-1791
Birth date1726~
Death date1791-12-10
Place of birthPodillia (Ukraine)
Place of deathOffenbach am Main (Germany)
Field of activityReligion
Profession or occupationReligious leaders
Special noteMachine-derived non-Latin script reference project.
Non-Latin script references not evaluated.
Found inKraushar, A. Frank i frankiści polscy, 1897.
Kronika. Hebrew & Polish. ha-"Kroniḳah" ... 1984: t.p. (Yaʻaḳov Franḳ) added t.p. (Jacob Frank [in rom.])
Hilburg, E.K.J. Jakob Frank, die Frankisten und ihre ... 1977.
Jakob Frank, der Messias aus dem Ghetto, c1998: t.p. (Jakob Frank) p. [4] of cover (Jakob Leibowicz, called Frank (1726-1791))
Sayings of Yakov Frank, 1978: p. 3 (Yankiev Leivitch; Yakov ben Lev; called by some Wise Jacob)
Tokarczuk, Olga. Księgi Jakubowe, albo, Wielka podróż przez siedem granic, pięć języków i trzy duże religie, nie licząc tych małych, 2015: page 4 of cover (Jakub Lejbowicz Frank; Jakub Frank)
Wikipedia, February 16, 2016: Jacob Frank (born around 1726 in Podolia, then in Eastern Poland; died December 10, 1791 in Offenbach am Main; born Jakub Lejbowicz; Polish-Jewish religious leader who claimed to be the reincarnation of the self-proclaimed messiah Sabbatai Zevi and also of the biblical patriarch Jacob; took the baptismal name "Józef" on conversion to Christianity)