Eliseo Graziadio Pontremoli (Hebrew: אליזו גרוזידיו פונטרמולי; Casale Monferrato, September 15, 1778 - Nice, August 21, 1851) was a Hebrew scholar, biblical hexagete, writer, poet, professor, rabbi, intellectual, philosopher, translator, judge, diplomat, and Italian civil servant, and was Grand Rabbi and head of the Jewish community of Nice.
That same year he was appointed chief rabbi of Chieri, and he began to participate in the Academy of the Restless established there in the early nineteenth century.
During this period he also had to clash with representatives of the secular Jewish community who wanted to take away the decision-making power and economic recognition that was given to the chief rabbi.
A great supporter of Moses Mendelssohn's Jewish Enlightenment current, he wrote hundreds of works, which were later collected by the noted Hebraist Moritz Steinschneider in the late 19th century.
In September 1851, at the suggestion of French Interior Minister Léon Faucher, a street in central Nice, now renamed "Rue Georges Ville," was named after him.