Immanuel Oscar Menahem Deutsch

[1] On reaching his sixteenth year, he began his studies at the University of Berlin, paying special attention to theology and the Talmud.

The monument of his official work in the British Museum is to be found in the Phoenician Inscriptions, edited by William Sandys Wright Vaux, to whom Deutsch rendered assistance.

[3] The article was translated into French, German, Russian, Swedish, Dutch and Danish, and reprinted by the American Jewish Publication Society, Special Series No.

Deutsch was an important influence[4] on George Eliot's Jewish characters and their ideas in her last novel Daniel Deronda.

A collection, Literary Remains, edited by Lady Strangford, was published in 1874, consisting of nineteen papers on such subjects as "The Talmud," "Islam," "Semitic Culture," "Egypt," "Ancient and Modern," "Semitic Languages," "The Targums," "The Samaritan Pentateuch," and "Arabic Poetry.