Rabbi
David Tebele Scheuer was born in
Frankfurt am Main in 1712. He was one of the outstanding students of the
Shev Yaakov, Rabbi
Jacob Cohen in Frankfurt. He served as
Dayan of Frankfurt during the entire time that the
Pnei Yehoshua, Rabbi
Yehoshua Falk was Rabbi of Frankfurt (1741-1756). In 1759 he succeeded his father-in-law Rabbi
Nathan Otiz as Rabbi of
Bamberg. There during the
Third Silesian War; its part of the
Seven Years' War (1756-1763), where
Austria under the Empress
Maria Theresa of Austria tried for the second time in vain to get back
Silesia from
Prussia; the
Prussians under King
Frederick the Great ravaged and plundered the region. In 1763 during the turmoil, Rabbi Tebele lost many of his writings including his writings on the tractate
Niddah, which he greatly bemoaned. In 1767 he was appointed as Rabbi of
Mainz where he led a
Yeshiva. He died there in 1782 (
Shmini Atzeres 5543 on the
Hebrew calendar).
Pupils
Among his early pupils is Rabbi
Levi Pante and among his later pupils is the
Chasam Sofer. He also left two sons; Rabbi
Mechel Scheuer, Rabbi of
Worms and Rabbi
Abraham Naftali Hertz Scheuer, who later served as Rabbi of Mainz.