Samuel Vita della Volta (Hebrew: שמואל חי מלאוולטא, romanized: Shmuel Ḥay mi-Lavolta; 24 September 1772 – 29 March 1853), also known by the acronymsשמ״ח and שח״ם, was an Italian physician and Hebraist, who flourished in Mantua. He wrote a number of commentaries, sermons, and responsa (especially on medical issues), which remain in manuscript.[2][3]
Della Volta was the owner of a large Hebrew library, which, together with its 131 manuscripts, came into the possession of Marco Mortara. He was also a contributor to the periodical Kerem Ḥemed [he].[4] A letter from Isaac Samuel Reggio to Della Volta appeared in Otzar Neḥmad (III, pp. 25–27), and several letters between him and Samuel David Luzzatto are preserved in his Epistolario italiano, francese, latino (1890).[5]
^ abSalah, Asher (2007). La République des Lettres: Rabbins, écrivains et médecins juifs en Italie au XVIIIe siècle. Studies in Jewish History and Culture (in French). Vol. 16. Leiden: Brill. pp. 428, 661–662. doi:10.1163/ej.9789004156425.i-822. ISBN978-90-47-40341-8.