<font color='black' size='2' face='arial'><font size="2"><font style="" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif">>Stranger than the curly payos is the fact that he seems to have shaved part of his beard -- his cheeks are clean-shaven and he only has hair on his chin and under his jaw. The juxtaposition of the curly payos and sylized beard is very strange-looking. (Unless -- is it possible? -- that's just how his beard happened to grow? It really looks shaved, not the bits of fluff and fuzz some men have who can't grow a full beard.)<br>
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>--Toby Katz<br>
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Such beard styles was very common among Central European rabbis of the period, ie, early 19th century. <br>
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However, you seem to have overlooked the fact that he was co-editor of Hameassef, THE periodical of the Berlin Haskalah. However, this is irrelevant for the reason I said; loads of rabbis had similar beards. Not trimming the beard at all seems to be a bit of a (new style) Chassidishe practice, albeit with kabbalistic sources in mind. Even an old style Chassid like the Gra seems to have at least trimmed his beard and mustache. Obviously the style depicted is "funkier" and more modern than the modestly trimmed beard of the Gra and various other famous rabbis of the period, but in principle there's not touching the beard on one side, and trimming it to make it neater on the other.<br>
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All of that aside, it certainly *is* possible that's how his beard grew. It's a drawing after all, and not a photograph.<br>
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SW<br>
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