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Leopold Zunz

Leopold Zunz (Hebrew: יום טוב צונץYom Tov Tzuntz, Yiddish: ליפמן צונץLipmann Zunz; 10 August 1794 – 17 March 1886) was the founder of academic Judaic Studies (Wissenschaft des Judentums), the critical investigation of Jewish literature, hymnology and ritual.[1] Zunz's historical investigations and contemporary writings had an important influence on contemporary Judaism.

Leopold Zunz
Personal
Born10 August 1794
Died17 March 1886
ReligionJudaism
NationalityGerman
SpouseAdelheid Beermann (m. 1822)
OccupationRabbi, writer, activist

Biography

Leopold Zunz was born at Detmold, the son of Talmud scholar Immanuel Menachem Zunz (1759-1802) and Hendel Behrens (1773-1809), the daughter of Dov Beer,[2] an assistant cantor of the Detmold community.[3] The year following his birth his family moved to Hamburg, where, as a young boy, he began learning Hebrew grammar, the Pentateuch, and the Talmud.[2] His father, who was his first teacher, died in July 1802, when Zunz was not quite eight years old.[4] He subsequently gained admission to the Jewish "free school" (Freischule) founded by Philipp Samson, in Wolfenbüttel. Departing from home in July 1803, he saw his mother for the last time (she died in 1809 during his years in Wolfenbüttel).[4] A turning point in Zunz's development came in 1807, when Samuel Meyer Ehrenberg [de], a reform-minded educator, took over the directorship of the Samson School. Ehrenberg reorganized the curriculum, introducing, alongside traditional learning, new subjects such as religion, history, geography, French, and German; he became Zunz's mentor, and they remained friends until Ehrenberg's death in 1853.[2]

The summer of 1811 is noteworthy as the time when Zunz made his first acquaintance with Johann Christoph Wolf's Bibliotheca Hebræa, which, together with David Gans's Tzemach David, gave him his first introduction to Jewish literature and the first impulse to think of the "Science of Judaism."[5][1]

He settled in Berlin in 1815, studying at the University of Berlin and obtaining a doctorate from the University of Halle. He was ordained by the Hungarian rabbi Aaron Chorin, an early supporter of religious reform, and served for two years teaching and giving sermons in the Beer reformed synagogue in Berlin. He found the career uncongenial, and in 1840 he was appointed director of a Lehrerseminar, a post which relieved him from pecuniary troubles. Zunz was always interested in politics, and in 1848 addressed many public meetings. In 1850 he resigned his headship of the Teachers' Seminary, and was awarded a pension. Throughout his early and married life he was the champion of Jewish rights, and he did not withdraw from public affairs until 1874, the year of the death of his wife Adelheid Beermann, whom he had married in 1822.

Together with other young men, among them the poet Heinrich Heine, Zunz founded the Verein für Kultur und Wissenschaft der Juden (The Society for the Culture and Science of the Jews) alongside Joel Abraham List, Isaac Marcus Jost, and Eduard Gans in Berlin in 1819. In 1823, Zunz became the editor of the Zeitschrift für die Wissenschaft des Judenthums (Journal for the Science of Judaism). The ideals of this Verein were not destined to bear religious fruit, but the "Science of Judaism" survived. Zunz "took no large share in Jewish reform", but never lost faith in the regenerating power of "science" as applied to the traditions and literary legacies of the ages. He influenced Judaism from the study rather than from the pulpit.

Although affiliated with the Reform movement, Zunz appeared to show little sympathy for it, though this has been attributed to his disdain for ecclesiastical ambition and fears that rabbinical autocracy would result from the Reform crusade. Further, Isidore Singer and Emil Hirsch have stated that "the point of (Geiger's) protest against Reform was directed against Samuel Holdheim and the position maintained by this leader as an autonomous rabbi." Later in life Zunz went so far as to refer to rabbis as soothsayers and quacks.[5]

The violent outcry raised against the Talmud by some of the principal spirits of the Reform party was repugnant to Zunz's historic sense. Zunz himself was temperamentally inclined to assign a determinative potency to sentiment, this explaining his tender reverence for ceremonial usages. Although Zunz kept to the Jewish ritual practises, he understood them as symbols (see among others his meditation on tefillin, reprinted in "Gesammelte Schriften," ii. 172-176). This contrasts with the traditional view of the validity of divine ordinances according to which the faithful are bound to observe without inquiry into their meaning. His position accordingly approached that of the symbolists among the reformers who insisted that symbols had their function, provided their suggestive significance was spontaneously comprehensible. He emphasized most strongly the need of a moral regeneration of the Jews.

He wrote precise philological studies but also impassioned speeches on the Jewish nation and history that had an influence on later Jewish historians. Zunz wrote in 1855:

"If there are ranks in suffering, Israel takes precedence of all the nations; if the duration of sorrows and the patience with which they are borne ennoble, the Jews can challenge the aristocracy of every land; if a literature is called rich in the possession of a few classic tragedies—what shall we say to a National Tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred years, in which the poets and the actors were also the heroes?"[6]

In 1840 he became director of the Berlin Jewish Teachers' Seminary.

He was friendly with the traditional Enlightenment figure Nachman Krochmal whose Moreh Nebuke ha-Zeman (Lemberg, 1851), was edited, according to the author's last will, by his friend Leopold Zunz.

Zunz died in Berlin in 1886.

 
Leopold Zunz on his 90th birthday, 10 August 1884

Works

 
First edition of Namen der Juden, 1837, in the collection of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland.

Zunz’ famous article “Etwas über die rabbinische Litteratur” (“On Rabbinical Literature”), published in 1818, established the intellectual agenda of the Wissenschaft des Judentums (“Science of Judaism”), while adumbrating the main themes of his own future work as well. Even at this early stage of his academic career, Zunz mapped out his concept of the Wissenschaft des Judentums which he intended to serve as a medium for presenting, preserving, and transmitting the corpus of Jewish literary works. Zunz believed that only an academic approach to Jewish texts and a comprehensive and interdisciplinary academic framework would allow for the adequate study of Jewish themes and Judaism.[7] In 1832 appeared "the most important Jewish book published in the 19th century." This was Zunz's Gottesdienstliche Vorträge der Juden, i.e. a history of the Sermon. It lays down principles for the investigation of the Rabbinic exegesis (Midrash) and of the siddur (prayer-book of the synagogue). This book raised Zunz to the supreme position among Jewish scholars. In 1845 appeared his Zur Geschichte und Literatur, in which he threw light on the literary and social history of the Jews. He had visited the British Museum in 1846, and this confirmed him in his plan for his third book, Synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters (1855). It was from this book that George Eliot translated the following opening of a chapter of Daniel Deronda: "If there are ranks in suffering, Israel takes precedence of all the nations...". After its publication Zunz again visited England, and in 1859 issued his Ritus. In this he gives a masterly survey of synagogal rites. His last great book was his Literaturgeschichte der synagogalen Poesie (1865). A supplement appeared in 1867. Besides these works, Zunz published a new translation of the Bible, and wrote many essays which were afterwards collected as Gesammelte Schriften.

  • Etwas über die rabbinische Litteratur. Berlin : Maurersche Buchhandlung, 1818. Digital Form SLUB Dresden via EOD
  • Die gottesdienstlichen Vorträge der Juden historisch entwickelt : ein Beitrag zur Alterthumskunde u. biblischen Kritik, zur Literatur- u. Religionsgeschichte. Berlin : Asher, 1832. Digital Form Freimann-Sammlung, Frankfurt.
    • Translated into Hebrew as הדרשות בישראל והשתלשלותן ההיסטורית (1947, Bialik Institute)
  • Namen der Juden: Eine geschichtliche Untersuchung, Leipzig, L. Fort, 1837.
  • Die vier und zwanzig Bücher der Heiligen Schrift : Nach dem masoretischen Texte / unter der Redaction von Dr. Zunz ; übersetzt von H. Arnheim, Dr. Julius Fürst, Dr. M. Sachs. Berlin : Veit, 1837/1839.
  • Zur Geschichte und Literatur. Berlin : Veit, 1845. Digital Form Freimann-Sammlung, Frankfurt.
  • Predigten gehalten in der neuen Israelitischen Synagoge zu Berlin. Berlin : Schlesinger 1846.
  • Die synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters. Berlin, 1855. Digital Form Freimann-Sammlung, Frankfurt.
  • Samuel Meyer Ehrenberg, Inspektor der Samsonschen Freischule zu Wolfenbüttel. Braunschweig : Gebrüder Meyer, 1854.
  • Die [sic] Ritus des synagogalen Gottesdienstes geschichtlich entwickelt. Berlin : Springer, 1859. (Die synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters ; Bd. 2) Digital Form Freimann-Sammlung Frankfurt.
  • Deutsche Briefe. Leipzig , F.A. Brockhaus, 1872.
  • Die Monatstage des Kalenderjahres ; ein Andenken an Hingeschiedene. Berlin ; M. Poppelauer, 1872.
  • Literaturgeschichte der synagogalen Poesie. Berlin : Gerschel, 1865, mit einem Ergänzungsband 1867. Digital Form Freimann-Sammlung, Frankfurt.
  • Gesammelte Schriften. Berlin : Gerschel, 1875–76, Bd. 1, Bd. 2, Bd.3. Digital Form: Freimann-Sammlung, Frankfurt.
  • Zeitschrift für die Wissenschaft des Judentums Jg. 1, Heft 1–3, 1822 (not more published). Edited by Leopold Zunz and Eduard Gans. Digital Form Compact Memory, Frankfurt. (About: J. Raphael Die Zeitschrift des Dr. L. Z. in: Zeitschrift f. d. Geschichte der Juden, Heft 1/1970, Tel Aviv: Olamenu, S. 31–36)

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Nahum Glatzer, Pelger Gregor "Zunz, Leopold", Encyclopaedia Judaica (2nd ed., 2007)
  2. ^ a b c Glatzer, Nahum N.; Pelger, Gregor (2007). "Zunz, Leopold". In Berenbaum, Michael; Skolnik, Fred (eds.). Encyclopaedia Judaica. Vol. 21 (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. pp. 684–688. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4.
  3. ^ Kaufmann, David (1894). "Die Familie Zunz" (in German). Monatsschrift für Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums vol. 38, no. 11, 481–493; here: p. 484.
  4. ^ a b Kaufmann, David (1900). "Zunz, Leopold." (in German) In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Vol. 45, p. 490-501. Online version retrieved 2016-12-10.
  5. ^ a b "Zunz, Leopold" By Isidore Singer, Emil G. Hirsch, Jewish Encyclopedia (1901-1906)
  6. ^ Zunz, L. Die Synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters
  7. ^ "LZA".

Sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainIsidore Singer, Emil G. Hirsch (1901–1906). "Zunz, Leopold". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Zunz, Leopold". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1056.
  • "Zunz, Leopold", entry by Nahum N. Glatzer and Gregor Pelger, Encyclopaedia Judaica (2nd ed., 2007)
  • Leopold Zunz, myjewishlearning.com
  • "Leopold Zunz". bh.org.il. The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
  • Elbogen, Ismar. "Leopold Zunz zum Gedächtnis." In: Fünfzigter Bericht der Lehranstalt fuer die Wissenschaft des Judentums in Berlin. Berlin, 1936, 14-32.
  • Glatzer, Nahum Norbert (ed.): Leopold and Adelheid Zunz, an account in letters 1815-1885. London : Published for the Institute by the East and West Library, 1958. (Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute of Jews from Germany)
  • Glatzer, Nahum Norbert (ed.): Leopold Zunz, Jude, Deutscher, Europäer; ein jüdisches Gelehrtenschicksal des 19. Jahrhunderts in Briefen an Freunde. Tübingen : Mohr, 1964. (Schriftenreihe wissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen des Leo Baeck Instituts, 11)
  • Michael A. Meyer, The Origins of the Modern Jew: Jewish Identity and European Culture in Germany, 1749-1824, Wayne State University Press, Detroit, (1967) 1984 ISBN 0-8143-1470-8
  • Schorsch, Ismar. Leopold Zunz : creativity in adversity. Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016. ISBN 9780812248531.
  • Veltri, Giuseppe. "A Jewish Luther? The academic dreams of Leopold Zunz." In: Jewish Studies Quarterly. 7/4 (2000), 338-351.
  • Vetter, Dieter. "Leopold Zunz. (Mit-)Begründer der Wissenschaft des Judentums." In: Freiburger Rundbrief. 13/2 (2006), 111-122.
  • Bautz, Traugott, ed. (1998). "ZUNZ, Leopold (eigentlich: Yom Tov [Jomtob] Lipman Z.), jüdischer Gelehrter". Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 14. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 607–627. ISBN 3-88309-073-5.
  • Wieseltier, Leon. „Etwas über die jüdische Historik. Leopold Zunz and the Inception of Modern Jewish Historiography." In: History and Theory. 20/2 (May, 1981), 135-149.

External links

  • Guide to the digitized Leopold and Adelheid Zunz Collection at the Archives of the Leo Baeck Institute, New York (call number AR 3648)
  • Works by Leopold Zunz in the Library Collection of the Leo Baeck Institute, New York.
  • Digitized works by Leopold Zunz in the Freimann Collection at the Judaica Division of the University Library of the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main.
  • The Leopold Zunz Archives at the Archives of the National Library of Israel (call number ARC. 4* 792).
  • Zunz-Moyal-Zentrum, (formerly Leopold Zunz Center), Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. The Leopold Zunz Center had worked on the digitization of the Leopold Zunz Archives at the Nation Library of Israel. The project is currently undergoing a revision.

leopold, zunz, hebrew, יום, טוב, צונץ, tzuntz, yiddish, ליפמן, צונץ, lipmann, zunz, august, 1794, march, 1886, founder, academic, judaic, studies, wissenschaft, judentums, critical, investigation, jewish, literature, hymnology, ritual, zunz, historical, invest. Leopold Zunz Hebrew יום טוב צונץ Yom Tov Tzuntz Yiddish ליפמן צונץ Lipmann Zunz 10 August 1794 17 March 1886 was the founder of academic Judaic Studies Wissenschaft des Judentums the critical investigation of Jewish literature hymnology and ritual 1 Zunz s historical investigations and contemporary writings had an important influence on contemporary Judaism Leopold ZunzPortrait by Moritz Daniel OppenheimPersonalBorn10 August 1794DetmoldDied17 March 1886BerlinReligionJudaismNationalityGermanSpouseAdelheid Beermann m 1822 OccupationRabbi writer activist Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 3 References 3 1 Citations 3 2 Sources 4 External linksBiography EditLeopold Zunz was born at Detmold the son of Talmud scholar Immanuel Menachem Zunz 1759 1802 and Hendel Behrens 1773 1809 the daughter of Dov Beer 2 an assistant cantor of the Detmold community 3 The year following his birth his family moved to Hamburg where as a young boy he began learning Hebrew grammar the Pentateuch and the Talmud 2 His father who was his first teacher died in July 1802 when Zunz was not quite eight years old 4 He subsequently gained admission to the Jewish free school Freischule founded by Philipp Samson in Wolfenbuttel Departing from home in July 1803 he saw his mother for the last time she died in 1809 during his years in Wolfenbuttel 4 A turning point in Zunz s development came in 1807 when Samuel Meyer Ehrenberg de a reform minded educator took over the directorship of the Samson School Ehrenberg reorganized the curriculum introducing alongside traditional learning new subjects such as religion history geography French and German he became Zunz s mentor and they remained friends until Ehrenberg s death in 1853 2 The summer of 1811 is noteworthy as the time when Zunz made his first acquaintance with Johann Christoph Wolf s Bibliotheca Hebraea which together with David Gans s Tzemach David gave him his first introduction to Jewish literature and the first impulse to think of the Science of Judaism 5 1 He settled in Berlin in 1815 studying at the University of Berlin and obtaining a doctorate from the University of Halle He was ordained by the Hungarian rabbi Aaron Chorin an early supporter of religious reform and served for two years teaching and giving sermons in the Beer reformed synagogue in Berlin He found the career uncongenial and in 1840 he was appointed director of a Lehrerseminar a post which relieved him from pecuniary troubles Zunz was always interested in politics and in 1848 addressed many public meetings In 1850 he resigned his headship of the Teachers Seminary and was awarded a pension Throughout his early and married life he was the champion of Jewish rights and he did not withdraw from public affairs until 1874 the year of the death of his wife Adelheid Beermann whom he had married in 1822 Together with other young men among them the poet Heinrich Heine Zunz founded the Verein fur Kultur und Wissenschaft der Juden The Society for the Culture and Science of the Jews alongside Joel Abraham List Isaac Marcus Jost and Eduard Gans in Berlin in 1819 In 1823 Zunz became the editor of the Zeitschrift fur die Wissenschaft des Judenthums Journal for the Science of Judaism The ideals of this Verein were not destined to bear religious fruit but the Science of Judaism survived Zunz took no large share in Jewish reform but never lost faith in the regenerating power of science as applied to the traditions and literary legacies of the ages He influenced Judaism from the study rather than from the pulpit Although affiliated with the Reform movement Zunz appeared to show little sympathy for it though this has been attributed to his disdain for ecclesiastical ambition and fears that rabbinical autocracy would result from the Reform crusade Further Isidore Singer and Emil Hirsch have stated that the point of Geiger s protest against Reform was directed against Samuel Holdheim and the position maintained by this leader as an autonomous rabbi Later in life Zunz went so far as to refer to rabbis as soothsayers and quacks 5 The violent outcry raised against the Talmud by some of the principal spirits of the Reform party was repugnant to Zunz s historic sense Zunz himself was temperamentally inclined to assign a determinative potency to sentiment this explaining his tender reverence for ceremonial usages Although Zunz kept to the Jewish ritual practises he understood them as symbols see among others his meditation on tefillin reprinted in Gesammelte Schriften ii 172 176 This contrasts with the traditional view of the validity of divine ordinances according to which the faithful are bound to observe without inquiry into their meaning His position accordingly approached that of the symbolists among the reformers who insisted that symbols had their function provided their suggestive significance was spontaneously comprehensible He emphasized most strongly the need of a moral regeneration of the Jews He wrote precise philological studies but also impassioned speeches on the Jewish nation and history that had an influence on later Jewish historians Zunz wrote in 1855 If there are ranks in suffering Israel takes precedence of all the nations if the duration of sorrows and the patience with which they are borne ennoble the Jews can challenge the aristocracy of every land if a literature is called rich in the possession of a few classic tragedies what shall we say to a National Tragedy lasting for fifteen hundred years in which the poets and the actors were also the heroes 6 In 1840 he became director of the Berlin Jewish Teachers Seminary He was friendly with the traditional Enlightenment figure Nachman Krochmal whose Moreh Nebuke ha Zeman Lemberg 1851 was edited according to the author s last will by his friend Leopold Zunz Zunz died in Berlin in 1886 Leopold Zunz on his 90th birthday 10 August 1884Works Edit First edition of Namen der Juden 1837 in the collection of the Jewish Museum of Switzerland Zunz famous article Etwas uber die rabbinische Litteratur On Rabbinical Literature published in 1818 established the intellectual agenda of the Wissenschaft des Judentums Science of Judaism while adumbrating the main themes of his own future work as well Even at this early stage of his academic career Zunz mapped out his concept of the Wissenschaft des Judentums which he intended to serve as a medium for presenting preserving and transmitting the corpus of Jewish literary works Zunz believed that only an academic approach to Jewish texts and a comprehensive and interdisciplinary academic framework would allow for the adequate study of Jewish themes and Judaism 7 In 1832 appeared the most important Jewish book published in the 19th century This was Zunz s Gottesdienstliche Vortrage der Juden i e a history of the Sermon It lays down principles for the investigation of the Rabbinic exegesis Midrash and of the siddur prayer book of the synagogue This book raised Zunz to the supreme position among Jewish scholars In 1845 appeared his Zur Geschichte und Literatur in which he threw light on the literary and social history of the Jews He had visited the British Museum in 1846 and this confirmed him in his plan for his third book Synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters 1855 It was from this book that George Eliot translated the following opening of a chapter of Daniel Deronda If there are ranks in suffering Israel takes precedence of all the nations After its publication Zunz again visited England and in 1859 issued his Ritus In this he gives a masterly survey of synagogal rites His last great book was his Literaturgeschichte der synagogalen Poesie 1865 A supplement appeared in 1867 Besides these works Zunz published a new translation of the Bible and wrote many essays which were afterwards collected as Gesammelte Schriften Etwas uber die rabbinische Litteratur Berlin Maurersche Buchhandlung 1818 Digital Form SLUB Dresden via EOD Die gottesdienstlichen Vortrage der Juden historisch entwickelt ein Beitrag zur Alterthumskunde u biblischen Kritik zur Literatur u Religionsgeschichte Berlin Asher 1832 Digital Form Freimann Sammlung Frankfurt Translated into Hebrew as הדרשות בישראל והשתלשלותן ההיסטורית 1947 Bialik Institute Namen der Juden Eine geschichtliche Untersuchung Leipzig L Fort 1837 Die vier und zwanzig Bucher der Heiligen Schrift Nach dem masoretischen Texte unter der Redaction von Dr Zunz ubersetzt von H Arnheim Dr Julius Furst Dr M Sachs Berlin Veit 1837 1839 Zur Geschichte und Literatur Berlin Veit 1845 Digital Form Freimann Sammlung Frankfurt Predigten gehalten in der neuen Israelitischen Synagoge zu Berlin Berlin Schlesinger 1846 Die synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters Berlin 1855 Digital Form Freimann Sammlung Frankfurt Samuel Meyer Ehrenberg Inspektor der Samsonschen Freischule zu Wolfenbuttel Braunschweig Gebruder Meyer 1854 Die sic Ritus des synagogalen Gottesdienstes geschichtlich entwickelt Berlin Springer 1859 Die synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters Bd 2 Digital Form Freimann Sammlung Frankfurt Deutsche Briefe Leipzig F A Brockhaus 1872 Die Monatstage des Kalenderjahres ein Andenken an Hingeschiedene Berlin M Poppelauer 1872 Literaturgeschichte der synagogalen Poesie Berlin Gerschel 1865 mit einem Erganzungsband 1867 Digital Form Freimann Sammlung Frankfurt Gesammelte Schriften Berlin Gerschel 1875 76 Bd 1 Bd 2 Bd 3 Digital Form Freimann Sammlung Frankfurt Zeitschrift fur die Wissenschaft des Judentums Jg 1 Heft 1 3 1822 not more published Edited by Leopold Zunz and Eduard Gans Digital Form Compact Memory Frankfurt About J Raphael Die Zeitschrift des Dr L Z in Zeitschrift f d Geschichte der Juden Heft 1 1970 Tel Aviv Olamenu S 31 36 References Edit Jewish portal Judaism portalCitations Edit a b Nahum Glatzer Pelger Gregor Zunz Leopold Encyclopaedia Judaica 2nd ed 2007 a b c Glatzer Nahum N Pelger Gregor 2007 Zunz Leopold In Berenbaum Michael Skolnik Fred eds Encyclopaedia Judaica Vol 21 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference pp 684 688 ISBN 978 0 02 866097 4 Kaufmann David 1894 Die Familie Zunz in German Monatsschrift fur Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums vol 38 no 11 481 493 here p 484 a b Kaufmann David 1900 Zunz Leopold in German In Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie Vol 45 p 490 501 Online version retrieved 2016 12 10 a b Zunz Leopold By Isidore Singer Emil G Hirsch Jewish Encyclopedia 1901 1906 Zunz L Die Synagogale Poesie des Mittelalters LZA Sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Isidore Singer Emil G Hirsch 1901 1906 Zunz Leopold In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Zunz Leopold Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 1056 Zunz Leopold entry by Nahum N Glatzer and Gregor Pelger Encyclopaedia Judaica 2nd ed 2007 Leopold Zunz myjewishlearning com Leopold Zunz bh org il The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot Elbogen Ismar Leopold Zunz zum Gedachtnis In FunfzigterBericht der Lehranstalt fuer die Wissenschaft des Judentums in Berlin Berlin 1936 14 32 Glatzer Nahum Norbert ed Leopold and Adelheid Zunz an account in letters 1815 1885 London Published for the Institute by the East and West Library 1958 Publications of the Leo Baeck Institute of Jews from Germany Glatzer Nahum Norbert ed Leopold Zunz Jude Deutscher Europaer ein judisches Gelehrtenschicksal des 19 Jahrhunderts in Briefen an Freunde Tubingen Mohr 1964 Schriftenreihe wissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen des Leo Baeck Instituts 11 Michael A Meyer The Origins of the Modern Jew Jewish Identity and European Culture in Germany 1749 1824 Wayne State University Press Detroit 1967 1984 ISBN 0 8143 1470 8 Schorsch Ismar Leopold Zunz creativity in adversity Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 2016 ISBN 9780812248531 Veltri Giuseppe A Jewish Luther The academic dreams of Leopold Zunz In Jewish Studies Quarterly 7 4 2000 338 351 Vetter Dieter Leopold Zunz Mit Begrunder der Wissenschaft des Judentums In Freiburger Rundbrief 13 2 2006 111 122 Bautz Traugott ed 1998 ZUNZ Leopold eigentlich Yom Tov Jomtob Lipman Z judischer Gelehrter Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Vol 14 Herzberg Bautz cols 607 627 ISBN 3 88309 073 5 Wieseltier Leon Etwas uber die judische Historik Leopold Zunz and the Inception of Modern Jewish Historiography In History and Theory 20 2 May 1981 135 149 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Leopold Zunz Guide to the digitized Leopold and Adelheid Zunz Collection at the Archives of the Leo Baeck Institute New York call number AR 3648 Works by Leopold Zunz in the Library Collection of the Leo Baeck Institute New York Digitized works by Leopold Zunz in the Freimann Collection at the Judaica Division of the University Library of the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main The Leopold Zunz Archives at the Archives of the National Library of Israel call number ARC 4 792 Zunz Moyal Zentrum formerly Leopold Zunz Center Martin Luther University Halle Wittenberg The Leopold Zunz Center had worked on the digitization of the Leopold Zunz Archives at the Nation Library of Israel The project is currently undergoing a revision Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leopold Zunz amp oldid 1135355328, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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