Item #242 Jüdische Dogmen. Offenes Sendschreiben and den Herrn Dr. Ignatz Hirschler, Eigenthümer des “Izraelita Közlöny.” Von --. Leopold Löw.
Early publication of the Hungarian "Neolog" Movement

Jüdische Dogmen. Offenes Sendschreiben and den Herrn Dr. Ignatz Hirschler, Eigenthümer des “Izraelita Közlöny.” Von --.

Pest: L. Aigner, 1871. First edition. Old entry of ownership (Schulhof) on titlepage. In contemporary paper. VIII, 40 p. In good condition.

A very important and early compilation of the “official” thoughts about the religious principles of Judaism of the Hungarian Neolog Jewry.

Written after the 1868 Jewish Congress, the so-called Schism in Hungarian Jewry. The congress was held in order to establish a national representative organisation of the Hungarian Jewry initiated by the Hungarian government, but resulted the institutional division of the Jewry into the Orthodox, Neolog (Reform) and “Status Quo” factions.

In this “response” Löw summarises the principles of the Jewish religion in exegetical, philosophical, theological, historical, ritual, pedagogical-didactical and liturgical aspects.

Leopold Löw (Judah Leib; 1811–1875) was the most important Hungarian Neolog Rabbi of the 19th century, served in Pápa and Szeged. He was one of the chief figures of the emancipation of the Hungarian Jewry. As rabbi he was the first who held the sermons in Hungarian, already in 1840s, his sermons in Hungarian were published in 1870 which was the first publication of such collection in Hungarian.

Ignatz Hirschler (Ignác; 1823–1891) was a pioneer of ophthalmology in Hungary, member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. He was the president of the Jewish Community of Pest, Hungary’s leading Neolog community. Served as the president of the Hungarian Physicians Association and published numerous scientific articles on innovative ophthalmologic methods in Hungarian and German medical journals.

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Price: €400.00

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