Apor Éva (szerk.): Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Könyvtára Keleti Gyűjtemény.
The Kaufmann Collection
The Kaufmann Collection 12 T he Hebraica collection of the professor of the Jewish Theological Seminary of Hungary Dávid Kaufmann (1852-1899) is internationally renowned. Kaufmann was an eminent scholar of medieval Jewish philosophy, history and cultural history, and a systematic collector of Hebrew manuscripts and old books. When he and his wife died, upon his mother-in-law Róza Gomperz's will, the collection was donated to the Academy Library as the Foundation of Dávid Kaufmann and his wife, born Irma Gomperz. Dávid. KAUFMANN (1852-1899) The catalogue of the library was published by Miksa Weisz in 1906, upon the request of the scholar's widow, and Ignác Goldziher introduced the collection to the Academy at the meeting on 23 April of the same year. The collection divides into three groups: a) codices and manuscripts, b) genizah fragments, c) printed books. "Manuscripts numbering 594 which touch on every branch and age of Hebrew literature", Goldziher announced. They include very rare and invaluable pieces such as the 11th century philosophical work, Kitab al-muhtavi by Yusuf al-Basir written in Hebrew script in Arabic (A. 280); or the Mishnah codex (A. 50.), "which, thanks to the zealous endeavours of a scholar in South Arabia, presents the critically screened complete text of the Mishnah, with accentuation and vocalization." Goldziher pointed out a Hungaricum (A. 349) "which Kaufmann himself had published on the basis of the manuscript in 1895,... an account of an eye-witness of the recapture of Buda (1686) in Hebrew." He gave separate mention of the richly embellished painted manuscripts belonging to the finest achievements of Jewish book art: "this collection has an art historical rather than literary value, including 25 richly illustrated codices, mostly of parchment mainly coming from Italy." One is the Kaufmann Haggadah (A. 422) published facsimile twice so far, first edited by Sándor Scheiber (1957) and then by Gabrielle Sed-Rajna (1990). Mahzor, MS Kaufmann A. 384