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

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