Moritz Horschetzky
Moritz Horschetzky | |
---|---|
Born | 1777 or 1788 Bydzov, Bohemia |
Died | Nagykanizsa, Hungary | 7 November 1859
Occupation | Physician |
Language | German |
Spouse | Julia Lackenbacher |
Moritz Horschetzky (1777 or 1788 – 7 November 1859) was an Austrian physician, writer, and translator.
He was born to a Jewish family in Bydzov, Bohemia, in 1777 or 1788. He received a traditional early education, attended the Israelitische Hauptschule in Prague, and later acquired a doctorate in medicine in Vienna.[1]
Horschetzky married into the prominent Lackenbacher family;[2] his father-in-law Hirsch Lackenbacher was leader of the Jewish community of Nagykanizsa, Hungary,[3] where Horschetzky began practising medicine in 1811.[4] He went on to run the town's Jewish hospital and serve as director of the Jewish community school.[5] He became a member of the Royal Hungarian Academy of Sciences in 1845.[1]
As a writer he devoted himself chiefly to the works of Josephus, whose Antiquities he translated and in part annotated (1826, 1843, 1851).[6] He also wrote for the journals Allgemeine Zeitung des Judenthums, the Orient, and Ben-Chananja . He possessed remarkable humor, which appears in his fictitious Reiseberichte Nathan Ghazzati's (1848), which Julius Fürst took to be a translation from Hebrew.[7]
He died in Nagykanizsa on 7 November 1859.[6]
Bibliography
[edit]- Geschichte der Juden seit dem Rückzuge aus der babylonischen Gefangenschaft, bis zur Schlacht bei Aza in welcher Judas der Maccabäer fiel. Antiquitates Judaicae.German. (in German). Prague: M. I. Landau. 1826. hdl:2027/hvd.hw5hia.
- Dreizehntes Buch der jüdischen Antiquitäten des Flavius Josephus (in German). Nagykanizsa. 1843.
- "Reiseberichte des Natan Ghazzati". Orient. Lit. (in German). 9: 170–172, 299–301.
References
[edit]This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; Kayserling, Meyer (1904). "Horschetzky, Moritz". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 469.
- ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin von, ed. (1863). "Horschetzky, Moriz". Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Österreich (in German). Vol. 9. Vienna. p. 308.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Silber, Michael K. (2004) [1992]. "The Entrance of Jews into Hungarian Society". In Frankel, J.; Zipperstein, S. J. (eds.). Assimilation and Community: The Jews in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 301. ISBN 978-0-521-52601-2.
- ^ Tamás, Máté (2020). Thulin, M.; Krah, M.; Pick, B. (eds.). "'Moses Lackenbacher & Compagnie': Business and kinship in the early 19th-century Habsburg monarchy". PaRDeS: Journal of the Association for Jewish Studies in Germany (in German). 2020 (26). Potsdam: Universitätsverlag Potsdam: 86. doi:10.25932/publishup-48564. ISBN 978-3-86956-493-7.
- ^ Steinschneider, Moritz (1859). Hebræische Bibliographie. Blätter für neuere und ältere Literatur des Judenthums (in German). Vol. 2. Berlin: A. Asher & Comp. p. 110.
- ^ Pearce, Sarah (2019). "Josephus and the Jewish Chronicle: 1841–1855". In Schatz, A. (ed.). Josephus in Modern Jewish Culture. Leiden: Brill. p. 129. ISBN 978-90-04-39309-7.
- ^ a b Singer, Isidore; Kayserling, Meyer (1904). "Horschetzky, Moritz". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 469.
- ^ Fürst, Julius (1863). Bibliotheca Judaica: Bibliographisches Handbuch der gesammten jüdischen Literatur (in German). Leipzig: Verlag von Wilhelm Engelmann. p. 408.
- 18th-century births
- 1859 deaths
- 19th-century Austrian Jews
- 19th-century Hungarian Jews
- Jews from the Austrian Empire
- Physicians from the Austrian Empire
- Jews from Bohemia
- Historians from the Austrian Empire
- Jewish historians
- Jewish physicians
- Jewish translators
- Members of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
- People from Nagykanizsa
- People from Nový Bydžov
- Translators from Greek
- Translators to German