List of Austrian Jews

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Austria first became a center of Jewish learning during the 13th century. However, increasing antisemitism led to the expulsion of the Jews in 1669. Following formal readmission in 1848, a sizable Jewish community developed once again, contributing strongly to Austrian culture. By the 1930s, some 300,000 Jews lived in Austria, most of them in Vienna. Following the Anschluss with Nazi Germany, most of the community emigrated or were killed in the Holocaust. The current Austrian Jewish population is 9,000.[1] The following is a list of some prominent Austrian Jews. Here German-speaking Jews from the whole Habsburg Monarchy are listed.

Athletes[]

  • Margarete "Grete" Adler, swimmer, Olympic bronze (4x100-m freestyle relay)[2]
  • Richard Bergmann, Austria/Britain table tennis player, seven-time world champion, ITTF Hall of Fame
  • Albert Bogen (Albert Bógathy), fencer (saber), Olympic silver
  • Fritzi Burger, figure skater, two-time Olympic silver, two-time World Championship silver
  • Siegfried "Fritz" Flesch, fencer (sabre), Olympic bronze
  • Hans Haas, weightlifter, Olympic champion (lightweight), silver
  • Judith Haspel (born "Judith Deutsch"), Austrian-born Israeli swimmer, held every Austrian women's middle and long distance freestyle record in 1935, refused to represent Austria in 1936 Summer Olympics along with Ruth Langer and Lucie Goldner, protesting Hitler, stating, "I refuse to enter a contest in a land which so shamefully persecutes my people."[3]
  • Dr. Otto Herschmann, fencer (saber), 2-time Olympic silver winner (in fencing/team sabre and 100-m freestyle); arrested by Nazis, and died in Izbica concentration camp
  • Nickolaus "Mickey" Hirschl, wrestler, two-time Olympic bronze (heavyweight freestyle and Greco-Roman)
  • Felix Kasper, figure skater, Olympic bronze
  • Ruth Langer was an Austrian swimmer that refused to attend the 1936 Summer Olympics, along with Judith Haspel and Lucie Goldner.
  • Klara Milch, swimmer, Olympic bronze (4x100-m freestyle relay)
  • Paul Neumann, swimmer, Olympic champion (500-m freestyle)
  • Fred Oberlander, Austrian, British, and Canadian wrestler; world champion (freestyle heavyweight); Maccabiah champion
  • Felix Pipes, tennis player, Olympic silver (doubles)
  • Maxim Podoprigora, Olympic swimmer
  • Ellen Preis, fencer (foil), three-time world champion (1947, 1949, and 1950), Olympic champion, 17-time Austrian champion
  • Otto Scheff (born "Otto Sochaczewsky"), swimmer, Olympic champion (400-m freestyle) and two-time bronze (400-m freestyle, 1,500-m freestyle)
  • Josephine Sticker, swimmer, Olympic bronze (4x100-m freestyle relay)
  • Otto Wahle, Austria/US swimmer, two-time Olympic silver (1,000-m freestyle, 200-m obstacle race) and bronze (400-m freestyle); International Swimming Hall of Fame

Historical figures[]

Politicians[]

  • Bruno Kreisky, Chancellor of Austria 1970-1983, agnostic
  • Ignaz Kuranda, politician[4]
  • Joseph Redlich, politician, Minister of Finance in the early 1930s
  • Otto Bauer, Foreign Minister 1918-1919
  • Franz Klein, Minister of Justice 1906-1908, and in 1916

Revolutionaries[]

  • Simon Deutsch (1822–1877), revolutionary

Academic figures[]

Lawyers[]

  • Fred F. Herzog, only Jewish judge in Austria between the world wars; fled to the United States and became the dean of two law schools

Scientists[]

  • Carl Djerassi, chemist, inventor of the pill
  • Sir Otto Frankel, geneticist [5]
  • Jakob Erdheim, pathologist (Erdheim–Chester disease).[6]
  • Eric Kandel, neuroscientist, winner of 2000 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • Karl Koller, ophthalmologist; first to use cocaine as an anaesthetic [7]
  • Hans Kronberger, nuclear physicist[8]
  • Robert von Lieben, physicist (Jewish father) [9]
  • Victor Frederick Weisskopf (1908–2002), physicist; during World War II, worked at Los Alamos on the Manhattan Project to develop the atomic bomb; later campaigned against the proliferation of nuclear weapons[10]
  • Max Perutz, molecular biologist, winner of 1962 Nobel Prize for Chemistry
  • Lise Meitner, physicist, discovered nuclear fission of uranium with * Otto Hahn, namegiver of element 109 * meitnerium

Psychologists, psychotherapists and psychiatrists[]

  • Alfred Adler, founding member of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society and founder of the school of individual psychology
  • Anna Freud, Vienna-born child psychologist and daughter of Sigmund Freud
  • Sigmund Freud, Moravian-born founder of psychoanalysis and neurologist[11]
  • Marie Jahoda, psychologist [12]
  • Melanie Klein, psychotherapy[13]
  • Heinz Kohut, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst
  • Wilhelm Reich, psychiatry and psychoanalysis[14]
  • Viktor Frankl, psychiatrist and psychologist

Social and political scientists[]

  • Guido Adler, Moravian musicologist
  • Hugo Bergmann, philosopher[15]
  • Hugo Botstiber, musicologist
  • Paul Edwards, philosopher [16]
  • Heinrich Friedjung, Moravian historian and politician [17]
  • Norbert Jokl, founder of Albanology[18]
  • Otto Kurz, historian [19]
  • Emil Lederer, economist[20]
  • Ludwig von Mises, economist
  • Otto Neurath, economist, sociologist, philosopher
  • Ludwig Wittgenstein, philosopher[21][22] (of largely Jewish descent but given a Catholic burial)

Cultural figures[]

Film and stage[]

  • Rudolf Bing (1902–1997), opera impresario, General Manager of the Metropolitan Opera in New York from 1950 to 1972[23]
  • Fritz Grünbaum (1880–1941), cabaret artist, operetta and pop songwriter, director, actor and master of ceremonies
  • , actor[24]
  • Kurt Kren (1929–1998), experimental filmmaker, director of the avant garde films 8/64: Ana – Aktion Brus, 10/65: Selbstverstümmelung, 10b/65: Silber – Aktion Brus, 16/67: 20. September, and 10c/65: Brus wünscht euch seine Weihnachten (Jewish father)
  • Reggie Nalder (1907–1991), cabaret dancer, stage, film and television actor
  • Joseph Schildkraut (1896–1964), stage and film actor
  • Harry Schein (1924–2006), founder of the Swedish Film Institute, writer, chemical engineer

Musicians[]

  • Kurt Adler (1907–1977), Bohemian born Austrian chorus master, conductor, pianist, author, Metropolitan Opera New York City, United States[25]
  • Ignaz Brüll, composer and pianist[26]
  • Hanns Eisler (1898–1962), composer and co-author (with Theodor W. Adorno) of Komposition für den Film (Jewish father)
  • Joseph Joachim, violinist (born in Kittsee, Austria, at that time Hungary)[27]
  • Hans Keller, musicologist[28]
  • Fritz Kreisler (1875–1962), violinist and composer, one of the most famous of his day[29]
  • Erica Morini, violinist [30]
  • Erwin Schulhoff (1894–1942), composer and pianist[31]
  • Julius Schulhoff (1825–1898), pianist and composer[32]
  • Rudolf Schwarz, conductor[33]
  • Walter Susskind (1913–1980), conductor[34]
  • Richard Tauber, singer and composer[35]
  • Egon Wellesz, composer[36]

Composers[]

  • Erich Wolfgang Korngold, composer (born in Bohemia)[37]
  • Fritz Kreisler (1875–1962), violinist and composer, one of the most famous of his day[29]
  • Gustav Mahler, Bohemian-born composer, conductor and pianist[38]
  • Arnold Schoenberg (1871–1954), composer (born in Vienna); founder of Second Viennese School; music theorist

Writers[]

  • Peter Altenberg, writer and poet
  • Raphael Basch (1813–?), journalist and politician[39]
  • Abraham Benisch (1814–1878), Hebraist and journalist; born Bohemia[40]
  • Henri Blowitz, journalist[41]
  • (Sepp Österreicher), poet and translator[42]
  • , poet[43]
  • Bernard Friedberg, Hebraist, scholar and bibliographer[44]
  • Elfriede Jelinek (born 1946), Nobel prize-winning (2004) novelist (Jewish father).
  • Franz Kafka, writer
  • Paul Kornfeld (1889–1942), writer, author of many expressionist plays[45]
  • Karl Kraus, author[46]
  • Heinrich Landesmann, poet [47]
  • Robert Lucas, writer, emigrated to Britain in 1934
  • Joseph Roth, novelist and journalist
  • Felix Salten, Hungarian-born Austrian writer[48][49][50][51]
  • Arthur Schnitzler, writer and physician
  • Alice Schwarz-Gardos (1915–2007), writer, journalist and editor-in-chief of Israel-Nachrichten 1975-2007 (de:Alice Schwarz-Gardos )
  • Hugo Sonnenschein, Bohemian-born writer [52]
  • Regine Ulmann, editor, educator and feminist
  • Franz Werfel, novelist and playwright
  • Alma Wittlin (1899–1992), art historian and museologist[53]
  • Stefan Zweig, writer

Miscellaneous[]

Others[]

  • Viktor Aptowitzer (1871–1942), born in Tarnopol, Galizien, Jewish theologian, Talmudist[60]
  • Rudolf Auspitz (1837–1906), Austrian politician, entrepreneur () [61]
  • Joseph Samuel Bloch (1850–1923), born in Dukla, Galizien, Austrian publicist, politician [62]
  • Ludo Moritz Hartmann, Austrian Jewish historian and statesman [63]
  • , Paul Hirsch (1892–1975), born in Kew, near Melbourne, Austrian Jewish writer, chemist [64]

See also[]

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ "Jewish Population of the World". Jewish Virtual Library. 2012. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  2. ^ Horvitz, Peter S. (April 2007). The Big Book of Jewish Sports Heroes: An Illustrated Compendium of Sports History and the 150 Greatest Jewish Sports Stars. ISBN 9781561719075. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
  3. ^ "Diving into troubled waters", Paul Kalina, The Age, November 24, 2005, Retrieved January 1, 2011
  4. ^ [1] Accessed 8 Feb 2007.
  5. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-10-02. Retrieved 2007-03-21.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ Der wissenschaftliche Werdegang von Professor Jakob Erdheim
  7. ^ "Dr Koller, discoverer of cocaine as a local anaesthetic in ophthalmology".
  8. ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born in Linz, Austria, of Jewish parents"
  9. ^ "Lieben". Archived from the original on 2009-10-27.
  10. ^ [2] "Growing up in Vienna in a well-to-do Jewish family..." [3] "One of the most brilliant Jewish scientists to be driven from Germany by Nazi persecution..."
  11. ^ [Gresser, Moshe. Dual Allegiance: Freud As a Modern Jew. SUNY Press, 1994, p. 225]
  12. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-09-06. Retrieved 2007-03-21.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born in Vienna of Jewish parentage"
  14. ^ Gay, Miriam. "Reich, Wilhelm." Encyclopaedia Judaica. Eds. Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik. Vol. 17. 2nd ed. Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2007. 198-199. 22 vols. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Thomson Gale.
  15. ^ Jewish Agency for Israel Archived 2006-10-01 at the Wayback Machine; The Hugo Bergmann family Papers; both accessed 11 March 2007
  16. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-03-13. Retrieved 2007-02-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ [4]; Encyclopaedia Judaica, article "Historians", list of "Prominent Jewish General Historians".
  18. ^ Biography of Ernest Koliqi, Shkoder.net Authors from Shkodra Archived 2007-03-07 at the Wayback Machine: "Norbert Jokl (1877-1942), the renowned Austrian Albanologist of Jewish origin" Accessed 8 Dec 2006.
  19. ^ Jewish Year Book 1975, p.214
  20. ^ JInfo list of economists accessed 17 May 2007
  21. ^ Jewish Chronicle, April 27, 2001 p.34: "he believed that, as a Jew, he was capable of only derivative thought."
  22. ^ Evening Standard (London), 24/5/2004, p15: "Born less than a week apart, Adolf Hitler and the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein attended the institution together. There is a haunting school photograph of the young, complex, Jewish philosopher just one row away from the most evil tyrant of the 20th century."
  23. ^ Bing - [5] Rudolf Bing... had been born a Jew in Vienna"
  24. ^ "Albert Misak".
  25. ^ Evelyne Adler-daughter
  26. ^ Jewish: "Contemporary Review, June, 1999 by Anthony Paterson" "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-04-10. Retrieved 2006-10-30.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "the Nazi ban on his compositions - he was Jewish" Accessed 6 Nov 2006.
    born Moravia: "Composers of Classical Music" [6] "Brull, Ignaz 1846-1907 Moravia, Prossnitz - Austria, Vienna" Accessed 6 November 2006.
  27. ^ "Jewish Violinists".
  28. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: "he described himself as an 'unpious Jew'"
  29. ^ Jump up to: a b Kreisler - [7] "Jascha Heifetz, Fritz Kreisler, Mischa Elman... were all Jews, too"
  30. ^ [8]
  31. ^ School of Oriental and African Studies, Newsletter of the Jewish Music Institute Archived 2006-08-22 at the Wayback Machine "Erwin Schulhoff, a Czech Jew executed by the Nazis..." Accessed 8 Dec 2006.
  32. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 2nd ed., art. "Schulhoff, Julius": "Born in Prague"
  33. ^ Jewish Chronicle, February 16, 2007, p.14: "he carried on as the sole Jewidh conductor of the Kulturbund"
  34. ^ Bach cantatas site "The distinguished Czech-born English conductor" Lake Placid Film Forum Archived 2006-05-23 at the Wayback Machine "Walter Susskind, a German Jew" Both accessed 4 Jan 2007
  35. ^ "The Penguin Dictionary of Musical Performers", Arthur Jacobs, ISBN 0-14-051160-1, "Under threat as a Jew from Nazi persecution, settled in Britain, 1938."
  36. ^ [9][dead link]
  37. ^ Korngold Society Archived 2006-12-09 at the Wayback Machine: "he got thrown out of Vienna because he was Jewish" Jessica Duchen, author of E. Korngold's biography; Korngold Society: "BRNO, where the composer was born"; accessed 6 Feb 2007.
  38. ^ ["Gustav Mahler Dies in Vienna". The New York Times. 18 May 1911. http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/arts/105027769.pdf. Retrieved 1 July 2011. PDF format]
  39. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia, "born at Prague"; accessed 3 Dec 2006.
  40. ^ British Concise Dictionary of National Biography
  41. ^ Encyclopaedia Judaica, 2nd ed., art. "Blowitz, Henri
  42. ^ Boris Brainin
  43. ^ Fritz Brainin
  44. ^ Public Domain Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "FRIEDBERG, BERNARD". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. Retrieved December 25, 2013.
  45. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-07-02. Retrieved 2007-06-24.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "German-Jewish writers: Paul Kornfeld"
  46. ^ The Literary Encyclopedia: "Karl Kraus was born in Jicin (or Gitschin), Czechoslovakia (then a part of Austria-Hungary) into a Jewish family." Accessed 8 Feb 2007.
  47. ^ "Mikulov (Nikolsburg) in the 1930s (Lilly Landesman)".
  48. ^ [10] Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine "Hungarian writer Felix Salten" "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-05-28. Retrieved 2006-07-07.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) "Hungarian/Austrian Jewish writer Felix Salten"
  49. ^ [11][permanent dead link] "Everyone knows Walt Disney's Bambi. Far fewer know that the author of the original book was the Austrian writer, Felix Salten."
  50. ^ [12] "..Austrian novelist and journalist..."
  51. ^ Odds & Ends, June 1998
  52. ^ "Sonnenschein, Hugo auch H. Sonka".
  53. ^ "Alma S. Wittlin (1899-1992) Preliminary remarks on the life and scholarship of an Austrian émigré" (PDF). Institute of Modern Languages Research. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-11-14. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  54. ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography: "born of Jewish parents at Vienna"
  55. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: "His grandfather Jacob had established the family as one of the first Jewish families to acquire great wealth and social acceptability in Bavaria... His mother came from an Orthodox Frankfurt family and ensured that the children were properly instructed in Jewish matters... He was a citizen of Austria-Hungary at his death."
  56. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia "born June 10, 1759, at Prostiebor, near Kladrau, in the district of Pilsen, Bohemia" accessed 8 Feb 2007
  57. ^ Jewish Encyclopedia
  58. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2006-10-14. Retrieved 2007-03-05.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  59. ^ "Simon Wiesenthal Center convicted of defamation by Paris court". European Jewish Press. 13 March 2007. Archived from the original on 2012-06-01. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  60. ^ [13] "two Austrian Jewish scholars - Samuel Krauss and Viktor Aptowitzer"
  61. ^ [14]
  62. ^ "Powell's Books | the World's Largest Independent Bookstore".
  63. ^ [15] " two lay Jews Ludo Moritz Hartmann"
  64. ^ [16] "Paul Hatvani, a German Jewish refugee"
Retrieved from ""