Ignác Goldziher

1850–1921

The scholar Ignác Goldziher was born in Székesfehérvár in the Hungarian kingdom of the Habsburg Empire. Pursuing a German university education in Berlin and Leiden, where he embarked on his study of Arabic and Islam, he also traveled in Egypt, Palestine, and Syria. Over the nearly thirty years that followed, Goldziher became one of the pioneers of the serious study of Islam in Europe, even as he was forced by institutional antisemitism to work as an unpaid university lecturer. He supported himself by working as secretary of the Hungarian Neolog Jewish community. He finally was appointed professor at Budapest University in 1905, having already been elected to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and having received offers of professorships abroad. In the context of his deep interest in and admiration for Islam and the medieval Arab world, Goldziher also wrote about relations between Islam and Judaism and served on the editorial board of the Jewish Encyclopedia (1901–1906).

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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My Oriental Diary

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I did not sleep; I let myself be rocked by the inexorable battle of the waves; soon the monster of seasickness flashed in my innards, but I overcame it. A god held sway in me; he triumphed: it was the…

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The Zahiris

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It cannot be doubted that the two designations ahl al-ḥadīth and ahl al-ra’y originally referred to branches of legists occupied with the investigation of Islamic law: the former were…

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Diary Entries

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“Consummatum est!” I could exclaim on January 1, 1876.The minister [Jozsef Eötvös] frivolously deceived me. His promise turned out to be a premeditated lie. Scorn and sarcasm were his response when I…