Philippson family

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The Philippson family was a German Jewish family with roots in Saxony. The name Philippson was first used by Moses Philippson, the father of rabbi Ludwig Philippson, and was derived from Moses's father's name of Philipp Moses.

Some information from the book Die Philippsons in Bonn: Deutsch-jüdische Schicksalslinien, 1862-1980. Dokumentation einer Ausstellung in der Universitätsbibliothek Bonn, 1989, by Karl Gutzmer (Bonn: Bouvier, 1991) was used in the compiling of this biographical note.

Ludwig Philippson was born on December 28, 1811 in Dessau. He was the son of Moses Philippson, a teacher, and Marianne Levy-Wust. By the time he was fourteen, Ludwig Philippson was reciting poetry and writing literary pieces; by the next year he had left Dessau to study in Halle, where his older brother Phöbus was studying medicine. It was through Phöbus that he became interested in scientific studies. His first work was published at 16, under his brother's name: Die Propheten Hosea, Joel, Jona, Obadja und Nahum in metrisch-deutscher Übersetzung . In 1829 he began to attend the University of Berlin, with a major in classical philology. Since the family had exhausted much of its funds when sending his older brother to study medicine, and Jews could not receive scholarships, Ludwig Philippson supported himself by writing. Some of these early works appeared in publications such as Die Freimütige and the Jenaische Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung .

In 1833 Ludwig Philippson became the rabbi of the Magdeburg synagogue. He met members of the Wolffstein family soon after becoming rabbi, and in 1836 married Julianne Wolffstein. They would eventually have 3 daughters: Johanna, Bertha, and Rosalie. In 1843 he created a Jewish German-language newspaper: the Allgemeine Zeitung des Judenthums, with the goal of bringing issues of religion, spirituality, and politics together in one publication. Several years later he wrote a German translation and interpretation of the Old Testament, which was published in several parts and several different editions beginning in 1841.

In September 1843 Ludwig Philippson lost his wife after many years of a wasting sickness. By the end of 1844 he had married Mathilde Hirsch, the sister of his brother's wife. Together they had six children: Martin, Meta, Joseph, Franz, Richard, and Alfred. During the 1840s Ludwig Philippson continued to write, producing in 1847 his work Die Entwicklung der religiösen Idee im Judenthume, Christenthume und Islam und die Religion der Gesellschaft ; the next year another book on the relationship between religion and society was produced with Die Religion der Gesellschaft und die Entwickelung der Menschheit zu ihr, dargestellt in zehn Vorlesungen . He wrote several works on the rights of Jews in the Prussian state as well. The political events of 1848 also affected Philippson. In that year he was elected as a representative for his region of Saxony in the Frankfurt National Assembly. The next year he became a member of the Saxony trade council. In 1855 he helped found the Institut zur Förderung der isralitischen Literature in Leipzig. This institute published many works, including his novel Saron in 1858 as well as texts of his brother, Phöbus.

By 1862 Ludwig Philippson left his position as rabbi and moved from Magdeburg to Bonn, recommended by his doctors and family members for its mild climate. It was hoped that this would help alleviate his worsening health and growing blindness. Although the family first rented space on the first floor of a gardener's house, by 1863 he had bought a residence on Grünen Weg (now Königstrasse). There Ludwig Philippson lived with his family for the remaining twenty-five years of his life. Three generations of Philippsons would go on to live in this house, until its loss under the National Socialists. He shared in the life of the Jewish community in his new home, and supported the building of the synagogue there as well as the establishment of the new Jewish cemetery, where he, his wife, and numerous children and grandchildren would be buried.

While in Bonn Ludwig Philippson turned once more to his writing, and fought further for the equal rights of Jews. In 1866 he published Haben wirklich die Juden Jesus gekreuzigt? Many other works would come out of this time period, including religious essays, prayer books, poetry, and novels. Although most of his writings concerned religion, some continued to state his opinions in regards to the social status of Jews. In addition, in 1866 and 1867 two historical novels written by him were published.

Ludwig Philippson died on December 29, 1889 in Bonn.

Juliane Wolffstein, Ludwig's Philippson's first wife, grew up in the town of Osterburg. Her father was a businessman, who had died early, leaving behind five daughters, of which Julie was the youngest. Her mother took over the family business after the death of her husband. Julie Wolffstein grew up in a neighborhood where Jews and Christians often mixed. She died of lung tuberculosis in 1843. Julie Philippson had three children: Johanna, Bertha, and Rosalie, as well as a son who did not live to adulthood.

In 1844 Ludwig Philippson married Mathilde Hirsch, who was 21 years old. The fifth child of eight from a bourgeois family, she grew up in Halberstadt, although she often visited Magdeburg. She died in 1891.

Phöbus Philippson was the elder brother of Ludwig Philippson, son of Moses Philippson and Marianne Levy-Wust. He was born on July 25, 1807 in Dessau. In 1814 he began attending secondary school, and later left his home to study medicine in Halle. He graduated in 1828 and went to Magdeburg to work as a doctor. In 1835 he began practicing in the small town of Klötze. He published many medical articles as well as literary works. Two of these were written on cholera; one described the history of cholera from ancient times through the 1800s. In 1832 he married his cousin, Sara Gottschalk. After the death of his first wife he married her sister Pauline in 1849. Together they had four children who survived until adulthood and several who did not. Phöbus Philippson died in 1870.

Henriette Philippson was the daughter of Ludwig Philippson's cousin Louis. She married Lesser Ephraim, Kommerzienrat, of the town of Görlitz. Their daughter, Ida, married Martin Philippson, the eldest son of Ludwig and Mathilde Philippson.

Moritz Philippson was born in 1837 in Magdeburg, the son of Phöbus Philippson and Sara Gottschalk. He spent his earliest years in Klötze, where his father had his medical practice. Since there was no secondary school in Klötze, he stayed at the house of his uncle Ludwig Philippson in Magdeburg, along with his many cousins, while he continued his education. Like his father, Moritz Philippson also became a doctor, and studied medicine at universities in Jena, Berlin, and Vienna before opening a medical practice in Berlin. This practice was disturbed by wars several times, and Moritz worked as a field doctor during the Prussian-Danish war of 1864, the Prussian-Austrian war of 1866, and the German-French war of 1870-1871. In 1872 he married his cousin, Meta Philippson, the eldest daughter of Ludwig and Mathilde Philippson. Their only daughter Paula was born two years later. Moritz Philippson died in Bonn in 1877 of cancer; Meta died in 1928.

Paula Philippson was born in Berlin in 1874, the daughter of Moritz and Meta Philippson. She and her mother lived in the house on Grünen Weg in Bonn with her maternal grandparents, Ludwig and Mathilde Philippson, and cousins after the death of her father Moritz. Like her father and grandfather before her, Paula Philippson desired to become a doctor, an unusual profession for women at that time. Once Alfred Philippson returned to live at his parents' house, Paula and her mother moved to Berlin, where she eventually took the teachers' exams. Over the next few years Paula Philippson moved to several cities in an attempt to study medicine, including Wiesbaden, Straßburg, Freiburg and finally Breslau. There she completed her studies, and worked for four years in a clinic until she went to Frankfurt, where she worked as a pediatrician. Along with her professional interests, Paula also developed a great interest in Ancient Greece and classical artwork, and took many trips to Greece with her uncle Alfred Philippson and his wife. Paula Philippson never married and died in 1949 in Basel, Switzerland.

Alfred Philippson was the youngest son of Ludwig and Mathilde Philippson, and was born in Bonn on January 1, 1864. He attended secondary school and spent two years studying geography and related fields at the University of Bonn under Ferdinand Freiherr von Richthofen. When Richthofen went to teach at the University of Leipzig in 1884, Alfred Philippson followed him, and received his doctorate in geography in 1886. The next year he traveled to Greece and would spend a significant of time over the next few years studying the geography and people of Greece. He wrote several books on the topic, and eventually returned to the University of Bonn as a lecturer. It was during these years that he also married his first wife, Lina Anna Simoni, in 1892; together they had four children: Mathilde, Ludwig, Dora, and Eva.

In 1899 Alfred Philippson was given the title of professor. After teaching for two years in Bern, he became a full professor (Ordinarius) at the University of Halle and then in Bonn in 1911. His wife had died in 1906, and in 1919 he married Margarete Kirchberger. He was made a Professor Emeritus in 1929. During the years of his teaching and especially after he was named Emeritus he published numerous articles and books in his field, most prominently in the geography of Greece and the Mediterranean as well as of the Rhineland. Some examples of these works include Das Türkische Reich (1915), Das Mittelmeergebiet: seine geographische und kulturelle Eigenart (1922), Das fernste Italien: geographische Reiseskizzen und Studien (1925) and Zur Geographie der Rheinlande (1927). He received many awards for his work, but following the National Socialists' rise to power it became increasingly more difficult for him to travel to accept them. Alfred Philippson was imprisoned in the Theresienstadt concentration camp from 1942-1945, along with his family. During his incarceration he wrote an autobiographical work, Wie ich zum Geographen wurde, which was posthumously published by his descendents in 1996. His multi-volume work Die griechischen Landschaften, begun before he was sent to Theresienstadt, was also published after his death. Alfred Philippson died in Bonn in 1953; his wife died less than two weeks later.

Eva Philippson was the youngest daughter of Alfred and Lina Philippson, and was born in 1899. She held a doctorate in law and was a social worker, and had two works published: Die rechtliche Ordnung des freiwilligen Arbeitsdientes in der Schweiz and Bijdrage over de bevolkungspolitiek van de Duitse bezetter in Nederland en de toepassing in zijn beleid (1951). Eva Philippson died in 1963 in Amsterdam.

From the guide to the Ludwig Philippson Family Collection, 1810-1989, bulk 1840-1953, (Leo Baeck Institute)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Ludwig Philippson Family Collection, 1810-1989, bulk 1840-1953 Leo Baeck Institute.
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Philippson, Alfred, 1864-1953 person
associatedWith Philippson, Eva, 1899-1963 person
associatedWith Philippson, Henriette person
associatedWith Philippson, Julie, 1815-1843 person
associatedWith Philippson, Ludwig, 1811-1889 person
associatedWith Philippson, Mathilde, 1822-1891 person
associatedWith Philippson, Moritz, 1833-1877 person
associatedWith Philippson, Paula, 1874-1949 person
associatedWith Philippson, Phöbus, 1807-1870 person
associatedWith Philipsen family family
Place Name Admin Code Country
Germany
Bonn (Germany)
Switzerland
Magdeburg (Germany)
Brussels (Belgium)
Subject
College teachers
Occupation
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Family

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