Paul Hirsch (bibliophile)
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Paul Adolf Hirsch (24 February 1881,
Frankfurt am Main Frankfurt am Main () is the most populous city in the States of Germany, German state of Hesse. Its 773,068 inhabitants as of 2022 make it the List of cities in Germany by population, fifth-most populous city in Germany. Located in the forela ...
25 November 1951,
Cambridge, England Cambridge ( ) is a city and non-metropolitan district in the county of Cambridgeshire, England. It is the county town of Cambridgeshire and is located on the River Cam, north of London. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census, the population of ...
) was a German industrialist. He was also a musician, bibliophile and musicologist who assembled the largest private music library in Europe. The Hirsch Collection is now housed at the
British Library The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. Based in London, it is one of the largest libraries in the world, with an estimated collection of between 170 and 200 million items from multiple countries. As a legal deposit li ...
.


Biography

Paul Hirsch was born into a wealthy Jewish mercantile family, the fourth of five children of Anna Pauline (née Mayer) and Ferdinand Hirsch (1834–1916). He had two brothers— Robert von Hirsch (18831977), a noted art collector, and Carl Siegmund Hirsch, a district court judge who died in 1938 in the
Buchenwald concentration camp Buchenwald (; 'beech forest') was a German Nazi concentration camp established on Ettersberg hill near Weimar, Nazi Germany, Germany, in July 1937. It was one of the first and the largest of the concentration camps within the Altreich (pre-1938 ...
. Ferdinand Hirsch founded ''Hirsch and Company'', an iron works, in 1867. After completing school, Paul Hirsch entered the family business, training in England and France, which also broadened his acquaintance with musicians and collectors. In 1911 he married (1889–1969), daughter of a Frankfurt banker. They lived first in Beethovenstraße and later at (destroyed in 1944). They had two sons and two daughters. From 1930 to 1933 Hirsch was vice president of the Frankfurt Chamber of Industry and Commerce. He was also served on the advisory board for export trade, the foreign trade committee of the German Industry and Commerce Association, and chaired the foreign trade office. Hirsch belonged to the and co-founded the Frankfurt Bibliophile Society (Frankfurter Bibliophilen-Gesellschaft) in 1922, serving as chairman. He was a member of the
German People's Party The German People's Party (German: , DVP) was a conservative-liberal political party during the Weimar Republic that was the successor to the National Liberal Party of the German Empire. Along with the left-liberal German Democratic Party (DDP), ...
. Hirsch died on 23 November 1951 in Cambridge.


Building the collection

Hirsch, an accomplished violinist who had studied with Adolf Rebner, took a keen interest in publications concerning all aspects of music—performance, history and theory. In 1896 he began to collect historical musical works, focusing on early printed editions of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven, 19th-century opera and early theoretical works. He participated in the ''Second Specialist Music Exhibition'' at the Leipzig Crystal Palace in 1909. In 1922 Hirsch hired musicologist Kathi Meyer (later Meyer-Baer) as a research assistant and opened the library to the public two days a week. Hirsch and Meyer began compiling a catalog of the library contents. In 1928 and 1929 Hirsch purchased the library of Berlin music critic at auction. With this addition of approximately 15,000 items to the 5,000 he already possessed, he now owned the largest and best-kept private music library in Europe. Housed in a wing of the house on Neue Mainzer Straße, the library had its own concert hall. Hirsch organized over four hundred chamber music evenings, during which he often played first violin in his "house quartet", which on occasion would include his friend Ludwig Rottenberg and Rottenberg's son-in-law
Paul Hindemith Paul Hindemith ( ; ; 16 November 189528 December 1963) was a German and American composer, music theorist, teacher, violist and conductor. He founded the Amar Quartet in 1921, touring extensively in Europe. As a composer, he became a major advo ...
. The library was a valuable resource for musicians, musicologists and students. The visitor register for the years 1923 to 1935 lists many people well known in Frankfurt's musical circles, including Licco Amar, Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno, conductor and music critic Artur Holde,
Erich Itor Kahn Erich Itor Kahn (23 July 1905 - 5 March 1956) was a German composer of Jewish descent, who emigrated to the United States during the years of National Socialism. Biography He was born in Rimbach in the Odenwald, the son of Leopold Kahn, a mathema ...
, pianist Emma Lübbecke-Job, singer Carl Rehfuss, Ludwig Rottenberg,
Hermann Scherchen Hermann Scherchen (21 June 1891 – 12 June 1966) was a German conductor, who was principal conductor of the city orchestra of Winterthur from 1922 to 1950. He promoted contemporary music, beginning with Schoenberg's '' Pierrot Lunaire'', follow ...
, Mátyás Seiber and Helmut Walcha. The list also records visitors who came from as far away as Tokyo. Other friends in Hirsch's musical circle included Wilhelm Furtwängler, Bruno Walter and Stefan Zweig. Hirsch's collection encompasses four and a half centuries of Western music. A few of the items that he was most proud of, according to librarian and musicologist Alec Hyatt King, were: * Jean Gerson's ''Collectorium super magnificat'', printed in Esslingen am Neckar, Germany, by Conrad Fyner in 1473, which contains the first musical notes ever printed. * The only known copy of Francesco Caza's ''Tractato vulgare de canto figurato'' (Milan, 1492) * The ''Glückwünschende Kirchen Motetto'', also known as ''Gott ist mein König, BWV 71, Gott ist mein König'', Johann Sebastian Bach's earliest published work, printed in nineteen parts at Mühlhausen in 1708. One of only three known copies. * Bach's own copy of ''Partitas for keyboard (Bach), Clavier-Übung I'' with corrections in his hand. * One of two known copies of the first edition of ''La Marseillaise'', printed in 1792. * Edward Elgar's ''May-Song'', with decorations by Walter Crane, one of five or ten copies on vellum, 1901. Opera is particularly well represented, as noted by King: Between 1922 and 1934 Hirsch issued facsimile editions of some library items, edited by Johannes Wolf (musicologist), Johannes Wolf and published by Martin Breslauer. The German National Library has cataloged eleven of these facsimiles and reprints.


Emigration

When the National Socialists Adolf Hitler's rise to power#Seizure of control (1931–1933), seized power in 1933, Hirsch's situation became difficult because of his Jewish heritage. The Bibliophile Societies came under the control of the Reich Chamber of Culture, where Jews could no longer hold board positions. In 1934 Hirsch resigned as chair of the Frankfurt Society and joined the Kulturbund Deutscher Juden, Kulturbundes Deutscher Juden. Early in 1936, Hirsch wrote to his friend Edward Joseph Dent, Edward J. Dent, Professor of Music at the University of Cambridge, proposing a contractual loan of the music library to the university. Dent helped arrange the loan and facilitated the emigration of Hirsch's family to Cambridge later that year. Despite efforts by Frankfurt mayor Friedrich Krebs (mayor), Friedrich Krebs to prevent export or to confiscate the music library, Hirsch was able to transfer almost all of it to Cambridge in several train cars. Hirsch's collection was placed in the newly built Cambridge University Library where it took up almost of shelving on the fifth floor. Despite his expatriation from Germany in 1938, Hirsch was briefly interned as an enemy alien in 1940, which worsened his already fragile health. This, in combination with his strained finances, led to his decision to sell the music library. In 1946, with assistance from Dent, he sold it to the British Museum for £120,000 () although he continued to purchase additional items which he donated to the museum. In 1973, the British Library Act 1972 created the
British Library The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. Based in London, it is one of the largest libraries in the world, with an estimated collection of between 170 and 200 million items from multiple countries. As a legal deposit li ...
, which took ownership of the British Museum library.


Selected bibliography

Hirsch wrote a number of papers about items in his library. A 75-page catalog of works by W. A. Mozart was published in 1906 in honor of the composer's 150th birthday. In 1928 he published the first volume of the ''Katalog der Musikbibliothek Paul Hirsch''. He also published several articles about the iron business.


In German

* * * * * * * * The first three volumes were originally published by Martin Breslauer, Berlin, and were reprinted by Morsum/Sylt:Cicero Presse of Hamburg in 1993. The fourth volume, which includes addenda to the first three, was completed in Cambridge with the help of Edith Schnapper and Hirsch's daughters, Irene Hartogs-Hirsch and Renate Schuster. ** Vol. 1: Theoretische Drucke bis 1800. (1928) ** Vol. 2: Opern-Partituren. (1930) ** Vol. 3: Instrumental- und Vokalmusik bis etwa 1830. (1936) ** Vol. 4: Erstausgaben, Chorwerke in Partitur, Gesamtausgaben, Nachschlagewerke etc. Ergänzungen zu Bd. 1–3. Cambridge University Press (1947)


In English

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Notes


References


Sources

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Further reading

* * * * * * * A comprehensive listing of music in the collection * A comprehensive listing of books in the collection {{DEFAULTSORT:Hirsch, Paul 1881 births 1951 deaths German bibliophiles German industrialists People from Frankfurt People from Cambridge 20th-century German Jews German emigrants to the United Kingdom Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to the United Kingdom