Hungarian scholar and Orientalist; son of the Hebrew writer Simon; born in Liptó-Szent-Miklós, Hungary, Jan. 12, 1850; he attended the Hebrew schools in Szucsán and in his native town, and passed through the higher classes of the Evangelical Lyceum at Presburg from 1863 to 1867, at the same time diligently prosecuting Talmudic studies. In 1867 he began the study of philosophy and of Oriental languages—the latter under Vámbéry—at the University of Budapest, and also attended the lectures on the Talmud given by Samuel Löb Brill. In 1868, he went to Breslau, where he continued the study of philosophy and philology at the University, and that of theology at the Jewish-Theological Seminary. He graduated at the University of Leipsic in 1870. His graduation thesis, "Nizâmî's Leben und Werke, und der Zweite Theil des Nizâmî'schen Alexanderbuches," appeared in 1871, and was translated into English in 1873 by S. Robinson. This was afterward incorporated in the collection entitled "Persian Poetry for English Readers." In 1876, Bacher graduated as rabbi, and shortly afterward was appointed to the rabbinate in Szegedin, which had become vacant in consequence of the death of Leopold Löw.
On July 1, 1877, together with Moses Bloch and David Kaufmann, he was appointed by the Hungarian government to the professorship of the newly created Landesrabbinerschule of Budapest. This institution was inaugurated Oct. 4, 1877, Bacher delivering the address in the name of the faculty, and since that time he has been teacher of the Biblical sciences, of Jewish history, and of various other branches at that institution. Bacher was for a time in 1878 field-chaplain in the Austro-Hungarian army, being delegated to the headquarters of the army of occupation in Bosnia. The congregation of Pest appointed Bacher director of the Talmud-Torah School in 1885, and he has been connected with that institution ever since. In 1884 Bacher and JosephBánóczi founded the Judæo-Hungarian review, the "Magyar Zsidó Szemle," which they conjointly edited during the first seven years, and it is still the only Jewish review in Hungary. In 1894 he assisted in founding the Judæo-Hungarian Literary Society, Izraelita Magyar Jrodami Társulat, of which he became vice-president in 1898. This society instituted a new translation of the Bible into Hungarian—the first complete translation due solely to Jewish initiative; and the first two volumes of this work (the Pentateuch and the earlier prophets), edited by Bacher in collaboration with S. Krauss and T. Bánóczi, have already appeared. The first five year-books of the society were edited by Bacher in conjunction with F. Mezey and afterward with D. Bánóczi.
Voluminous Author.Bacher is the author of the following works:
Bacher has also been the author of numerous criticisms and reviews in periodicals devoted, like his books, to Hebrew philology, history of Biblical exegesis, and of the Haggadah. The magazines, etc., in which his contributions have appeared are the following:
His Criticisms and Reviews.M. E. Stern, "Kokbe Yiẓḥaḳ," 1865-68; "Monatsschrift," 1869-92; "Izraelit Közlöny," 1869-70; Rahmer's "Israelitische Wochenschrift und Jüdische Literaturblätter," 1870-76; I. Kobak's "Jeschurun," 1871; I. Reich, "Beth-Lechem," Jahrbuch, 1873; "Ha-Ḥabaẓelet," 1873; "Z. D. M. G." 1874-1902; Berliner's "Magazin für die Geschichte und Literatur des Judenthums," 1880-94; "Rev. Et. Juives," 1882-1902; "Magyar Zsidó Szemle," 1884-1901; W. R. Harper, "Hebraica," 1884-93; Stade, "Zeitschrift" 1885-1901; "Jew. Quart. Rev." 1890-1901; Königsberger, "Monatsblätter," 1891; Évkönyv, "Jahrbuch des Ungarisch-Israelitischen Literaturvereins," published in Hungarian, 1895-1901; "Oẓar ha-Sefarim"; "Gräber's Magazin für Hebrẓische Literatur," 1896; "Zeit. f. Hebr. Bibl." 1896-1900; "Deutsche Literaturzeitung," 1898-1901; S. H. Horodeczky's "Ha-Goren"; "Abhandlung über die Wissenschaft des Judenthums," 1898-1900; "Ha-Eshkol," "Hebräisches Jahrbuch," 1898; "Jahrbuch für Jüdische Gesch. und Literatur," 1899-1900; "Theologische Literaturzeitung," 1900-1; "Keleti Szemle" ("Revue Orientale," 1902); "The Expository Times," 1900. Further contributions of Bacher appeared in the festival publications to the seventieth birthday of Graetz, 1887, and the eightieth birthday of Steinschneider, 1896; in the festival publication in honor of Daniel Chwolsohn, 1899; and in the memorial book published on the anniversary of Samuel David Luzzatto's birthday, Berlin, 1900, and in that published in memory of Prof. David Kaufmann, 1900. Bacher has also contributed the article "Levita" to the "Allgemeine Encyklopädie" of Ersch and Gruber, and the articles "Sanhedrin" and "Synagoge" to the last volume—not yet published—of Hastings and Selbie's "Dictionary of the Bible."
Categories: [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]