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Constantin Brunner Collection

 Collection
Identifier: LBI/JMB-2009/2 LBI AR 1024

Scope and Contents

This collection combines the Constantin Brunner estates in the archives of the Leo Baeck Institute New York and the Internationaal Constantin Brunner Instituut in The Hague.

The collection contains almost the complete estate of Constantin Brunner (i.e. Leo Wertheimer) as well as a substantial collection of documents and correspondence from the Brunner Circle and about Brunner’s reception. The collection includes ca. 31,000 letters (among them ca. 5,000 letters by and to Brunner), 1,300 manuscripts (among them ca. 200 manuscripts by Brunner), 1,700 published works (among them ca. 200 works by Brunner, new editions and translations of his works), and 1,100 photographs (among them ca. 120 photographs of Brunner).

For example, there are manuscripts by and letters by or to Elisabeth Altkirch, Ernst Altkirch, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Willy Aron, Rose Ausländer, Ferdinand Avenarius, Julius Bab, Eduard Bäumer, Hermann Bahr, Letty Bakker, Bella Ball, Schlomoh Ball, Simson Ball, Moses Barasch, Michael Baraz, Harry Behnsch, Evert Bekius, Martin Beradt, Leo Berg, Gerhard Berger, Aron Berman, Walter Bernard (i.e. Bernard Goldschläger), Lothar (i.e. Eliezer, Lazare) Bickel, Oscar Bie, Otto Julius Bierbaum, Ernst Bittlinger, Margarete Bittlinger, Erna Blankenfeld, Fritz Blankenfeld, Carl Bleibtreu, Richard Bloch, Dora Boehm, Regine Borchardt, Alice Brandt (i.e. Cohn), Nettie Steijns-Bromberg, Leoni Brunner (i.e. Rosalie Auerbach, Wertheimer), Lotte (i.e. Elise Charlotte) Brunner (Müller, Wertheimer, Stigter), Martin Buber, Abraham Buschke, Carl Busse, Max Busyn, Central-Verein deutscher Staatsbüger jüdischen Glaubens, Maria Cohn, Bianca Collani, Ella Cramme, Hellmut Delius, Chiren Disenhaus, Stanislaus von Dunin-Borkowski, Siegfried Eberhardt, Adolf Eckstein, Moritz von Egidy, Elisabeth Ehrlich, Genka Ehrlich, Albert Einstein, Israel Eisenstein (pseud. Friedrich Andermann), Shilo (= Maximilian) Eisenstein, Eduard Engel, Wolfgang Engelhardt, Otto Ernst (Schmidt), Emanuel Essenfeld, Ernst Ewert, Julius Fackenheim, Marc Falek, Gustav Falke, Max Fischbach, Theodor Fontane, Ilse Frapan, Jakob Flickstein, Sigmund Freud, Karl (= Koppel) Fröhlich, Paula Fröhlich, Erich Fromm, Ludwig Fulda, Gerhard Gärtner, Willy Gall, Johannes Gaulke, Carl Gebhardt, Paul Geisler, Anni Gerzon, Jacob Gerzon, Martin Gericke, Norbert Gingold, David Glasberg, Nikolai Graf von Glehn, George Goetz, Hans Goetz, Wolfgang Goetz, Hermann Levin Goldschmidt, Lea Goth, Martin Greif, Genia Grünberg, Phöbus Grünberg, Norbert Gründlinger, Rita Grunbaum, Raymonde Grundlinger-Fieux, Emil Grünfeld, Johannes Hafer, Peggy Halm-van Lith, Kurt Haltke, Maximilian Harden, Frieda Hebel, Werner Heisenberg, Adolf Heitner, Maximilian Herer, Borromäus Herrligkoffer, Siegfried Herrligkoffer, Fritz Hertz, Gertrud Hertz (geb. Müller), Hermann Hesse, Siegfried Hessing, Fritz Heyn, Frans Hiemstra, Mini Hiemstra, Emmy Hirschberg, Annie Höfken-Hempel, Claire Hönig (Sinnreich), Willy Hohmann, Ludwig Holländer, Frieda Hollinger, Paul Hollinger, Inge von Holtzendorff, Helga von Holzendorff, Josef Hurti, Jo Isaacson, Luc Jaller, Hans von Januszkiewicz (i.e. Reinfels), Lotte Jaslowitz, Marianne Joseph, Magdalena Kasch, Bronka Kesten, Meyer Kesten, Friedrich (= Frederick) Kettner, Gustav Kiepenheuer, Arthur Kirchhoff, Jakob Klatzkin, Martin Klein, Truus Klijn, Eberhard König, Toni König, Walther König, Kraushaar, Hildegard Kreitz, Hedwig Lachmann, Gustav Landauer, Tullio Laufer, Sal van Leeuwen, Selma van Leeuwen, Ernst Levy, Arthur Liebert, Liga gegen Imperialismus, Hermann von Lingg, Clara Liquornik, Max Liquornik, Johanna Löwenthal, Manfred Lohrenz, Werner Low (= Löwenstein), Henri Lurié, Paula Magnussen, Peter Magnussen, Thomas Mann, Hans Margolius, Klara Meidler, Erna Menczer (geb. Sonntag), Josef Menczer, Flora Menken, Yehudi Menuhin, Moritz Meyer, Siegfried Miron (i.e. Butterklee), Elise Mönch, Frida Mond, Ludwig Mond, Cécilie Mutzenbecher, Paul Neubauer, Richard Neuburger, Norbert Neumann, Max Nordau, Adolph S. Oko, Fritz Petrowsky, Arthur Pfungst, Ernst Ludwig Pinner, Frieda Pinner, Rozka Pinner (geb. Fischer), Lotte Popper, Heriberta von Poschinger, Hermione von Preuschen, Wilhelm Raabe, Aron Rappaport, Mathilde Rathenau, Walther Rathenau, Abraham Retter, Malka Retter, Eva Reichmann, Fritz Ringler, Fritz (= Frederick) Ritter, Ida (= Ady) Ritter, Julius Rodenberg, Norbert Rosenzweig, Ludwig Rost, Eli (= Ewald, Elijahu) Rottner (= Rudnitzky), Maximilian Rubel, Lucia Sachs, Dow Sadan, Max Sälhof, Mosche Schefi, Opanas Schewtschukewitsch, Ben Schikmoni, Bruno Schmergel, Hilde Schmidt, Richard Schmidt-Cabanis, Mira Schneider (i.e. Rosenheck), Julie Schnepp, Prinz Emil von Schoenaich-Carolath, Heinrich Stümcke, Wilhelm Schwaner, G. Segal, Karl Semel, Fred Serné, Albert Sexauer, v. Seydlitz, Anni Silber, Peter Silbermann, Sally Simon, Daniel Sinnreich, Jacob Sinnreich, Nathan Sinnreich, Leo Sonntag, M. Steinberg, Lore Sterian (geb. Neumann), Moscheh (Moses) Sterian (= Sternschuß), Bertel Stern, Gabriel Stier, Hans Stigter, Piet Stigter, Heinz Stolte, Franzi Strack, Abraham Suhl, van der Tak, Henri Thomas, Völkerversöhnungsbund, Friedel Vogler, Bernhard Weiss, Akiba Wertheimer, Ekiwa Wertheimer, Moses Wertheimer, Rosa Wertheimer, Konrad Westphal, Israel Wiegler, Georg Wienbrack, Heinrich Winnik, B. Wolf, Hans Würzner, Ernst Zabel, Alfred Zerning, Margarete Ziesmer, Ignatz Zwillich, and many more correspondents from the Brunner Circle.

Dates

  • Creation: 1866-2010

Creator

Language of Materials

The collection is in German, English, Dutch, Hebrew, French, and Spanish.

Access Restrictions

Open to researchers.

Access Information

Collection is digitized. Follow the links in the Container List to access the digitized materials.

Collection is available on 129 reels of microfilmed (MF 1135).

Readers may access the microfilmed collection by visiting the Leo Baeck Institut, Archiv im Jüdischen Museum Berlin at the Center for Jewish History.

Use Restrictions

There are no restrictions on the use of the collection.

Biographical Note <extptr actuate="onload" altrender="Portrait of Constantin Brunner (1862-1937)" href="http://digital.cjh.org/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=1453543" show="embed" title="Portrait of Constantin Brunner (1862-1937)"/>

Constantin Brunner

Constantin Brunner (actually named Leo Wertheimer) was born in Altona, Germany on August 27, 1862, the grandson of Rabbi Akiba Wertheimer. He studied at the Jewish Teachers Seminary in Cologne and at the Universities in Berlin and Freiburg 1893-95 with Leo Berg (later Otto Ernst), publisher of the periodical The Observer in Hamburg. Brunner lived since 1895 as an independent academic with his family in Berlin; 1913-30 in Potsdam and after l933 in exile in The Hague, where he died on August 27, 1937.

With his Magnum Opus Die Lehre von den Geistigen und vom Volk (1908) he conceptualized a philosophical System connected to Spinoza and against Kant, Nietzsche and academic philosophy. Brunner fostered concrete and practical consequences of his ideal, the “spiritual reflection.” In Our Christ (1921) he sketched a concept of the “Spiritual”, thus engaging in Christian and Jewish debates about Jesus.

Politically Brunner was a protagonist of emancipation. He took a determined position against German nationalism and racial theory, but also against Zionism (Der Judenhaß und die Juden 1918.) Brunner considered himself a “recluse” and did not participate in academic discussions.

Since the publication of his main work in 1908, but especially due to his personality, Brunner attracted the spiritually young, as well as intellectuals, politicians and artists, thus creating the “Brunner-Circle”. These friends, who corresponded with him and visited him, made Brunners’ practical stipulation their own. Apart from Berlin, where a Constantin Brunner Society was formed in 1925, the main center was in Czernowitz, (the “Ethical Seminar” founded by Friedrich Kettner in 1919.) Since 1933 his followers dispersed all over the world. In 1947 they founded the “International Brunner Institute” in The Hague to publish Brunner’s work once again and to advocate his memory.

Lotte Brunner

Lotte (Elise Charlotte) Müller was born on May 1, 1883, the daughter of Georg Müller and Rosalie (called 'Leonie') Auerbach. After her mother separated from her father and married Constantin Brunner in 1895, Lotte and her sister Gertrud, who was one year younger, grew up in the home of her mother and her stepfather; her younger brother Hans lived with his father. Lotte Brunner was introduced to literature at an early age by her stepfather. Later on she worked as a teacher, author and translator. She lived most of her life in the home of her parents. She was an adherent of the philosophy of Constantin Brunner and one of his most important dialogue partners. She kept a diary for 30 years, chronicling the intense exchange of ideas about literature and philosophy with her stepfather. After she emigrated with her parents to The Hague, she married Piet Stigter, a Dutch man, in l934. He died in l938 following an operation. When her stepfather became seriously ill, Lotte Brunner became his prime caregiver. After his death she devoted herself to the administration of his estate. She also published several small philosophical scripts and a large number of poems. When The Netherlands were occupied by the Germans and the situation for Jews became very precarious, Lotte Brunner and her mother returned to Germany. Shortly thereafter though, they decided to return to the Hague.Presumably Lotte Brunner was deported to the concentration camp Westerbork in 1942 and from there to Sobibor, where she was murdered April 30, 1943 at the age of 59. Her 84 year old mother Leonie had perished there a few weeks earlier.

Lothar Bickel

Lothar (Eliezer Lazare) Bickel, was born May 8, 1902 in Chisilau, Bukowina. He belonged to the Zionist Youth movement Hashomer Hazair until l920. After graduating from Gymnasium in Czernowtiz, he studied medicine in Bucharest. Before he was 18 years old, he discovered the works of Constantin Brunner, thus getting an introduction into his philosophy. Bickel got in touch with Brunner, and a lively exchange of letters developed between the two. In 1927 Lothar Bikel travelled to Berlin and met Constantine Brunner for the first time. Bikel worked in Berlin as an assistant physician in the gynecological department of the Charité. Later on he became the leading physician at a hospital in Fürstenwalde. He published several academic papers as well as a little book Zur Renaissance der Philosophie. Shortly before becoming a full professor, he felt forced to leave Germany, due to the rise of the National Socialist Party. He returned to Romania, where he continued to practice gynecology. In Bucharest he founded a Brunner-Circle, to which he contributed decisively. In the spring of 1937 Brunner named him curator of his literary estate. After Brunner’s death he saw to the publication of his work Unser Charakter oder Ich bin der Richtige! (l939) followed by the collection of essays Kunst, Philosophie, Mystik (l940.) After World War II, in 1947, Bickel emigrated from Bucharest to Canada, where he managed to publish a short version of Brunner’s work Der entlarvte Mensch. Lothar Bickel died on April 23, 1951 due to a heart condition. During his lifetime his own work Probleme und Ziele des Denkens (l939) was published. Other books, Wirklichkeit und Wahrheit des Denkens (1953) Kultur (1956) Das Leben – eine Aufgabe (1959) as well as The unity of body and mind (1960) were published posthumously.

Israel Eisenstein

Israel Eisenstein was born March 23, 1903 in the Galician town Zurawno. He studied medicine and made his doctorate in Würzburg. In the middle of the nineteen thirties he wrote Kritik der Abstammungslehre. He had sent the manuscript to Constantin Brunner who was very impressed. The book was published in 1937 under Brunner’s suggested title Irrtum und Wahrheit der Biologie (under Eisenstein’s’ pseudonym Friedrich Andermann.) Israel Eisenstein belonged to the Brunner study group led by Friedrich Kettner in Czernowitz., the so-called Ethical Seminar, which emerged into the Brunner-Freundeskreis, which included Lothar Bickel and the poet Rose Ausländer. Israel Eisenstein emigrated to Palestine in l947, where he practiced medicine. He wrote numerous small scripts and essays, and he lectured a group of Israeli Brunner-friends. He also volunteered at the Internationaal Brunner Instituut. In l989, together with Heinz Hermann Stolte he published the book Ein neuer Beitrag zum Verständnis Spinozas. Aufgrund der Lehre Constantin Brunners. Israel Eisenstein died in 1991.

Shilo Eisenstein

Shilo Eisenstein, the brother of Israel Eisenstein, attended regularly the meetings of the Brunner circle in Czernowitz. In early 1937 he visited Constantin Brunner in The Hague. Brunner was impressed by Shilo Eisenstein’s writings, and even more so by his personality. Magdalena Kasch described him in her chronicles as an especially modest man. The Brunner Czernowitz circle came to a violent end when a Ghetto was erected, followed by deportations. After the German occupation of Romania, the followers of the Czernowitz circle such as Rose Ausländer and the married couple Phoebus and Genia Grünberg were forced into the newly erected Ghetto. Shilo Eisenstein was interned in a slave labor camp. After the war the majority of the surviving Czernowitz-Brunner circle including Shilo Eisenstein gathered again in Bucharest. This group, whose membership was considerably reduced by emigration, continued to exist until the nineteen eighties. Shilo Eisenstein lived in Israel, where he died.

Magdalena Kasch

Magdalena Kasch was born 1885 in Niendorf on the Baltic Sea, the daughter of Hans Heinrich David Kasch and his wife Sophia Dorothea, née Schernitt. She was a baptized Lutheran. At the age of 25, she read Constantin Brunner’s main opus, Die Lehre von den Geistigen und vom Volke which made a deep impression on her. She contacted Brunner, and in 1912 she met with her ‘Master” for the very first time. She became a faithful and convinced adherent of Constantin Brunner and his philosophy. Magdalena Kasch owned a bookstore and a library in Berlin-Neukölln, which was boycotted in l933, and she was forced to sell it under duress. She immigrated to the Netherlands, where she lived with Brunner and his wife Leoni under one roof. Together with his step-daughter Lotte, Kasch cared for him with great devotion until his death. When German troops invaded the Netherlands, she hid the manuscripts of the philosopher from the Nazis. After the war, she participated in founding the Internatinaal Constantin Brunner Instituut, and she acted as the secretary of the organization for many years. In a memorial publication of the Institute, she was called a “woman whose entire life was devoted to the work of Constantin Brunner, who saved it during World War II, and who gave all her energy to its republishing.” In l976 Magdalena Kasch received an Order of the Merit from the city of The Hague. She died there on February 11, 1981 at the age of 96 and left all her personal possessions to the Internatinaal Constantin Brunner Instituut.

Selma van Leeuwen

Selma van Leeuwen, née Gerzon was born on October l8, 1880 in Cologne and spent her childhood and youth there. In l906 she moved to Amsterdam and then to Rotterdam. There she married Salomon von Leeuwen in l908; they had two children. Selma de Leeuwen occupied a leading position in the department store Gerzon in Rotterdam. She carried a steady correspondence with Constantin Brunner and apparently was his most important contact, promoter and finally organizer of his emigration to the Netherlands in l933. Selma de Leeuwen’s husband Salomon died in 1939 after a long illness. On September 28, 1943 she was deported to the concentration camp Bergen-Belsen together with her daughter Rita and her family. Shortly before the liberation of the camp, she was supposed to be sent to Theresienstadt. By then the US army and the Russians had advanced so far, that the transport never managed to get through, and finally Russian units stopped the train. Selma de Leeuwen survived the war and returned to the Netherlands. After spending six years in the United States, where her son and daughter had emigrated, she returned to the Netherlands in 1952. Selma van Leeuwen died in Rotterdam in l972.

Henri Lurié

Henry Lurié, born in l905, was a member of the Czernowitz Ethical Seminar. Since l932 he lived with his family in Paris, where he worked as an engineer until his emigration to the USA in l957. Next to his main job he translated the texts of Constantin Brunner into French. Already in 1932 the work Spinoza contre Kant - et la cause de la Véritée spirituelle was published. Lurié founded the Cercle Omnia Animata, whose members discussed Spinoza and Brunner and translated Spinoza Ethics and the works of Brunner into French. After his emigration to the United States, Lurié became an associate professor of engineering at C.W. Post College (Long Island, New York.) He continued to work as a translator and published several literary works, among them Chain Mathematics. Introduction and typical Problems (l961), Spinoza, The Ethica (l964), Trilogy of Christianity (l965), and Presence de Goethe. Choix lyrique(l965). In the U.S. Lurié belonged to Walter Bernard’s Brunner-Circle. Henri Lurié died on August 1994 In Cliffside Park, New Jersey.

Extent

65 Linear Feet (20 linear meters)

Abstract

This Collection contains the almost complete estate of Constantin Brunner (a.k.a Leo Wertheimer) as well as a comprehensive collection of documents and especially letters from the Brunner circle and those pertaining to the Brunner reception.

Arrangement

This collection is arranged in 6 series.

  1. Series I: Manuscripts, 1879-2006
  2. Subseries 1: Brunner, Constantin (BrCo), 1879-1980
  3. Subseries 2: Brunner, Lotte (BrLo), 1903-1972
  4. Subseries 3: Bickel, Lothar (BiLo), 1921-1971
  5. Subseries 4: Eisenstein, Israel (EiIs), 1932-1988
  6. Subseries 5: Eisenstein, Shilo (EiSh), 1951-1996
  7. Subseries 6: Kasch, Magdalena (KaMa), 1912-1981
  8. Subseries 7: Leeuwen van, Selma (LeSe), 1908-1954
  9. Subseries 8: Lurié, Henri (LuHe), 1920-1992
  10. Subseries 9: No Names (N. N.), 1919-1978
  11. Subseries 10: Other Manuscripts, 1892-2006
  12. Series II: Letters written by and to Constantin Brunner, 1897-1937
  13. Series III: Correspondence of Members of the Brunner Circle, 1889-1987
  14. Subseries 1: Letters in chronological order, 1889-1987
  15. Subseries 2: Undated letters in alphabetical order, undated
  16. Subseries 3: Collection of letters, 1916-1983
  17. Subseries 4: Pinner, Ernst Ludwig, 1910-1947
  18. Subseries 5: Bickel, Lothar, 1919-1951
  19. Subseries 6: Brunner, Lotte, 1923-1943
  20. Subseries 7: Sterian, Moscheh, 1924-1967
  21. Subseries 8: Bremer Kreis, 1981
  22. Subseries 9: “Ethisches Seminar” Czernowitz, 1922-1929
  23. Subseries 10: Internationaal Constantin Brunner Institute, 1947-1987
  24. Series IV: Clippings, 1891-2010
  25. Subseries 1: Constantin Brunner, 1892-1971
  26. Subseries 2: Other Authors, 1891-2010
  27. Series V: Miscellaneous, 1926
  28. Series VI: Photographs, 1866-1994
  29. Subseries 1: Constantin Brunner, 1866-1937
  30. Subseries 2: Constantin Brunner with others, 1866-1936
  31. Subseries 3: Relatives of Constantin Brunner, 1890-1942
  32. Subseries 4: Apartments of Constantin Brunner, 1908-1993
  33. Subseries 5: Albums of Constantin Brunner, 1932-1962
  34. Subseries 6: Group photographs of various Brunner Circles, 1918-1994
  35. Subseries 7: Members of the Brunner Circle, 1900-1992
  36. Subseries 8: Other Albums, 1960

Related Material

Books by Constantin Brunner and by other authors of the Brunner Circle are located in the Library of the Jewish Museum Berlin.

Title
Guide to the Papers of Constantin Brunner, 1866-2010   LBI/JMB-2009/2 LBI AR 1024
Author
Processed by Jana Mechelhoff-Herezi, Jürgen Stenzel (bio Constantin Brunner) and Jörg Waßmer
Date
© 2012
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Description is in English and German.

Revision Statements

  • August 2012: Links to digital objects added in Series IV: Photographs, 1866-1994.
  • July 2013:: Edited Biographical Note regarding Lotte Brunner.

Repository Details

Part of the Leo Baeck Institute Repository

Contact:
15 West 16th Street
New York NY 10011 United States