Günzburg (surname)
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Günzburg is a surname of Bavarian origin.
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[edit] History of the name
The Günzburg (Russian: Гинзбург, Гинцбург Ginzburg, Gintsburg; גינזבורג) family originated in the town of Günzburg, Bavaria. It is believed that the family went there from the city of Ulm, Württemberg, and that for this reason the best-known progenitor of the family and some of his immediate descendants, as well as certain others, called themselves "Ulma-Günzburg". The "Ulm, Ulma, Ullman, Ulmann, and Ulam" families are supposed to be branches of the Günzburg family. Kaufmann ("Rabbi Jair Chajim Bacharach und Seine Ahnen", p. 45, Treves, 1894) proves that "Gunz" and "Gaunz" are simply variants of "Günzburg."
It is also an Ashkenazi Jewish surname. When, early in the emancipation period, the Jews of Russia and of Austria were ordered by their governments to adopt family names, it was natural that many of them should choose a name so respected and pleasing as that of Günzburg. There is on record a lawsuit instituted by Baer Günzburg of Grodno against a Jewish family of that city who had adopted the same name under the decree of 1804 (Maggid, "Toledot Mishpechoth Gintzburg," p. 239, St. Petersburg, 1899). The court sustained the right of Jewish families to adopt any name they chose, and the number of Günzburg families accordingly increased.
[edit] People named Gunzburg or variant spellings
- Baron Joseph Günzburg, (1812-1878) Russian-Jewish banker, philanthropist and communal leader
- Baron Horace Günzburg, (1833-1909) Russian-Jewish banker, philanthropist and communal leader
- Baron David Günzburg, (1857-1910) Russian orientalist and Jewish communal leader
- Baron Nicolas de Gunzburg, (1904-1981) socialite, editor, actor, producer
- Nico Gunzburg, (1882–1984) Belgian lawyer and criminologist
- Alexander Ginzburg (1936-2002), Soviet-era Russian dissident
[edit] References
- Eisenstadt-Wiener, Da‘at Qedošim, pp. 198-212, St. Petersburg, 1897-98;
- Belinsohn, Shillume Emune Yisrael, Odessa, 1898;
- Belinsohn, Ein Wort über die Familie Guenzburg, St. Petersburg, 1858. The chief source is Maggid's work, quoted above.
- This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.
[edit] See also
- Ginsberg/Ginsburg (most common variants in the USA)
- Günsberg, municipality in the district of Lebern, canton of Solothurn, Switzerland
- Balm bei Günsberg, municipality in the district of Lebern, canton of Solothurn, Switzerland