Pfersee is a part of the city of Augsburg, Bavaria with some 25.000 inhabitants on the western shore of river Wertach. In 1911 Pfersee was incorporated to Augsburg.
![](../I/Gravemarker_of_the_Ulmo_family_at_Jewish_cemetery_Pfersee_Kriegshaber_in_Augsburg_Germany.JPG.webp)
The name Pfersee probably derives from “fert” (Furt), meaning a ford (crossing).
Pfersee is first mentioned in 8th century, but there also are important archeological findings such as a brazen horse-head which was part of an equestrian statue, probably dedicated to emperor Hadrian.
From 1560 until 1875 in Pfersee there was a noted Jewish community with a number of renowned chairmen, rabbis and scholars, mainly from the Ulmo (Ginsburg) family, who until the beginning of the 19th century was in possession of the so-called “Pfersee manuscript”, the oldest almost complete surviving handwritten edition of the Babylonian Talmud, dated from 14th century, which now is at the Bavarian State Library in Munich.[1] in 1627 the Jewish community of Pfersee along with the neighboring Jewish communities of Steppach and Kriegshaber established a common Jewish cemetery, today usually attributed to Kriegshaber, which became part of Augsburg in 1916 as well.
References
External links
- https://web.archive.org/web/20110218044050/http://www.bsb-muenchen.de/Babylonischer-Talmud.2519.0.html
- http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/images/Images%20302/CEM-KRI-BURIAL-REGISTER-ALPHABETICAL.pdf
- http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/images/Images%20302/CEM-KRI-BURIAL-REGISTER-SPATIAL.pdf
48°22′00″N 10°52′05″E / 48.36667°N 10.86806°E