Siegfried Kapper
Siegfried Kapper was the literary pseudonym of Isaac Salomon Kapper, a Bohemian-born Austrian writer of Jewish origin. Born in Smichow, Kapper studied medicine at Prague University, later completing a Ph.D. at the University of Vienna. Kapper wrote excellent fairy tales and poems, and was one of the leading figures of Czech-Jewish assimilation. Kapper wrote in both German and Czech. He translated Mácha's Máj into German for the first time.
After his death, the Kapper-Society was founded; its aim was Czech-Jewish assimilation and opposition to Zionism and German-Jewish assimilation.Selected works
- "Das Böhmerland"
- "Die Handschriften Altböhmischer Poesien"
- "Die Böhmischen Bäder"
- "Fürst Lazar"
- "Falk"
- "Südslavische Wanderungen"
- "Die Gesänge der Serben"
- "Lazar der Serbenzar". Kapper had a Serbian predecessor in the person of Joksim Nović-Otočanin who published his book on the same theme at Novi Sad in 1847.
- "Befreite Lieder dem Jungen Oesterreich"
- "České Listy"
- "Slavische Melodien"