Max Abraham (June 3, 1831 â December 8, 1900) was a German music publisher.
Max Abraham attended the Municipal Gymnasium in Danzig. He studied music in his hometown of Danzig and economics in London. He studied law in Heidelberg, Bonn, and Berlin. He passed his exams in Berlin and was awarded a doctorate in law in Heidelberg without having to submit a written dissertation. During his studies, he became a member of the Alemannia Bonn fraternity in 1851.
Born in Danzig, Abraham became a partner in the C.F. Peters publishing house in 1863, taking over as its sole proprietor in 1880. He founded its Edition Peters, and was succeeded as head of the firm by his nephew, Henri Hinrichsen.
In 1873, Abraham acquired an undeveloped property on Leipziger Talstrasse and had the architect Otto Brückwald build a residential and commercial building on it. In 1874, this became the headquarters of the music publisher CF Peters. In this house there is now an Edvard Grieg memorial. In 1893, Max Abraham donated the in Leipzig, which opened on January 2, 1894. It is considered the first of its kind in Germany and was an inspiration for Wilhelm Altmann to create an even more comprehensive collection
He died in Leipzig by committing suicide.
Since 1910 (with an interruption from 1935 to 1945), AbrahamstraÃÂe in the Neulindenau district of Leipzig has been named in his honor.
The Abraham/Hinrichsen family tomb at LeipzigâÂÂs Südfriedhof was leveled in the 1980s; since 1992, a monument has marked its former location.