Albrecht Rosengarten (also Albert Rosengarten, 5 January 1809 – 15 August 1893)[1][2] was among the first Jewish Germans permitted to train and practice as an architect and the first to design synagogues.[3][4] His work was a major influence on the Rundbogenstil design of synagogues in Central Europe and abroad in the second half of the nineteenth century.
^Melhop, Wilhelm (1925) Alt-Hamburgische Bauweise. Hamburg: Boysen, 1925 (2nd ed.), p. 226.
^Saskia Rohde (2006), "Rosengarten, Albert", Das jüdische Hamburg. Ein historisches Nachschlagewerk, Göttingen: Wallstein, p. 218, ISBN3-8353-0004-0
^Reade, Cyril (2007). Mendelssohn to Mendelsohn: Visual Case Studies of Jewish life in Berlin. Studies in German Jewish history. Oxford: Lang. p. 149. ISBN978-3-03910-531-1.