Pazmanitengasse
{{Short description|Street in Leopoldstadt, Vienna, Austria}}
Pazmanitengasse is a street in Vienna Leopoldstadt district.
It was named in 1867 after (the students of) the Pázmáneum, the Hungarian Catholic seminary, later university, founded in 1619 by Cardinal Péter Pázmány, an important figure in the Counter-Reformation and the father of modern Hungarian language.{{cn|date=February 2024}}
The street was home to one of the largest synagogues in Vienna{{cite book |last1=Muller |first1=Jerry Z. |title=Professor of Apocalypse: The Many Lives of Jacob Taubes |date=24 May 2022 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-23160-0 |page=14 |language=en}} (the Pazmanitentempel, built since 1910), until its destructions in 1938 during Kristallnacht.{{cn|date=February 2024}}