Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
- (-) Remove print filter print
- book (49) Apply book filter
- and (47) Apply and filter
- in (31) Apply in filter
- 15 (23) Apply 15 filter
- 15th-16th (23) Apply 15th-16th filter
- 16 (23) Apply 16 filter
- centuri (23) Apply centuri filter
- earli (23) Apply earli filter
- th (23) Apply th filter
- document (22) Apply document filter
- documents, (22) Apply documents, filter
- emissari (22) Apply emissari filter
- eretz (22) Apply eretz filter
- institut (22) Apply institut filter
- institutions, (22) Apply institutions, filter
- israel (22) Apply israel filter
- jerusalem (22) Apply jerusalem filter
- ledger (22) Apply ledger filter
- letter (22) Apply letter filter
- materi (22) Apply materi filter
- of (22) Apply of filter
- poland (20) Apply poland filter
- russia (20) Apply russia filter
- russia-poland (20) Apply russia-poland filter
- russiapoland (20) Apply russiapoland filter
- slavita (20) Apply slavita filter
- zhitomir (20) Apply zhitomir filter
- countri (6) Apply countri filter
- eastern (6) Apply eastern filter
- china (5) Apply china filter
- east (5) Apply east filter
- east, (5) Apply east, filter
- far (5) Apply far filter
- india (5) Apply india filter
- item (5) Apply item filter
- the (5) Apply the filter
Displaying 37 - 48 of 76
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $500
Sold for: $1,875
Including buyer's premium
Machzor (Part 2) for the Three Festivals - Succot, Pesach and Shavuot, as per the customs of Reisen and Lithuania, Poland, Pihem and Mehrin. With a commentary and with Yiddish-Deutsch translation. Nusach Sefarad. Zhitomir, 1866. Printed by Rabbi Chanina Lipa and Rabbi Yehoshua Heshel Shapira, grandsons of the Slavita rabbi.
136 leaves (listed in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book is a copy without Leaves 46-47 which appear in this copy). 30 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming. Old binding with worming and damages.
136 leaves (listed in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book is a copy without Leaves 46-47 which appear in this copy). 30 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming. Old binding with worming and damages.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $800
Unsold
Two machzorim for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, printed in Zhitomir.
1. Machzor for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, as per the customs of Poland-Lithuania, Reisen, Pihem and Mehrin [Nusach Ashkenaz]. Zhitomir, 1862. Printed by Rabbi Chanina Lipa and Rabbi Yehoshua Shapira, grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi.
164 leaves. 26 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear, light worming. On the last leaves are restorations of damaged text. Half-leather elaborate binding.
2. Machzor for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, as per the customs of Poland-Lithuania, Reisen, Pihem and Mehrin, [Nusach Sefarad - Chassidic. Some of the variations of Nusach Sefarad are in parentheses, therefore on the title page, the machzor is described as set according to Ashkenazi tradition]. Zhitomir, 1874. Printed by R' Yitzchak Moshe Bakst.
157 leaves, [mispagination]. 29.5 cm. Fair condition. Wear and stains, restored damages to margins, with damages affecting text. Half-leather ornate binding.
1. Machzor for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, as per the customs of Poland-Lithuania, Reisen, Pihem and Mehrin [Nusach Ashkenaz]. Zhitomir, 1862. Printed by Rabbi Chanina Lipa and Rabbi Yehoshua Shapira, grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi.
164 leaves. 26 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear, light worming. On the last leaves are restorations of damaged text. Half-leather elaborate binding.
2. Machzor for Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, as per the customs of Poland-Lithuania, Reisen, Pihem and Mehrin, [Nusach Sefarad - Chassidic. Some of the variations of Nusach Sefarad are in parentheses, therefore on the title page, the machzor is described as set according to Ashkenazi tradition]. Zhitomir, 1874. Printed by R' Yitzchak Moshe Bakst.
157 leaves, [mispagination]. 29.5 cm. Fair condition. Wear and stains, restored damages to margins, with damages affecting text. Half-leather ornate binding.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $1,250
Including buyer's premium
Collection of seven books (including siddurim and Tehillim) printed by the Shapira family - sons of the Korets-Slavita Rebbes:
· Siddur Korban Mincha V'Seder Tehillim im Ma'amadot. [Slavita?, unknown edition. Lacking title page and several other first pages of the compilation of laws. Separate title page of Tehillim and for Ma'amadot]. · Siddur Tikunei Shabbat. [Slavita, unknown edition. Copy lacking at beginning and at end. Very damaged]. · Tehillim with Ivri-teitch (Yiddish) translation and Seder Ma'amadot. [Zhitomir, c. 1850-1860]. Lacking title page and 2 leaves at the end of Seder Ma'amadot. Wear and use stains. · Chovat HaLevavot, Part 2 of Rabbeinu Bechaye HaZaken. Zhitomir, 1850. Printed by the Shapira brothers, grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. Worming. · Mishnayot Seder Taharot with the commentaries of Rabbi Ovadya of Bartenura and Ikar Tosfot Yom Tov. Zhitomir, 1862. Printed by Rabbi Aryeh Leib Shapira. Good-fair condition. · Tz'ena U'Rena on the Torah and on Megillot. Zhitomir 1852. Printed by the Shapira brothers, grandsons of the Slavita rabbi. Wear and stains. Paper gluing to title page. · Tur Orach Chaim. With the Beit Yosef. Zhitomir, 1859. Printed by the brothers Rabbi Chanina Lipa and Rabbi Yehoshua Heshel Shapira.
7 books, size and condition vary. Some copies are damaged and lacking.
· Siddur Korban Mincha V'Seder Tehillim im Ma'amadot. [Slavita?, unknown edition. Lacking title page and several other first pages of the compilation of laws. Separate title page of Tehillim and for Ma'amadot]. · Siddur Tikunei Shabbat. [Slavita, unknown edition. Copy lacking at beginning and at end. Very damaged]. · Tehillim with Ivri-teitch (Yiddish) translation and Seder Ma'amadot. [Zhitomir, c. 1850-1860]. Lacking title page and 2 leaves at the end of Seder Ma'amadot. Wear and use stains. · Chovat HaLevavot, Part 2 of Rabbeinu Bechaye HaZaken. Zhitomir, 1850. Printed by the Shapira brothers, grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. Worming. · Mishnayot Seder Taharot with the commentaries of Rabbi Ovadya of Bartenura and Ikar Tosfot Yom Tov. Zhitomir, 1862. Printed by Rabbi Aryeh Leib Shapira. Good-fair condition. · Tz'ena U'Rena on the Torah and on Megillot. Zhitomir 1852. Printed by the Shapira brothers, grandsons of the Slavita rabbi. Wear and stains. Paper gluing to title page. · Tur Orach Chaim. With the Beit Yosef. Zhitomir, 1859. Printed by the brothers Rabbi Chanina Lipa and Rabbi Yehoshua Heshel Shapira.
7 books, size and condition vary. Some copies are damaged and lacking.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $2,000
Including buyer's premium
Collection of more that 20 books printed in Slavita and Zhitomir, some damaged and lacking.
Among the books:
· Selichot, Polish tradition. Zhitomir, 1875. Printed by Yitzchak Moshe Bakst. Not recorded in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book nor in the Vinograd-Rosenfeld records. Tears to title pages.
· Machzor, as per the customs of Reisen, Lithuania, Poland, Pihem and Mehrin, with explanations (commentary by R' Moshe Shadil) and with Ivri-teitch (Yiddish) translation. Part 1, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Zhitomir, 1853. Printed by the grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. Worming. Detached leaves, broken and detached binding.
· Machzor for the Three Festivals (Part 2), as per the customs of Reisen, Lithuania, Poland, Pihem and Mehrin (Nusach Ashkenaz). Zhitomir, 1866. Printed by the grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi.
· Divrei Torah, compilations and novella by Rabbi Moshe Wartman. Zhitomir, 1856. Printed by Aryeh Leib Shapira. Lacking pages 141-144,236-246. Worming. Unbound.
· Orach Chaim, Se'ah Solet, Tochachat Megule U'Marpe L'Nefesh. Zhitomir, 1858. Printed by the grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. Four books bound together, separate title page for each book. Open tears to several pages (last leaf of Tochachat Megule is lacking).
· Levushei S'rad, by Rabbi David Shlomo Eybeschütz. Zhitomir, 1854. Printed by Aryeh Leib Shapira. Copy on blue paper, fair-poor condition. Coarse open tears to title page. Lacking 4 last leaves. Detached binding and leaves. Worming.
· Tikunei HaZohar. [Zhitomir, 1863/1865/1875]. Lacking title page.
· Siddur with Kabbalistic kavanot, nusach Sefarad. Unidentified edition. Lacking first and last leaves and some in the middle [Zhitomir].
· More.
For a complete list, see Hebrew description.
23 books. Size and condition vary.
Among the books:
· Selichot, Polish tradition. Zhitomir, 1875. Printed by Yitzchak Moshe Bakst. Not recorded in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book nor in the Vinograd-Rosenfeld records. Tears to title pages.
· Machzor, as per the customs of Reisen, Lithuania, Poland, Pihem and Mehrin, with explanations (commentary by R' Moshe Shadil) and with Ivri-teitch (Yiddish) translation. Part 1, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Zhitomir, 1853. Printed by the grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. Worming. Detached leaves, broken and detached binding.
· Machzor for the Three Festivals (Part 2), as per the customs of Reisen, Lithuania, Poland, Pihem and Mehrin (Nusach Ashkenaz). Zhitomir, 1866. Printed by the grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi.
· Divrei Torah, compilations and novella by Rabbi Moshe Wartman. Zhitomir, 1856. Printed by Aryeh Leib Shapira. Lacking pages 141-144,236-246. Worming. Unbound.
· Orach Chaim, Se'ah Solet, Tochachat Megule U'Marpe L'Nefesh. Zhitomir, 1858. Printed by the grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. Four books bound together, separate title page for each book. Open tears to several pages (last leaf of Tochachat Megule is lacking).
· Levushei S'rad, by Rabbi David Shlomo Eybeschütz. Zhitomir, 1854. Printed by Aryeh Leib Shapira. Copy on blue paper, fair-poor condition. Coarse open tears to title page. Lacking 4 last leaves. Detached binding and leaves. Worming.
· Tikunei HaZohar. [Zhitomir, 1863/1865/1875]. Lacking title page.
· Siddur with Kabbalistic kavanot, nusach Sefarad. Unidentified edition. Lacking first and last leaves and some in the middle [Zhitomir].
· More.
For a complete list, see Hebrew description.
23 books. Size and condition vary.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $400
Unsold
Five books printed in Zhitomir and in Russia-Poland:
1. Sefer HaRokeach, by Rabbi Eliezer of Worms, with compilations from the book Or HaYashar by Rabbi Meir Poppers. Zhitomir, 1847. Printed by the Shapira brothers, grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. The Bibliography of the Hebrew Book records a lacking copy. Stamps of "Yonah Leib".
2. Be'er HaGolah, by the Maharal of Prague, with "Shelosha Devarim" by the Magid of Kosnitz. Zhitomir, 1859. Printed by Rabbi Aryeh Leib Shapira, grandson of the Slavita Rabbi.
3. Derech Chaim V'Tochachat Musar Haskel, by Rebbe Duber Schneerson of Lubavitch ["The Middle Rebbe"]. Without title page [Zhitomir, 1863. Printed by Chanina Lipa and Yehoshua Heshel Shapira].
4. Shulchan Aruch HaRav, by the Rebbe author of the Tanya, Part 1 (Orach Chaim, Simanim 1-212). [Sudilkov, 1826]. Lacking title page and 11 leaves.
5. Seder Hayom, by Rabbi Moshe Ibn Machir. Zhovkva, [1805]. In large letters on the title page: "As printed in Slavita" and the words "Printed in Slavita". Bound at the end of the book is a title page and three leaves of the Passover Haggadah, with the commentary of R' Y. Giktalia, Rabbi Ya'akov Emden and the Vilna Gaon. [Lvov? 1810?].
5 books. Size varies. Sefer HaRokeach is in overall good condition. The rest of the books are in overall fair-poor condition. Heavy worming, wear and tears.
1. Sefer HaRokeach, by Rabbi Eliezer of Worms, with compilations from the book Or HaYashar by Rabbi Meir Poppers. Zhitomir, 1847. Printed by the Shapira brothers, grandsons of the Slavita Rabbi. The Bibliography of the Hebrew Book records a lacking copy. Stamps of "Yonah Leib".
2. Be'er HaGolah, by the Maharal of Prague, with "Shelosha Devarim" by the Magid of Kosnitz. Zhitomir, 1859. Printed by Rabbi Aryeh Leib Shapira, grandson of the Slavita Rabbi.
3. Derech Chaim V'Tochachat Musar Haskel, by Rebbe Duber Schneerson of Lubavitch ["The Middle Rebbe"]. Without title page [Zhitomir, 1863. Printed by Chanina Lipa and Yehoshua Heshel Shapira].
4. Shulchan Aruch HaRav, by the Rebbe author of the Tanya, Part 1 (Orach Chaim, Simanim 1-212). [Sudilkov, 1826]. Lacking title page and 11 leaves.
5. Seder Hayom, by Rabbi Moshe Ibn Machir. Zhovkva, [1805]. In large letters on the title page: "As printed in Slavita" and the words "Printed in Slavita". Bound at the end of the book is a title page and three leaves of the Passover Haggadah, with the commentary of R' Y. Giktalia, Rabbi Ya'akov Emden and the Vilna Gaon. [Lvov? 1810?].
5 books. Size varies. Sefer HaRokeach is in overall good condition. The rest of the books are in overall fair-poor condition. Heavy worming, wear and tears.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Three books printed in Sudilkov, at the beginning of the 19th century. Copies on bluish paper.
1. Chovot HaLevavot, Part 1. By Rabbeinu Bechaye Ibn Pekuda. Sudilkov, 1820.
[2], 192 leaves. 22 cm. Bluish paper. Good-fair condition. Wear and stains. Worming. Unbound.
2. Chovot HaLevavot, Part 2. By Rabbeinu Bechaye Ibn Pekuda. Sudilkov, [1819]. Ownership inscription and ancient stamps of Mishnayot groups in the synagogue of Rabbi Mianov in Berdychiv.
[2], 121 leaves. 20 cm. Bluish paper. Fair condition. Stains and major wear. Unbound.
3. Mikdash Melech, commentary on the Zohar - Part 2 on Shemot, by Kabbalist Rabbi Shalom Buzaglo. Sudilkov, [1819]. Signatures of Rabbi "Mordechai Ze'ev Wolf ---", and more inscriptions.
[1], 134, 155-158, [1] leaves. 21 cm. Bluish paper, good-fair condition. Stains. Worming. Old binding with damages and worming.
1. Chovot HaLevavot, Part 1. By Rabbeinu Bechaye Ibn Pekuda. Sudilkov, 1820.
[2], 192 leaves. 22 cm. Bluish paper. Good-fair condition. Wear and stains. Worming. Unbound.
2. Chovot HaLevavot, Part 2. By Rabbeinu Bechaye Ibn Pekuda. Sudilkov, [1819]. Ownership inscription and ancient stamps of Mishnayot groups in the synagogue of Rabbi Mianov in Berdychiv.
[2], 121 leaves. 20 cm. Bluish paper. Fair condition. Stains and major wear. Unbound.
3. Mikdash Melech, commentary on the Zohar - Part 2 on Shemot, by Kabbalist Rabbi Shalom Buzaglo. Sudilkov, [1819]. Signatures of Rabbi "Mordechai Ze'ev Wolf ---", and more inscriptions.
[1], 134, 155-158, [1] leaves. 21 cm. Bluish paper, good-fair condition. Stains. Worming. Old binding with damages and worming.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $400
Unsold
Tikun Lel Shavuot and Lel Hoshana Raba, according to the order of the Shla HaKadosh. Ostroh, 1813.
The story of the revelation of the Magid to Rabbi Yosef Karo on Lel Shavuot appears at the beginning of the book.
[98] leaves. 20.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Old worn binding.
The story of the revelation of the Magid to Rabbi Yosef Karo on Lel Shavuot appears at the beginning of the book.
[98] leaves. 20.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Old worn binding.
Category
Books Printed in Slavita and Zhitomir and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $6,000
Unsold
Manuscript, ledger of Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia, Tiberias emissary, recording his travels throughout Italy and France in 1819.
A full ledger written by Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia, during 1819 (Kislev-Tamuz), on his travels throughout the Jewish communities in Northern and Eastern Italy. These communities include: Ferrara, Bologna, Modena, Forli, Lugo, Pesaro, Senigallia, Ancona, Mantua (Mantua), Verona, Milano, Vercelli, Moncalvo, Casale Monferrato, Torino and other communities in Italian towns and villages. Rabbi C.S. Abulafia also visited French communities, primarily those situated near the Italian border: Nice, Marseille and Aix.
This ledger is of great historic interest, containing information regarding community life in Italy at the beginning of the 19th century. In this ledger, Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia meticulously recorded his travels and his visits to various communities, the people who hosted him, names of donors and other details.
Following are a few examples quoted from the ledger:
"From Lugo, on the way to Forli, I stayed with the brothers MeHazkenim for the first day of Chanuka 1819… From there to Pesaro" [8b].
"Senigallia… I was honored greatly and from that city, the wealthy Mr. Aharon Galiko came to meet me…with his entire lofty family…" [10].
"From Mantua to Milano is a three-day journey…and from Milano until Vercelli takes one and a half days…" [29a].
On his visit to Ancona, he mentions the local rabbi "The great luminary, greatest of the Sanhedrin, Rabbi Refaeli Yeshaya Azulai" - son of the Chida. [12a].
On Leaf [45] is a long list he wrote while in Venice with details of his activities to include donations to Tiberias in the city's regulations. He adds details of old regulations regarding the distribution of donations to Eretz Yisrael and about the portion allotted to Tiberias from those donations. Among other things, he mentions traveling through the city of Trieste and finding there signed regulations on this issue, etc.
On Leaves [33]-[34], are additions in Italian writing, written in Senigallia in the month of Shevat 1819, concerning an obligation for a donation by the community's leading figures. On Leaves [46]-[48], are obligations written and signed by residents of the Cuneo community.
On Leaf [49] is a handwritten and signed inscription by Rabbi Yechezkel Eliezer Abulafia, nephew of Rabbi Chaim Shlomo who served as a Tiberias emissary after him.
Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia, a Tiberias sage, descendent of Rabbi Chaim Abulafia, author of Etz HaChaim. From 1816, he was emissary of the city of Tiberias to Italy and to France. In 1829, he travelled to Italy and Tunis, and was dubbed "Ba'al HaNissim" because of the miracles he merited. This ledger records his first journey. At the end of this journey, he reprinted the book Zimrat HaAretz by Rabbi Ya'akov Birav in Livorno. [See: Ya'ari, Sheluchei Eretz Yisrael, pp. 642-644].
[53] written leaves and dozens more blank leaves. 22 cm. Overall good condition. Stains. Tears and worming in several places. Contemporary cardboard binding with a string for fastening.
A full ledger written by Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia, during 1819 (Kislev-Tamuz), on his travels throughout the Jewish communities in Northern and Eastern Italy. These communities include: Ferrara, Bologna, Modena, Forli, Lugo, Pesaro, Senigallia, Ancona, Mantua (Mantua), Verona, Milano, Vercelli, Moncalvo, Casale Monferrato, Torino and other communities in Italian towns and villages. Rabbi C.S. Abulafia also visited French communities, primarily those situated near the Italian border: Nice, Marseille and Aix.
This ledger is of great historic interest, containing information regarding community life in Italy at the beginning of the 19th century. In this ledger, Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia meticulously recorded his travels and his visits to various communities, the people who hosted him, names of donors and other details.
Following are a few examples quoted from the ledger:
"From Lugo, on the way to Forli, I stayed with the brothers MeHazkenim for the first day of Chanuka 1819… From there to Pesaro" [8b].
"Senigallia… I was honored greatly and from that city, the wealthy Mr. Aharon Galiko came to meet me…with his entire lofty family…" [10].
"From Mantua to Milano is a three-day journey…and from Milano until Vercelli takes one and a half days…" [29a].
On his visit to Ancona, he mentions the local rabbi "The great luminary, greatest of the Sanhedrin, Rabbi Refaeli Yeshaya Azulai" - son of the Chida. [12a].
On Leaf [45] is a long list he wrote while in Venice with details of his activities to include donations to Tiberias in the city's regulations. He adds details of old regulations regarding the distribution of donations to Eretz Yisrael and about the portion allotted to Tiberias from those donations. Among other things, he mentions traveling through the city of Trieste and finding there signed regulations on this issue, etc.
On Leaves [33]-[34], are additions in Italian writing, written in Senigallia in the month of Shevat 1819, concerning an obligation for a donation by the community's leading figures. On Leaves [46]-[48], are obligations written and signed by residents of the Cuneo community.
On Leaf [49] is a handwritten and signed inscription by Rabbi Yechezkel Eliezer Abulafia, nephew of Rabbi Chaim Shlomo who served as a Tiberias emissary after him.
Rabbi Chaim Shlomo Abulafia, a Tiberias sage, descendent of Rabbi Chaim Abulafia, author of Etz HaChaim. From 1816, he was emissary of the city of Tiberias to Italy and to France. In 1829, he travelled to Italy and Tunis, and was dubbed "Ba'al HaNissim" because of the miracles he merited. This ledger records his first journey. At the end of this journey, he reprinted the book Zimrat HaAretz by Rabbi Ya'akov Birav in Livorno. [See: Ya'ari, Sheluchei Eretz Yisrael, pp. 642-644].
[53] written leaves and dozens more blank leaves. 22 cm. Overall good condition. Stains. Tears and worming in several places. Contemporary cardboard binding with a string for fastening.
Category
Jerusalem and Eretz Israel - Ledgers of Emissaries and Institutions, Letters and Documents, Printed Material
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $500
Sold for: $2,250
Including buyer's premium
Collection of handwritten and printed letters, Tiberias and Safed, c. 1834-1935.
The collection contains:
· An emissary writ to Assyrian [Kurdistan] cities, for the emissary Rabbi Machluf HaCohen, with (calligraphic) signatures of seven Tiberias rabbis: The Rabbi of Tiberias - R' Chaim Nissim Abulafia, Rabbi She'altiel Ya'akov Ninyo, Rabbi Shlomo Alfasi, Rabbi Refael Maman, Rabbi Ye'uda Nechmad, and others. Tiberias, Kislev 1834.
· "Open announcement" - printed leaf with stamps of the Tiberias community, regarding the appointment of Rabbi Chaim Alchadif as Chacham-Bashi [Chief Rabbi]. Tiberias, Iyar 1898. · Long moving letter, handwritten and signed by Rabbi Shalom Sisu of Safed. Lag B'Omer 1904. · Letter signed by four Safed rabbis: Rabbi Yeshua Falagi, Rabbi Refael Moshe Entebbe, Rabbi Moshe Yosef HaCohen and Rabbi Shimon Shabtai. Safed, Cheshvan 1931. · Three more printed letters from Tiberias and Safed.
7 items, size and condition vary.
Provenance: The Sassoon family collection.
The collection contains:
· An emissary writ to Assyrian [Kurdistan] cities, for the emissary Rabbi Machluf HaCohen, with (calligraphic) signatures of seven Tiberias rabbis: The Rabbi of Tiberias - R' Chaim Nissim Abulafia, Rabbi She'altiel Ya'akov Ninyo, Rabbi Shlomo Alfasi, Rabbi Refael Maman, Rabbi Ye'uda Nechmad, and others. Tiberias, Kislev 1834.
· "Open announcement" - printed leaf with stamps of the Tiberias community, regarding the appointment of Rabbi Chaim Alchadif as Chacham-Bashi [Chief Rabbi]. Tiberias, Iyar 1898. · Long moving letter, handwritten and signed by Rabbi Shalom Sisu of Safed. Lag B'Omer 1904. · Letter signed by four Safed rabbis: Rabbi Yeshua Falagi, Rabbi Refael Moshe Entebbe, Rabbi Moshe Yosef HaCohen and Rabbi Shimon Shabtai. Safed, Cheshvan 1931. · Three more printed letters from Tiberias and Safed.
7 items, size and condition vary.
Provenance: The Sassoon family collection.
Category
Jerusalem and Eretz Israel - Ledgers of Emissaries and Institutions, Letters and Documents, Printed Material
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $3,000
Sold for: $3,750
Including buyer's premium
Leaf in Oriental handwriting, a document signed by the Rishon L'Zion Rabbi Yaakov Moshe Ayash, members of the Beit Din and leading Sephardi sages of the city. Jerusalem, Rosh Chodesh Sivan 1814.
Regulations for Melamdim of the Talmud Torah (elementary schools) of the Sephardi community of Jerusalem containing eight clauses regarding the obligations of the Melamdim, the study schedules, the number of students and the teachers' salaries and their obligation to adhere to the regulations. Granting the appointed Gaba'im (agents) the power to dismiss teachers. On the margins are the signatures of the teachers, some of them well-known Jerusalem Torah scholars.
The first to sign is the Rishon L'Zion Rabbi Ya'akov Moshe Ayash followed by (on the left) Rabbi Ya'akov Koral (successor as Rishon L'Zion) and after them Rabbi Yom Tov Danon (the Rishon L'zion after the Chikrei Lev), Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchak Meyuchas (Deputy Rishon L'Zion of Rabbi M. Suzin), undeciphered signature, Rabbi Yosef Yechiel Taragan (member of the Beit Din of Rabbi Y.M. Ayash also signed with him on the regulation regarding the production of cheese in Jerusalem, died 1820) and Rabbi Yehuda Uziel (also a sage of the same Beit Din, died in 1827).
[1] leaf. 21X30 cm. High-quality paper. Good-fair condition. Restored tears to paper folds.
Historical document shedding light on the life of the Sephardi community of Jerusalem.
Regulations for Melamdim of the Talmud Torah (elementary schools) of the Sephardi community of Jerusalem containing eight clauses regarding the obligations of the Melamdim, the study schedules, the number of students and the teachers' salaries and their obligation to adhere to the regulations. Granting the appointed Gaba'im (agents) the power to dismiss teachers. On the margins are the signatures of the teachers, some of them well-known Jerusalem Torah scholars.
The first to sign is the Rishon L'Zion Rabbi Ya'akov Moshe Ayash followed by (on the left) Rabbi Ya'akov Koral (successor as Rishon L'Zion) and after them Rabbi Yom Tov Danon (the Rishon L'zion after the Chikrei Lev), Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchak Meyuchas (Deputy Rishon L'Zion of Rabbi M. Suzin), undeciphered signature, Rabbi Yosef Yechiel Taragan (member of the Beit Din of Rabbi Y.M. Ayash also signed with him on the regulation regarding the production of cheese in Jerusalem, died 1820) and Rabbi Yehuda Uziel (also a sage of the same Beit Din, died in 1827).
[1] leaf. 21X30 cm. High-quality paper. Good-fair condition. Restored tears to paper folds.
Historical document shedding light on the life of the Sephardi community of Jerusalem.
Category
Jerusalem and Eretz Israel - Ledgers of Emissaries and Institutions, Letters and Documents, Printed Material
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $5,000
Sold for: $6,250
Including buyer's premium
Handwritten document, regarding the appointment of three representatives of the Ashkenazi community to the united committee of the Sephardic and Ashkenazic Jerusalem communities, for reducing rental fees in the city. Signed by six community and kollel leaders: Rabbi Yeshaya Bardaky, Rabbi Eliyahu Yosef Rivlin, Rabbi Yisrael Bak, Rabbi Nachum of Szadek, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Segal and Rabbi Yochanan Schlank. Jerusalem, 1858. Stamps of the Kollelim with various illustrations of the Western Wall.
The subject of the document is presenting a united front for balancing the housing market and rental contracts drawn with non-Jewish landlords, and with Jews who held rights of residence in non-Jewish owned properties and rented these rights to others.
"Since for a number of years, the rental fees of non-Jews in Jerusalem has been on a constant rise, ensuing in numerous disputes between those who held rights and their neighbors regarding rights of these properties. We have gathered together the scholars and rabbis of the kollels of the Sephardic and Ashkenazic communities and have reached the following conclusions: the Sephardim will choose three rabbis and the Ashkenazi kollels will also choose three rabbis and these six will sit together and discuss this matter… according to the Torah law and according to justice and integrity demanded by this issue, accepted by all parties. We, the Ashkenazic kollels have chosen Rabbi Moshe Yehuda Leib Av Beit Din of Kutna, and Rabbi Shmuel Salant, and Rabbi Mordechai Meir…".
The first signature: Rabbi Yeshaya son of R' Yissachar Ber Bardaky, son-in-law of Rabbi Yisrael of Shklow a disciple of the Vilna Gaon. Illustrious leader of the Jerusalem Perushim community. Died in Cheshvan 1862.
The second signature: Chairman of the Chabad Kollel - Rabbi Eliyahu Yosef Rivlin (1805-1864), author of Ohalei Yosef, exceptionally erudite in revealed and hidden Torah knowledge, leading Chabad Chassid of the Middle Chabad Rebbe and the Rebbe author of the Tzemach Tzedek. Disciple of Rabbi Menashe of Ilya. He served in the rabbinate abroad and moved to Eretz Israel in 1855. Inscribed on his tombstone on Har HaZeitim: "Great rabbi, sharp and erudite in revealed and hidden Torah, famous Chassid with many followers…".
The third signature: Chairman of the Wohlin Kollel - the famous printer Rabbi Yisrael Bak (1792-1874), disciple of Rebbe Yisrael of Ruzhyn and Rabbi Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev. A skilled printer, he established a printing press in Berdychiv and reputedly also designed the Slavita letters for printing. In 1831, he moved to Safed and established his printing press there, but following the 1937 earthquake which destroyed large sections of the city and following the Arab revolt, he moved to Jerusalem where he established his printing press for the third time. It was the first printing press in Jerusalem which produced Hebrew books.
The fourth signature: Chairman of the Poland Kollel - Rabbi Nachum Av Beit Din of Szadek (1813-1868), son of Rabbi Moshe Avraham Loewy-Weisfish. Disciple of the author of Chemdat Shlomo, a Polish Torah scholar. At the age of 18, his rabbi ordained him a Torah authority (semicha). He served for several years as rabbi of Szadek, Poland and in 1843, moved to Eretz Israel together with his two brothers, Rabbi Asher Lemel Av Beit Din of Golina and Rabbi Ya'akov Eliyahu Leib. One night, the three brothers all dreamed that they should ascend to Eretz Israel without informing the other two brothers. Most of the day, he would sit wrapped in his tallit and donning his tefillin and diligently study Torah. He established the Ran Yeshiva in which he delivered scholarly discourses to young Jerusalem Torah scholars. Together with the tsaddik Rabbi Yosef Zundel of Salant, he studied Kabbalah from the Kabbalist Rabbi Yehuda HaCohen. Died in a cholera plague in 1868. Inscribed on his tombstone on Har HaZeitim: "Holy pure man, at the age of eight he began searching for G-d and dedicated all his days to Torah study, fasting and abstinence. He studied Torah day and night without respite. He merited studying and teaching Torah and had many disciples…pious and humble…".
The fifth signature: Rabbi Menachem Mendel Segal was one of the heads of the Holland-Deutsch Kollel, together with his friend, the sixth rabbi signed on the document, Rabbi "Yochanan Hirsh son of R' M. Schlank", (1815-1884) - disciple of the Chatam Sofer, moved to Jerusalem with his father Rabbi Mordechai Shlank who was a leading disciple of the Chatam Sofer. Became a founder of public institutions in Jerusalem - See HaChatam Sofer V'Talmidav, pp. 188-189.
Leaf, 28 cm. Fair condition. Wear damages and heavy foxing.
The subject of the document is presenting a united front for balancing the housing market and rental contracts drawn with non-Jewish landlords, and with Jews who held rights of residence in non-Jewish owned properties and rented these rights to others.
"Since for a number of years, the rental fees of non-Jews in Jerusalem has been on a constant rise, ensuing in numerous disputes between those who held rights and their neighbors regarding rights of these properties. We have gathered together the scholars and rabbis of the kollels of the Sephardic and Ashkenazic communities and have reached the following conclusions: the Sephardim will choose three rabbis and the Ashkenazi kollels will also choose three rabbis and these six will sit together and discuss this matter… according to the Torah law and according to justice and integrity demanded by this issue, accepted by all parties. We, the Ashkenazic kollels have chosen Rabbi Moshe Yehuda Leib Av Beit Din of Kutna, and Rabbi Shmuel Salant, and Rabbi Mordechai Meir…".
The first signature: Rabbi Yeshaya son of R' Yissachar Ber Bardaky, son-in-law of Rabbi Yisrael of Shklow a disciple of the Vilna Gaon. Illustrious leader of the Jerusalem Perushim community. Died in Cheshvan 1862.
The second signature: Chairman of the Chabad Kollel - Rabbi Eliyahu Yosef Rivlin (1805-1864), author of Ohalei Yosef, exceptionally erudite in revealed and hidden Torah knowledge, leading Chabad Chassid of the Middle Chabad Rebbe and the Rebbe author of the Tzemach Tzedek. Disciple of Rabbi Menashe of Ilya. He served in the rabbinate abroad and moved to Eretz Israel in 1855. Inscribed on his tombstone on Har HaZeitim: "Great rabbi, sharp and erudite in revealed and hidden Torah, famous Chassid with many followers…".
The third signature: Chairman of the Wohlin Kollel - the famous printer Rabbi Yisrael Bak (1792-1874), disciple of Rebbe Yisrael of Ruzhyn and Rabbi Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev. A skilled printer, he established a printing press in Berdychiv and reputedly also designed the Slavita letters for printing. In 1831, he moved to Safed and established his printing press there, but following the 1937 earthquake which destroyed large sections of the city and following the Arab revolt, he moved to Jerusalem where he established his printing press for the third time. It was the first printing press in Jerusalem which produced Hebrew books.
The fourth signature: Chairman of the Poland Kollel - Rabbi Nachum Av Beit Din of Szadek (1813-1868), son of Rabbi Moshe Avraham Loewy-Weisfish. Disciple of the author of Chemdat Shlomo, a Polish Torah scholar. At the age of 18, his rabbi ordained him a Torah authority (semicha). He served for several years as rabbi of Szadek, Poland and in 1843, moved to Eretz Israel together with his two brothers, Rabbi Asher Lemel Av Beit Din of Golina and Rabbi Ya'akov Eliyahu Leib. One night, the three brothers all dreamed that they should ascend to Eretz Israel without informing the other two brothers. Most of the day, he would sit wrapped in his tallit and donning his tefillin and diligently study Torah. He established the Ran Yeshiva in which he delivered scholarly discourses to young Jerusalem Torah scholars. Together with the tsaddik Rabbi Yosef Zundel of Salant, he studied Kabbalah from the Kabbalist Rabbi Yehuda HaCohen. Died in a cholera plague in 1868. Inscribed on his tombstone on Har HaZeitim: "Holy pure man, at the age of eight he began searching for G-d and dedicated all his days to Torah study, fasting and abstinence. He studied Torah day and night without respite. He merited studying and teaching Torah and had many disciples…pious and humble…".
The fifth signature: Rabbi Menachem Mendel Segal was one of the heads of the Holland-Deutsch Kollel, together with his friend, the sixth rabbi signed on the document, Rabbi "Yochanan Hirsh son of R' M. Schlank", (1815-1884) - disciple of the Chatam Sofer, moved to Jerusalem with his father Rabbi Mordechai Shlank who was a leading disciple of the Chatam Sofer. Became a founder of public institutions in Jerusalem - See HaChatam Sofer V'Talmidav, pp. 188-189.
Leaf, 28 cm. Fair condition. Wear damages and heavy foxing.
Category
Jerusalem and Eretz Israel - Ledgers of Emissaries and Institutions, Letters and Documents, Printed Material
Catalogue
Auction 51 Part I - Books Chassidism Manuscripts Rabbinical Letters
July 11, 2016
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $9,375
Including buyer's premium
Siddur Tefillat Yisrael, Sephardic tradition, with laws, piyyutim and bakashot. Jerusalem, 1842. Printed by Rabbi Yisrael Bak. Noted on the title page: The siddur was printed in the Holy City of Jerusalem, in complete holiness and "all who performed the holy task were Jewish".
Many approbations of Sephardic sages from Jerusalem, Safed, Tiberias and Hebron, and of Ashkenazi sages from Jerusalem [Rebbe Aharon Moshe of Brody, Rabbi Yeshaya Bardaki son-in-law of Rabbi Yisrael of Shklow and Rabbi Moshe Rivlin "Doresh L'Zion", the Magid of Shklow]. In their approbation, the Jerusalem rabbis add an "approbation" granting Rabbi Yisrael Bak exclusive rights to print books in Jerusalem.
In his introduction, the printer recounts his travails in the city of Safed: "After all the travails that befell me - pestilence, sword, and hunger…a great earthquake…I was forced to ascend to the 'mountain' and I have established my dwelling here…Jerusalem". He thanks Yosef Amzalag "who assisted me in printing the siddur".
the famous printer Rabbi Yisrael Bak (1792-1874), disciple of Rebbe Yisrael of Ruzhyn and Rabbi Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev. A skilled printer, he established a printing press in Berdychiv and reputedly also designed the Slavita letters for printing. In 1831, he moved to Safed and established his printing press there, but following the 1937 earthquake which destroyed large sections of the city and following the Arab revolt, he moved to Jerusalem where he established his printing press for the third time. It was the first printing press in Jerusalem which produced Hebrew books.
152 leaves. 15 cm. Preserved copy on high-quality paper. Good condition. Worming. New leather binding.
The fourth Hebrew book printed in Jerusalem. See S. HaLevi, Sifrei Yerushalayim HaRishonim, no. 4.
Many approbations of Sephardic sages from Jerusalem, Safed, Tiberias and Hebron, and of Ashkenazi sages from Jerusalem [Rebbe Aharon Moshe of Brody, Rabbi Yeshaya Bardaki son-in-law of Rabbi Yisrael of Shklow and Rabbi Moshe Rivlin "Doresh L'Zion", the Magid of Shklow]. In their approbation, the Jerusalem rabbis add an "approbation" granting Rabbi Yisrael Bak exclusive rights to print books in Jerusalem.
In his introduction, the printer recounts his travails in the city of Safed: "After all the travails that befell me - pestilence, sword, and hunger…a great earthquake…I was forced to ascend to the 'mountain' and I have established my dwelling here…Jerusalem". He thanks Yosef Amzalag "who assisted me in printing the siddur".
the famous printer Rabbi Yisrael Bak (1792-1874), disciple of Rebbe Yisrael of Ruzhyn and Rabbi Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev. A skilled printer, he established a printing press in Berdychiv and reputedly also designed the Slavita letters for printing. In 1831, he moved to Safed and established his printing press there, but following the 1937 earthquake which destroyed large sections of the city and following the Arab revolt, he moved to Jerusalem where he established his printing press for the third time. It was the first printing press in Jerusalem which produced Hebrew books.
152 leaves. 15 cm. Preserved copy on high-quality paper. Good condition. Worming. New leather binding.
The fourth Hebrew book printed in Jerusalem. See S. HaLevi, Sifrei Yerushalayim HaRishonim, no. 4.
Category
Jerusalem and Eretz Israel - Ledgers of Emissaries and Institutions, Letters and Documents, Printed Material
Catalogue