Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Displaying 97 - 108 of 401
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $500
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
Babylonian Talmud - complete set. Munich-Heidelberg, 1948. "Published by the Union of Rabbis in the American Occupation Zone in Germany".
As WWII came to an end, and survivors gathered in DP camps, the need arose for volumes of the Talmud and other holy books to benefit the refugees. From 1946, the Union of Rabbis in Germany, with the support of the American Army and the Joint, undertook the project of printing the Talmud for the survivors. At first, individual tractates were printed in various formats. In 1948, a complete edition of the Talmud was published for the first time - the edition here. Each volume contains two title pages. The first title page was designed specifically to commemorate the printing of the Talmud on the scorched soil of Germany, the upper-part bearing an illustration of a Jewish village, captioned: "From servitude to salvation, from darkness to great light"; the bottom of the title page contains an illustration of barbed wire fencing and a labor camp, captioned: "Labor camp in Germany during Nazi occupation". "They almost destroyed me on earth, but I did not forsake Your precepts".
19 volumes. 39 cm. Some leaves on dry paper. Overall good condition. Stains, tears and wear. Large tears to several leaves. Title page of Tractate Rosh Hashanah lacking. Original bindings, repaired with new cloth spines, and cloth reinforcing to edges.
As WWII came to an end, and survivors gathered in DP camps, the need arose for volumes of the Talmud and other holy books to benefit the refugees. From 1946, the Union of Rabbis in Germany, with the support of the American Army and the Joint, undertook the project of printing the Talmud for the survivors. At first, individual tractates were printed in various formats. In 1948, a complete edition of the Talmud was published for the first time - the edition here. Each volume contains two title pages. The first title page was designed specifically to commemorate the printing of the Talmud on the scorched soil of Germany, the upper-part bearing an illustration of a Jewish village, captioned: "From servitude to salvation, from darkness to great light"; the bottom of the title page contains an illustration of barbed wire fencing and a labor camp, captioned: "Labor camp in Germany during Nazi occupation". "They almost destroyed me on earth, but I did not forsake Your precepts".
19 volumes. 39 cm. Some leaves on dry paper. Overall good condition. Stains, tears and wear. Large tears to several leaves. Title page of Tractate Rosh Hashanah lacking. Original bindings, repaired with new cloth spines, and cloth reinforcing to edges.
Category
Talmud and Mishnayot
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $500
Sold for: $1,125
Including buyer's premium
Machzor according to the rite of the community of Rome, Part II, prayers for the festivals of Tishrei. Mantua: [Jacob Cohen of Gazolo], 1559. Small volume.
The colophon states: "And it was completed during Chanukah [1559]… we began printing it three years ago and have delayed until now… since… we were obligated to print meanwhile other books, namely Livyat Chen, Tikunei HaZohar, Maarechet HaElokut, Toldot Yitzchak, Chovot HaLevavot, Mekor Chaim, Machzor Gadol and Sefer HaZohar which we are currently printing…" (this refers to the first edition of Sefer HaZohar, being printed at that time in Mantua).
[1], 250-532 leaves. 13.5 cm. Good-fair condition, most of the leaves in good condition. Stains. Worming to title page (the leaf has been restored and strengthened). Open tear (repaired) to the bottom of the last leaf, with loss of the last line of text. Minor damage (repaired) in a few more places. One leaf in the middle detached. New binding.
Provenance: Collection of Dr. Israel Mehlman.
The colophon states: "And it was completed during Chanukah [1559]… we began printing it three years ago and have delayed until now… since… we were obligated to print meanwhile other books, namely Livyat Chen, Tikunei HaZohar, Maarechet HaElokut, Toldot Yitzchak, Chovot HaLevavot, Mekor Chaim, Machzor Gadol and Sefer HaZohar which we are currently printing…" (this refers to the first edition of Sefer HaZohar, being printed at that time in Mantua).
[1], 250-532 leaves. 13.5 cm. Good-fair condition, most of the leaves in good condition. Stains. Worming to title page (the leaf has been restored and strengthened). Open tear (repaired) to the bottom of the last leaf, with loss of the last line of text. Minor damage (repaired) in a few more places. One leaf in the middle detached. New binding.
Provenance: Collection of Dr. Israel Mehlman.
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $300
Sold for: $813
Including buyer's premium
Collection of prayer books, machzorim and sections of prayer books, 16th-17th centuries:
1-2. Roman rite Machzor, Part II, for the High Holidays, Sukkot and Fast Days. [Venice]: Zuan (Giovanni) di Gara, [1587].
Incomplete copy. 72, 81-103, 105-120, 129-167, 169-176, 178-224, 226-231, 233-251, 254-264, 266-280, 283-295, 308-319, 322-327, 330-343 leaves. Originally: 347, [1] leaves. Lacking 47 leaves (most leaves were replaced with photocopies). 14 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming. Tears and trimming, affecting text (with handwritten replacement to one leaf). New binding.
Enclosed is another volume containing 25 leaves of this machzor, with typographic variations and differences in the printed marginal notes. These leaves may be from a variant, a different or concurrent edition of the machzor.
3. Year-round Machzor, according to the Roman rite, Part II, Maamadot for before Rosh Hashanah, and prayers for Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Sukkot. [Venice: Daniel Bomberg, 1526].
Section of [47] leaves from the middle of the machzor. (Part II originally contained [464] leaves). 10 cm. Good condition. High-quality paper. New binding.
4. Prayer services for festivals, according to the Sephardi rite. [Venice? 1639?].
2-72, 74-112, 115-118, 120, 122-152, 155-167, 169-254 leaves. Originally: 255 leaves. Lacking: 10 leaves (including title page and last leaf). 16 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming. Tears. New binding.
5. Moreh Chata'im BaDerech, by R. Yitzchak son of Moshe Ellis. [Venice, ca. 1625].
2-7 leaves (originally: 8 leaves). Lacking title page and last leaf. 13.5 cm.
6. Sephardi Machzor for the High Holidays, with the commentary of R. Moshe Cordovero. [Venice: Zuan (Giovanni) di Gara, 1584].
Section of [5] leaves from the Mincha and Arvit prayers of Yom Kippur eve. 14 cm.
7. Section of a Machzor for the Three Festivals. [Unidentified edition. Venice? 16th century?].
Lacking the beginning and end. The leaves are numbered 247-320. 12 cm. Begins at the end of Pirkei Avot (with Spanish translation), and continues with prayers for Shavuot and Sukkot, with Azharot, Megillat Ruth, Hoshanot and the Simchat Torah service.
7 books and book sections. Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Collection of Dr. Israel Mehlman.
1-2. Roman rite Machzor, Part II, for the High Holidays, Sukkot and Fast Days. [Venice]: Zuan (Giovanni) di Gara, [1587].
Incomplete copy. 72, 81-103, 105-120, 129-167, 169-176, 178-224, 226-231, 233-251, 254-264, 266-280, 283-295, 308-319, 322-327, 330-343 leaves. Originally: 347, [1] leaves. Lacking 47 leaves (most leaves were replaced with photocopies). 14 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming. Tears and trimming, affecting text (with handwritten replacement to one leaf). New binding.
Enclosed is another volume containing 25 leaves of this machzor, with typographic variations and differences in the printed marginal notes. These leaves may be from a variant, a different or concurrent edition of the machzor.
3. Year-round Machzor, according to the Roman rite, Part II, Maamadot for before Rosh Hashanah, and prayers for Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur and Sukkot. [Venice: Daniel Bomberg, 1526].
Section of [47] leaves from the middle of the machzor. (Part II originally contained [464] leaves). 10 cm. Good condition. High-quality paper. New binding.
4. Prayer services for festivals, according to the Sephardi rite. [Venice? 1639?].
2-72, 74-112, 115-118, 120, 122-152, 155-167, 169-254 leaves. Originally: 255 leaves. Lacking: 10 leaves (including title page and last leaf). 16 cm. Fair condition. Stains and wear. Worming. Tears. New binding.
5. Moreh Chata'im BaDerech, by R. Yitzchak son of Moshe Ellis. [Venice, ca. 1625].
2-7 leaves (originally: 8 leaves). Lacking title page and last leaf. 13.5 cm.
6. Sephardi Machzor for the High Holidays, with the commentary of R. Moshe Cordovero. [Venice: Zuan (Giovanni) di Gara, 1584].
Section of [5] leaves from the Mincha and Arvit prayers of Yom Kippur eve. 14 cm.
7. Section of a Machzor for the Three Festivals. [Unidentified edition. Venice? 16th century?].
Lacking the beginning and end. The leaves are numbered 247-320. 12 cm. Begins at the end of Pirkei Avot (with Spanish translation), and continues with prayers for Shavuot and Sukkot, with Azharot, Megillat Ruth, Hoshanot and the Simchat Torah service.
7 books and book sections. Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Collection of Dr. Israel Mehlman.
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $2,200
Sold for: $2,750
Including buyer's premium
Shaar HaShamayim - Polish rite, year-round siddur with commentaries, laws and customs, by R. Yeshaya HaLevi Horowitz, author of the Shelah. Amsterdam, [1742]. Second edition.
Explanation of the prayers by the Shelah, mostly according to Kabbalah (based on various books, especially the Ari's writings which he had in manuscript), with an anthology of laws and customs which the publisher, his grandson, compiled from Shnei Luchot HaBrit.
The Shelah wrote his siddur with the intention of printing and disseminating it, as he wrote in his will to his sons: "I thought to compose this holy work, in order to print it and disseminate it over the whole Jewish world, so that I may have a merit and share in all the prayers of the Jewish people". Praying from this siddur bears the special Segulah of the prayer being accepted and not going unanswered. As the Bach wrote in his approbation to the siddur: "We have no doubt that when it become widespread amongst the Jewish people, whoever prays from it will not have his prayer rejected". R. Avraham Yaakov, first Rebbe of Sadigura, mentions this Segulah in his approbation to the third edition of the siddur (Warsaw, 1882): "Siddur Shaar HaShamayim by the holy Shelah, as the renowned scholar, the Bach, testified… there is no doubt that whoever prays from it, his prayer will not be rejected". The holy kabbalist R. Naftali Katz, author of Semichat Chachamim, ascribes this Segulah to the author himself, the Shelah, as he writes: "…order of prayers… from the beginning of the year until the end of the year, arranged and composed by R. Yeshaya Segal author of Shnei Luchot HaBrit, and he was very attached to this siddur, and directed his descendants to publish it, to give the public the privilege of praying in this order, with these Kavanot, and pledged that whoever prays with all his might in this order with those Kavanot, his prayers will not go unanswered. Go out and see how people practice, and the approbations of the great Torah scholars of that generation… R. Yoel Sirkis author of Bayit Chadash, and R. Yaakov Rabbi of Lublin… R. Yom Tov Lipman Heller author of Tosfot Yom Tov… and they all concur that whoever prays with these Kavanot, his prayer will not be rejected".
An early signature (partly deleted) appears on the title page: "…Oppenheim of F.b." (this may be a relative of R. Ber Oppenheim Rabbi of Friedberg and the district, grandfather of R. Ber Oppenheim of Pressburg, author of Mei Be'er).
Two volumes. 28, 304 leaves; 305-568 leaves. 16 cm. Slightly darkened paper. Good-fair condition. Stains. Worming, affecting text in some places. Several leaves (including title page) repaired. New bindings.
Another edition, with German rite piyyutim, was printed concurrently, identical to this edition until leaf 364 (apart from the title page). From leaf 365 onwards (gathering 92), the word "Polish" is printed at the foot of the first leaf of each gathering (and in the parallel edition: "Ashkenaz").
Explanation of the prayers by the Shelah, mostly according to Kabbalah (based on various books, especially the Ari's writings which he had in manuscript), with an anthology of laws and customs which the publisher, his grandson, compiled from Shnei Luchot HaBrit.
The Shelah wrote his siddur with the intention of printing and disseminating it, as he wrote in his will to his sons: "I thought to compose this holy work, in order to print it and disseminate it over the whole Jewish world, so that I may have a merit and share in all the prayers of the Jewish people". Praying from this siddur bears the special Segulah of the prayer being accepted and not going unanswered. As the Bach wrote in his approbation to the siddur: "We have no doubt that when it become widespread amongst the Jewish people, whoever prays from it will not have his prayer rejected". R. Avraham Yaakov, first Rebbe of Sadigura, mentions this Segulah in his approbation to the third edition of the siddur (Warsaw, 1882): "Siddur Shaar HaShamayim by the holy Shelah, as the renowned scholar, the Bach, testified… there is no doubt that whoever prays from it, his prayer will not be rejected". The holy kabbalist R. Naftali Katz, author of Semichat Chachamim, ascribes this Segulah to the author himself, the Shelah, as he writes: "…order of prayers… from the beginning of the year until the end of the year, arranged and composed by R. Yeshaya Segal author of Shnei Luchot HaBrit, and he was very attached to this siddur, and directed his descendants to publish it, to give the public the privilege of praying in this order, with these Kavanot, and pledged that whoever prays with all his might in this order with those Kavanot, his prayers will not go unanswered. Go out and see how people practice, and the approbations of the great Torah scholars of that generation… R. Yoel Sirkis author of Bayit Chadash, and R. Yaakov Rabbi of Lublin… R. Yom Tov Lipman Heller author of Tosfot Yom Tov… and they all concur that whoever prays with these Kavanot, his prayer will not be rejected".
An early signature (partly deleted) appears on the title page: "…Oppenheim of F.b." (this may be a relative of R. Ber Oppenheim Rabbi of Friedberg and the district, grandfather of R. Ber Oppenheim of Pressburg, author of Mei Be'er).
Two volumes. 28, 304 leaves; 305-568 leaves. 16 cm. Slightly darkened paper. Good-fair condition. Stains. Worming, affecting text in some places. Several leaves (including title page) repaired. New bindings.
Another edition, with German rite piyyutim, was printed concurrently, identical to this edition until leaf 364 (apart from the title page). From leaf 365 onwards (gathering 92), the word "Polish" is printed at the foot of the first leaf of each gathering (and in the parallel edition: "Ashkenaz").
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
"Machzor of the Sephardim for the High Holidays, Selichot for Leilei Ashmurot and the prayer service for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur". Amsterdam, [1740].
360 leaves. 8 cm. Good condition. Repaired tears to the title page. Several detached leaves. Stains. Gilt edges. Fine original leather binding, with gilt ornamentations. Binding faded and slightly damaged.
360 leaves. 8 cm. Good condition. Repaired tears to the title page. Several detached leaves. Stains. Gilt edges. Fine original leather binding, with gilt ornamentations. Binding faded and slightly damaged.
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Beit Tefillah siddur according to the Italian rite. Pisa, [1816]. Pocket edition.
64, 49-224 leaves. 7.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Fine original leather binding, with gilt ornamentation on the spine.
64, 49-224 leaves. 7.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Fine original leather binding, with gilt ornamentation on the spine.
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $500
Unsold
Avodat HaTamid - prayer book with abridged halachot, selected and Kabbalistic commentaries, by R. Elisha Havilio. Livorno, [1794].
P. 83b contains: Shiviti, Ten Sefirot, a LaMenatze'ach Menorah illustration, various verses and Kabbalistic combinations.
The last page contains a printed statement by the author "to notify of a major mistake". He discovered during the printing of the siddur that the book HaTzad Tzvi from which he quotes Kabbalistic novellae in the first part of the siddur, is an objectionable book whose author, Nechemia Hayun, was a banned Sabbatean. He writes not to believe teachings he quotes from HaTzad Tzvi on leaf 82 and p. 84a, lines 11, 36 and 41. All should be deleted as they originate from a banned apostate. He declares that he wrote and printed them in absolute innocence.
· Bound at the end of the book is a (folded) leaf which was printed approximately a year earlier. The leaf, printed on both sides, bears the (printed) signature of R. Elisha Havilio and announces his intention to print this siddur, describing the advantages of the siddur, and listing additional works he intends to print (Pat Lechem, Hamon Chogeg, Shifat Revivim. These works were later printed in Livorno). He requests the public's financial support for these projects. He writes at the end: "I intend with the help of G-d to thereby settle in the Holy City of Jerusalem and publish over there, if G-d grants me life, the other sections for Shabbat, Festivals and High Holidays…". Livorno, Elul, [1793].
[12], 268, [1] leaves. 17 cm. Good condition. Stains. Slight worming. Original binding with leather spine, slightly damaged. Folded leaf at the back: Stains. Folding marks. Tear affecting text, repaired. Several words erased.
P. 83b contains: Shiviti, Ten Sefirot, a LaMenatze'ach Menorah illustration, various verses and Kabbalistic combinations.
The last page contains a printed statement by the author "to notify of a major mistake". He discovered during the printing of the siddur that the book HaTzad Tzvi from which he quotes Kabbalistic novellae in the first part of the siddur, is an objectionable book whose author, Nechemia Hayun, was a banned Sabbatean. He writes not to believe teachings he quotes from HaTzad Tzvi on leaf 82 and p. 84a, lines 11, 36 and 41. All should be deleted as they originate from a banned apostate. He declares that he wrote and printed them in absolute innocence.
· Bound at the end of the book is a (folded) leaf which was printed approximately a year earlier. The leaf, printed on both sides, bears the (printed) signature of R. Elisha Havilio and announces his intention to print this siddur, describing the advantages of the siddur, and listing additional works he intends to print (Pat Lechem, Hamon Chogeg, Shifat Revivim. These works were later printed in Livorno). He requests the public's financial support for these projects. He writes at the end: "I intend with the help of G-d to thereby settle in the Holy City of Jerusalem and publish over there, if G-d grants me life, the other sections for Shabbat, Festivals and High Holidays…". Livorno, Elul, [1793].
[12], 268, [1] leaves. 17 cm. Good condition. Stains. Slight worming. Original binding with leather spine, slightly damaged. Folded leaf at the back: Stains. Folding marks. Tear affecting text, repaired. Several words erased.
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Beit Tefillah siddur, according to the Italian rite. Livorno, [1862].
Miniature format volume, with original leather binding. Blocked gilt ornamentation to binding. Fine metal clasp.
288 leaves. 9.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Blue edges. Original leather binding, with metal clasp. Minor damage to binding.
Miniature format volume, with original leather binding. Blocked gilt ornamentation to binding. Fine metal clasp.
288 leaves. 9.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Blue edges. Original leather binding, with metal clasp. Minor damage to binding.
Category
Siddurim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $1,250
Including buyer's premium
Zevach Pesach, Passover Haggadah, with a commentary by R. Yitzchak Abarbanel. [Bistrowitz: Klonymus ben Mordechai Jaffe, 1592].
The only Hebrew book printed in Bistrowitz (Bystrzejowice). The printer, R. Klonymus son of Mordechai Jaffe, printed many books in Lublin. In 1592, a harsh epidemic broke out in Lublin and R. Klonymus was compelled to escape. He settled in Bistrowitz, where he printed this book over the course of two months. When the epidemic abated, he returned to Lublin and continued printing books there. See: C.D. Friedberg, Toldot HaDefus HaIvri B'Polania, Tel Aviv, 1950, p. 52.
Incomplete copy. 3-60, [2] leaves. Originally: 60, [4] leaves. Lacking 4 leaves (replaced with photocopies): first two leaves (including title page), leaf [1] of the 4 unpaginated leaves and the last leaf. Leaves 4-9 bound out of sequence. 19 cm. Fair-good condition. Stains. Tears and worming, repaired (the leaves were professionally restored). Several tears affecting text, replaced with photocopies. Margins trimmed, affecting text on several leaves. New leather binding (with minor damage).
Yaari 25; Otzar HaHaggadot 33.
The only Hebrew book printed in Bistrowitz (Bystrzejowice). The printer, R. Klonymus son of Mordechai Jaffe, printed many books in Lublin. In 1592, a harsh epidemic broke out in Lublin and R. Klonymus was compelled to escape. He settled in Bistrowitz, where he printed this book over the course of two months. When the epidemic abated, he returned to Lublin and continued printing books there. See: C.D. Friedberg, Toldot HaDefus HaIvri B'Polania, Tel Aviv, 1950, p. 52.
Incomplete copy. 3-60, [2] leaves. Originally: 60, [4] leaves. Lacking 4 leaves (replaced with photocopies): first two leaves (including title page), leaf [1] of the 4 unpaginated leaves and the last leaf. Leaves 4-9 bound out of sequence. 19 cm. Fair-good condition. Stains. Tears and worming, repaired (the leaves were professionally restored). Several tears affecting text, replaced with photocopies. Margins trimmed, affecting text on several leaves. New leather binding (with minor damage).
Yaari 25; Otzar HaHaggadot 33.
Category
Passover Haggadahs
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $500
Sold for: $1,188
Including buyer's premium
Map of Eretz Israel, "so that every intelligent person should know the route of the Jews' travels in the desert for forty years, and the length and breadth of the Holy Land, from the Egyptian Nile until Damascus and from the Arnon river until the Mediterranean Sea, and the portion of land allotted to each tribe…". [Copper-engraving, from a Passover Haggadah, Amsterdam: Solomon Proops, 1712].
A "Table of desert travels" (containing a list of the places the Jews encamped), a depiction of Eretz Israel as a land flowing with milk and honey, a Sukkah and various other illustrated verses, appear below the map.
The map, created by Avraham ben Yaakov Hagar (his printed signature "Avraham bar Yaakov" appears at the bottom of the plate), was first printed several years earlier - in a Passover Haggadah, Amsterdam 1695. In this map, the year was changed in the title to 1712.
48X26.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Marginal tears and open tears (with minimal damage to the map), repaired. The map is pasted onto thin, acid-free paper. Creases. Mounted on a passe-partout.
A "Table of desert travels" (containing a list of the places the Jews encamped), a depiction of Eretz Israel as a land flowing with milk and honey, a Sukkah and various other illustrated verses, appear below the map.
The map, created by Avraham ben Yaakov Hagar (his printed signature "Avraham bar Yaakov" appears at the bottom of the plate), was first printed several years earlier - in a Passover Haggadah, Amsterdam 1695. In this map, the year was changed in the title to 1712.
48X26.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Marginal tears and open tears (with minimal damage to the map), repaired. The map is pasted onto thin, acid-free paper. Creases. Mounted on a passe-partout.
Category
Passover Haggadahs
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Birkat HaMazon, according to the German and Polish rites, with Passover Haggadah and Yiddish translation in Tsene-rene typeface. Fürth, [1780]. The title page states: "In Amsterdam typeface".
37 [i.e. 39] leaves. 20.5 cm. Fair condition. Leaves slightly darkened. Stains and wear. Creases. Detached leaves. Old binding, worn and detached, without spine.
Otzar HaHaggadot 299.
37 [i.e. 39] leaves. 20.5 cm. Fair condition. Leaves slightly darkened. Stains and wear. Creases. Detached leaves. Old binding, worn and detached, without spine.
Otzar HaHaggadot 299.
Category
Passover Haggadahs
Catalogue
Auction 62 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
August 28, 2018
Opening: $800
Unsold
Sephardi rite Passover Haggadah. London, 1813.
Passover Haggadah according to the Sephardi rite, including engraved plates with illustrations and maps of Eretz Israel and the Sea of Reeds (the illustrations and maps do not appear in all copies). Hebrew and Spanish, on facing pages.
[2], 19 leaves, [7] illustration plates, [2] maps. 23 cm. Fair-poor condition. Stains and wear, dampstains, large marginal tears affecting text, repaired in some places. Wear, large tears and dampness damage to the illustrations and maps. Most of the illustration plates were bound at the end of the book, between the two maps (which were intended to be folded). Old binding, damaged.
Yaari 381; Otzar HaHaggadot 544.
Passover Haggadah according to the Sephardi rite, including engraved plates with illustrations and maps of Eretz Israel and the Sea of Reeds (the illustrations and maps do not appear in all copies). Hebrew and Spanish, on facing pages.
[2], 19 leaves, [7] illustration plates, [2] maps. 23 cm. Fair-poor condition. Stains and wear, dampstains, large marginal tears affecting text, repaired in some places. Wear, large tears and dampness damage to the illustrations and maps. Most of the illustration plates were bound at the end of the book, between the two maps (which were intended to be folded). Old binding, damaged.
Yaari 381; Otzar HaHaggadot 544.
Category
Passover Haggadahs
Catalogue