Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
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Displaying 85 - 96 of 434
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Mishlei with the Rashi commentary, and with the commentary of the Gaon of Vilna. Warsaw: David son of Aryeh Leib Shklover, 1837.
Copy that belonged to Chassidic rebbes:
Copy of Rebbe Simcha Bunim of Otwock. Ownership inscription on the title page: "Belongs to Simcha Bunim son of the Rabbi of Warka". Stamps on the title page and on other leaves: "Simcha Bunim son of Rebbe Mordechai Menachem Mendel of Warka, now in Otwock".
Stamps of the grandson of the Rebbe of Otwock on the title page and on the last leaf: "Simcha Bunim Rayevsky, Białobrzegi".
The Rebbe of Otwock - R. Simcha Bunim son of R. Mordechai Menachem Mendel Kalish (1851-1907, Encyclopedia L'Chassidut, III, pp. 827-828), one of the leading tzaddikim of his generation, served as Rebbe in Warka from the age of 17. After his first immigration to the city of Tiberias, he was banished by the Turks and returned to Poland. In 1906, he returned to Eretz Israel and settled in Tiberias.
Inscribed on the front flyleaf: "Avraham Avish Segal Kanner, here in Iași" - R. Avraham Avish Kanner of Tshkhoiv (Czchów). His father, Rebbe Yaakov Shimshon Kanner founded the Tshkhoiv Chassidic dynasty. R. Avraham Avish was appointed Rebbe in 1929 in the city of Botoşani and later relocated his court to Iași. In the wake of WWII, he immigrated to Eretz Israel and served as Rebbe in the city of Haifa.
Next to his stamp is the stamp of his son-in-law, Rebbe Yitzchak Yaakov Rabinowitz of Biala-Bnei Brak.
[1], 56 leaves. 23 cm. Fair-poor condition. Stains and wear. Traces of past dampness and dampness damage. Worming, affecting text. Paper repairs to title page margins. Stamps. New leather binding.
Vinograd, Otzar Sifrei HaGra, no. 90.
Copy that belonged to Chassidic rebbes:
Copy of Rebbe Simcha Bunim of Otwock. Ownership inscription on the title page: "Belongs to Simcha Bunim son of the Rabbi of Warka". Stamps on the title page and on other leaves: "Simcha Bunim son of Rebbe Mordechai Menachem Mendel of Warka, now in Otwock".
Stamps of the grandson of the Rebbe of Otwock on the title page and on the last leaf: "Simcha Bunim Rayevsky, Białobrzegi".
The Rebbe of Otwock - R. Simcha Bunim son of R. Mordechai Menachem Mendel Kalish (1851-1907, Encyclopedia L'Chassidut, III, pp. 827-828), one of the leading tzaddikim of his generation, served as Rebbe in Warka from the age of 17. After his first immigration to the city of Tiberias, he was banished by the Turks and returned to Poland. In 1906, he returned to Eretz Israel and settled in Tiberias.
Inscribed on the front flyleaf: "Avraham Avish Segal Kanner, here in Iași" - R. Avraham Avish Kanner of Tshkhoiv (Czchów). His father, Rebbe Yaakov Shimshon Kanner founded the Tshkhoiv Chassidic dynasty. R. Avraham Avish was appointed Rebbe in 1929 in the city of Botoşani and later relocated his court to Iași. In the wake of WWII, he immigrated to Eretz Israel and served as Rebbe in the city of Haifa.
Next to his stamp is the stamp of his son-in-law, Rebbe Yitzchak Yaakov Rabinowitz of Biala-Bnei Brak.
[1], 56 leaves. 23 cm. Fair-poor condition. Stains and wear. Traces of past dampness and dampness damage. Worming, affecting text. Paper repairs to title page margins. Stamps. New leather binding.
Vinograd, Otzar Sifrei HaGra, no. 90.
Category
Books by the Gaon of Vilna and his Disciples
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $600
Sold for: $1,500
Including buyer's premium
Sifra D'Tzeniuta with the commentary of the Gaon of Vilna. [Vilna and Grodno, 1820]. First edition of the commentary of the Gaon of Vilna on Sifra D'Tzeniuta. Copy lacking title page.
Signature of R. "Zundel of Salant" in the heading of leaf 7. A (trimmed) dedication in early handwriting on the first leaf: "Donated by the woman Rachel, in memory of the soul [---] R. Yosef Zundel Salant", and stamps of a synagogue in Petach Tikva.
R. Yosef Zundel of Salant (1787-1866) was a foremost disciple of R. Chaim of Volozhin, disciple of the Gaon of Vilna. He was the prime teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, who cleaved to him in his youth in Salant, and under his directives began studying mussar intensely and disseminating the mussar approach to the multitudes. As the teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, and the one who transmitted to him the teachings of the Gaon of Vilna, R. Yosef Zundel is considered the father of the mussar movement. R. Zundel studied in the Volozhin yeshiva, and was attached to the yeshiva dean, R. Chaim of Volozhin, who recognized his great stature and admitted him into the circle of his closest disciples, to whom he transmitted all the teachings of his great teacher the Gaon of Vilna, in revealed and hidden realms of the Torah. R. Zundel considered R. Chaim as his prime teacher and he refers to him in all his writings as "my master and teacher", whilst he quotes the Gaon of Vilna as "the great rabbi". His writings contain numerous excerpts and notes from their teachings and ways. Parts of his writings were published in the book HaTzaddik R. Yosef Zundel MiSalant VeRabbotav (Jerusalem, 1927), which includes his biography, his writings and the writings of his teachers R. Chaim of Volozhin and the Gaon of Vilna, of which he was the main transmitter.
This book is indispensable in understanding the Gra's approach to Kabbalah. The Chazon Ish was accustomed to praising the holiness and special segulah of this edition, which was printed by G-d-fearing Jews. He would tell the story of a dybbuk-stricken person that was brought before one of the great tzaddikim of the previous generation. The residents of the town gathered to see the proceedings and the tzaddik told the onlookers: "Let me show you a wondrous thing!". He presented the person with two identical books - the first edition of Sifra D'Tzeniuta printed in the previous generation and the second edition printed in his generation (Vilna, 1882). He handed them both to him, first wrapping them in paper, so that he could not distinguish between them. The dybbuk-stricken person took the second edition of the book and embraced it lovingly; however, he recoiled from the other book saying that he is unable to touch it. The tzaddik revealed the reason: the impure dybbuk could not hold the edition published by G-d-fearing Jews due to its great holiness and was able to hold the second edition since it was printed in a printing press which employed Jews who were lured by the Enlightenment Movement (Maase Ish, V, p. 122, in the name of R. Shemaryahu Greineman who heard the story from the Chazon Ish; Shimush Chachamim, p. 266).
A similar story was told by R. Shmuel David HaKohen Munk (rabbi of the Charedi community of Haifa), in the name of a Sephardic Jerusalem kabbalist. A person with a dybbuk was brought before the kabbalist, who placed a second edition volume of the Vilna Gaon's commentary on Sifra D'Tzeniuta on the man to no avail. Then he used a first edition and the man was cured (Zechor LeDavid, II, p. 159). R. Munk also quotes R. Eliezer Gordon of Telz, who reported that when a volume of the first edition was placed in the hands of a dybbuk, he shook and screamed in terror: "The Vilner! The Vilner!", but did not show the same agitation upon similar exposure to a second edition (ibid).
Copy lacking title page and first two leaves: [3], 59, [3] leaves (originally: [6], 59, [3] leaves). 20.5 cm. High-quality, thick, light-colored paper. Wide margins. Good-fair condition. Stains. Worming to inner margins of several leaves. Library stamps. New leather binding.
The order of the forewords in this copy concurs with the variant listed in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book, no. 177999, in which the foreword of R. Chaim of Volozhin precedes the foreword of R. Yaakov Moshe of Slonim, the Vilna Gaon's grandson.
Vinograd, Otzar Sifrei HaGra, no. 696; Stefansky Classics, no. 334.
Signature of R. "Zundel of Salant" in the heading of leaf 7. A (trimmed) dedication in early handwriting on the first leaf: "Donated by the woman Rachel, in memory of the soul [---] R. Yosef Zundel Salant", and stamps of a synagogue in Petach Tikva.
R. Yosef Zundel of Salant (1787-1866) was a foremost disciple of R. Chaim of Volozhin, disciple of the Gaon of Vilna. He was the prime teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, who cleaved to him in his youth in Salant, and under his directives began studying mussar intensely and disseminating the mussar approach to the multitudes. As the teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, and the one who transmitted to him the teachings of the Gaon of Vilna, R. Yosef Zundel is considered the father of the mussar movement. R. Zundel studied in the Volozhin yeshiva, and was attached to the yeshiva dean, R. Chaim of Volozhin, who recognized his great stature and admitted him into the circle of his closest disciples, to whom he transmitted all the teachings of his great teacher the Gaon of Vilna, in revealed and hidden realms of the Torah. R. Zundel considered R. Chaim as his prime teacher and he refers to him in all his writings as "my master and teacher", whilst he quotes the Gaon of Vilna as "the great rabbi". His writings contain numerous excerpts and notes from their teachings and ways. Parts of his writings were published in the book HaTzaddik R. Yosef Zundel MiSalant VeRabbotav (Jerusalem, 1927), which includes his biography, his writings and the writings of his teachers R. Chaim of Volozhin and the Gaon of Vilna, of which he was the main transmitter.
This book is indispensable in understanding the Gra's approach to Kabbalah. The Chazon Ish was accustomed to praising the holiness and special segulah of this edition, which was printed by G-d-fearing Jews. He would tell the story of a dybbuk-stricken person that was brought before one of the great tzaddikim of the previous generation. The residents of the town gathered to see the proceedings and the tzaddik told the onlookers: "Let me show you a wondrous thing!". He presented the person with two identical books - the first edition of Sifra D'Tzeniuta printed in the previous generation and the second edition printed in his generation (Vilna, 1882). He handed them both to him, first wrapping them in paper, so that he could not distinguish between them. The dybbuk-stricken person took the second edition of the book and embraced it lovingly; however, he recoiled from the other book saying that he is unable to touch it. The tzaddik revealed the reason: the impure dybbuk could not hold the edition published by G-d-fearing Jews due to its great holiness and was able to hold the second edition since it was printed in a printing press which employed Jews who were lured by the Enlightenment Movement (Maase Ish, V, p. 122, in the name of R. Shemaryahu Greineman who heard the story from the Chazon Ish; Shimush Chachamim, p. 266).
A similar story was told by R. Shmuel David HaKohen Munk (rabbi of the Charedi community of Haifa), in the name of a Sephardic Jerusalem kabbalist. A person with a dybbuk was brought before the kabbalist, who placed a second edition volume of the Vilna Gaon's commentary on Sifra D'Tzeniuta on the man to no avail. Then he used a first edition and the man was cured (Zechor LeDavid, II, p. 159). R. Munk also quotes R. Eliezer Gordon of Telz, who reported that when a volume of the first edition was placed in the hands of a dybbuk, he shook and screamed in terror: "The Vilner! The Vilner!", but did not show the same agitation upon similar exposure to a second edition (ibid).
Copy lacking title page and first two leaves: [3], 59, [3] leaves (originally: [6], 59, [3] leaves). 20.5 cm. High-quality, thick, light-colored paper. Wide margins. Good-fair condition. Stains. Worming to inner margins of several leaves. Library stamps. New leather binding.
The order of the forewords in this copy concurs with the variant listed in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book, no. 177999, in which the foreword of R. Chaim of Volozhin precedes the foreword of R. Yaakov Moshe of Slonim, the Vilna Gaon's grandson.
Vinograd, Otzar Sifrei HaGra, no. 696; Stefansky Classics, no. 334.
Category
Books by the Gaon of Vilna and his Disciples
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $1,500
Sold for: $3,250
Including buyer's premium
Nefesh HaChaim, by R. Chaim Rabbi of Volozhin (Valozhyn). Vilna and Grodno, 1824. First edition. Forewords by his sons R. Yitzchak of Volozhin and R. Yosef of Chorzów. Approbations by the rabbis of Vilna, R. Shaul Katzenelbogen and R. Avraham Abele Poswoler.
A classic book of the teachings of the Gaon of Vilna and his disciples, concerning manners of conduct and service of G-d according to both the revealed and hidden realms of the Torah (many parts of the book were written in response to the Chassidic school of thought, following the path and opinion of the Gaon of Vilna and his disciples). The author, R. Chaim of Volozhin, cherished this book more that all his many halachic writings, and before his passing, he ordered his sons to expedite its publishing. The book was edited and brought to print by his son R. Yitzchak of Volozhin and by his nephew, the kabbalist R. Avraham Simcha of Amtchislav (Mstsislaw), who both served as heads of the Volozhin Yeshiva.
[6], 17; 10; 8, [1]; 17; 4 leaves (leaves 1-4, which belong before section 4, were bound at the end of the book). 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Significant tears to title page margins and several other leaves. Dark stains and scribbles in several places. Ownership and familial inscriptions on flyleaves. New leather binding.
Stefansky Classics, no. 478.
A classic book of the teachings of the Gaon of Vilna and his disciples, concerning manners of conduct and service of G-d according to both the revealed and hidden realms of the Torah (many parts of the book were written in response to the Chassidic school of thought, following the path and opinion of the Gaon of Vilna and his disciples). The author, R. Chaim of Volozhin, cherished this book more that all his many halachic writings, and before his passing, he ordered his sons to expedite its publishing. The book was edited and brought to print by his son R. Yitzchak of Volozhin and by his nephew, the kabbalist R. Avraham Simcha of Amtchislav (Mstsislaw), who both served as heads of the Volozhin Yeshiva.
[6], 17; 10; 8, [1]; 17; 4 leaves (leaves 1-4, which belong before section 4, were bound at the end of the book). 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and wear. Significant tears to title page margins and several other leaves. Dark stains and scribbles in several places. Ownership and familial inscriptions on flyleaves. New leather binding.
Stefansky Classics, no. 478.
Category
Books by the Gaon of Vilna and his Disciples
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $500
Sold for: $1,125
Including buyer's premium
Sefer HaGilgulim, the Arizal's kabbalistic teachings, by R. Chaim Vital. [Johannisburg (Prussia, present day: Pisz), 1859].
Inscriptions on title page handwritten and signed by R. Yosef Zundel of Salant (Salantai): "Zundel of Salant"; "Donated by R. Akiva son of R. Gershon of Vilna"; "To Zundel of Salant"; "2 1/2 grush for binding". On the front endpaper: "Donated by Rachel, in the memory of R. Yosef Zundel" and the stamp of a synagogue in Petach Tikva.
R. Yosef Zundel of Salant (1787-1866) was a foremost disciple of R. Chaim of Volozhin, disciple of the Gaon of Vilna. He was the prime teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, who cleaved to him in his youth in Salant, and under his directives began studying mussar intensely and disseminating the mussar approach to the multitudes. As the teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, and the one who transmitted to him the teachings of the Gaon of Vilna, R. Yosef Zundel is considered the father of the mussar movement. R. Zundel studied in the Volozhin yeshiva, and was attached to the yeshiva dean, R. Chaim of Volozhin, who recognized his great stature and admitted him into the circle of his closest disciples, to whom he transmitted all the teachings of his great teacher the Gaon of Vilna, in revealed and hidden realms of the Torah. R. Zundel considered R. Chaim as his prime teacher and he refers to him in all his writings as "my master and teacher", whilst he quotes the Gaon of Vilna as "the great rabbi". His writings contain numerous excerpts and notes from their teachings and ways. Parts of his writings were published in the book HaTzaddik R. Yosef Zundel MiSalant VeRabbotav (Jerusalem, 1927), which includes his biography, his writings and the writings of his teachers R. Chaim of Volozhin and the Gaon of Vilna, of which he was the main transmitter.
[1], 1-64, 64-82 leaves. 18.5 cm. Darkened leaves. Good condition. Stains. New leather binding.
Inscriptions on title page handwritten and signed by R. Yosef Zundel of Salant (Salantai): "Zundel of Salant"; "Donated by R. Akiva son of R. Gershon of Vilna"; "To Zundel of Salant"; "2 1/2 grush for binding". On the front endpaper: "Donated by Rachel, in the memory of R. Yosef Zundel" and the stamp of a synagogue in Petach Tikva.
R. Yosef Zundel of Salant (1787-1866) was a foremost disciple of R. Chaim of Volozhin, disciple of the Gaon of Vilna. He was the prime teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, who cleaved to him in his youth in Salant, and under his directives began studying mussar intensely and disseminating the mussar approach to the multitudes. As the teacher of R. Yisrael of Salant, and the one who transmitted to him the teachings of the Gaon of Vilna, R. Yosef Zundel is considered the father of the mussar movement. R. Zundel studied in the Volozhin yeshiva, and was attached to the yeshiva dean, R. Chaim of Volozhin, who recognized his great stature and admitted him into the circle of his closest disciples, to whom he transmitted all the teachings of his great teacher the Gaon of Vilna, in revealed and hidden realms of the Torah. R. Zundel considered R. Chaim as his prime teacher and he refers to him in all his writings as "my master and teacher", whilst he quotes the Gaon of Vilna as "the great rabbi". His writings contain numerous excerpts and notes from their teachings and ways. Parts of his writings were published in the book HaTzaddik R. Yosef Zundel MiSalant VeRabbotav (Jerusalem, 1927), which includes his biography, his writings and the writings of his teachers R. Chaim of Volozhin and the Gaon of Vilna, of which he was the main transmitter.
[1], 1-64, 64-82 leaves. 18.5 cm. Darkened leaves. Good condition. Stains. New leather binding.
Category
Books by the Gaon of Vilna and his Disciples
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $700
Sold for: $1,750
Including buyer's premium
Passover Haggadah, with the Mateh Aharon commentary by R. Aharon Darshan Teomim and another Kabbalistic commentary. Frankfurt am Main: the dayan R. Leib Schnapper, [1710].
Combined texts for Ashkenazim and Sephardim, with instructions and explanations in Yiddish and Ladino.
Engraved illustrations (after drawings by Abraham ben Yaakov HaGer in the 1695 Amsterdam Haggadah). Elaborate title page, composed of several illustrations.
Trimmed signature on the title page: "Menachem Mendele son of Itzek Speyer". Another inscription on leaf 40, adjacent to the leaf number: "Mendele Speyer, Passover 1770" (the Frankfurt Memorbuch, p. 251, records: "Hendel wife of R. Mendele son of R. Itzek Speyer").
[2], 2-44 leaves. 29.5 cm. Some leaves somewhat darkened. Condition varies, fair-good. Most leaves of first part (the Haggadah) in fair condition, with wear, stains and dark dampstains. Some leaves with significant food and wine stains, over the entire leaf. Minor marginal worming to first leaves. Second part (the commentary) in overall good condition, with a few stains. New leather binding.
Yaari 71; Otzar HaHaggadot 113.
Combined texts for Ashkenazim and Sephardim, with instructions and explanations in Yiddish and Ladino.
Engraved illustrations (after drawings by Abraham ben Yaakov HaGer in the 1695 Amsterdam Haggadah). Elaborate title page, composed of several illustrations.
Trimmed signature on the title page: "Menachem Mendele son of Itzek Speyer". Another inscription on leaf 40, adjacent to the leaf number: "Mendele Speyer, Passover 1770" (the Frankfurt Memorbuch, p. 251, records: "Hendel wife of R. Mendele son of R. Itzek Speyer").
[2], 2-44 leaves. 29.5 cm. Some leaves somewhat darkened. Condition varies, fair-good. Most leaves of first part (the Haggadah) in fair condition, with wear, stains and dark dampstains. Some leaves with significant food and wine stains, over the entire leaf. Minor marginal worming to first leaves. Second part (the commentary) in overall good condition, with a few stains. New leather binding.
Yaari 71; Otzar HaHaggadot 113.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $500
Unsold
Passover Haggadah - Beit Chorin, with the Alshech, Gevurot Hashem and Olelot Efraim commentaries. Metz, 1767.
Additional, engraved title page. Engraved illustrations based on Avraham ben Yaakov HaGer's illustrations to the Amsterdam Haggadah.
[2], 64 leaves. Without folding map. 22 cm. Most leaves in good condition. Stains and light wear. Dark wine and food stains to several leaves. Damage and minor worming. Old binding, worn, with tears to spine.
Yaari 162; Otzar HaHaggadot 251. One of the first Hebrew books printed in Metz.
Additional, engraved title page. Engraved illustrations based on Avraham ben Yaakov HaGer's illustrations to the Amsterdam Haggadah.
[2], 64 leaves. Without folding map. 22 cm. Most leaves in good condition. Stains and light wear. Dark wine and food stains to several leaves. Damage and minor worming. Old binding, worn, with tears to spine.
Yaari 162; Otzar HaHaggadot 251. One of the first Hebrew books printed in Metz.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $2,000
Sold for: $3,000
Including buyer's premium
Passover Haggadah - Maaleh Bet Chorin, "Ashkenazi and Sephardi rite", with commentaries - Alshech, Gevurot Hashem by the Maharal and Olelot Efraim by Rabbi Shlomo Ephraim of Luntschitz (author of Kli Yakar). Amsterdam: Proops, [1781]. First edition of the Haggadah under this title.
Engraved title page. Engraved illustrations based on the Amsterdam 1695 edition. At the end of the Haggadah is a large engraved map of Eretz Israel (folded plate).
[2], 52 leaves + folded plate (map). 25.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Stamps. Tear (approx. 13 cm) to folded map, repaired, without loss. Stains and dampstains to map. Margins of map restored. New leather binding.
Yaari 199; Otzar HaHaggadot 300.
Engraved title page. Engraved illustrations based on the Amsterdam 1695 edition. At the end of the Haggadah is a large engraved map of Eretz Israel (folded plate).
[2], 52 leaves + folded plate (map). 25.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Stamps. Tear (approx. 13 cm) to folded map, repaired, without loss. Stains and dampstains to map. Margins of map restored. New leather binding.
Yaari 199; Otzar HaHaggadot 300.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $400
Sold for: $1,000
Including buyer's premium
"Haggadah with the Illustrations" - Passover Haggadah with illustrations and Yiddish instructions. Ostroh, 1832.
Signature on last leaf: "Duber Enis[?] of Botoşani[?]".
36 leaves. 15 cm. Printed in part on bluish paper. Fair-good condition. Stains and wear. Worming to title page and to other leaves. New leather binding.
Yaari 519; Otzar HaHaggadot 720.
Rare Haggadah. Listed by Yaari, Yudlov and the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book according to the records of Shmuel Weiner, without seeing the Haggadah. Not in NLI.
Signature on last leaf: "Duber Enis[?] of Botoşani[?]".
36 leaves. 15 cm. Printed in part on bluish paper. Fair-good condition. Stains and wear. Worming to title page and to other leaves. New leather binding.
Yaari 519; Otzar HaHaggadot 720.
Rare Haggadah. Listed by Yaari, Yudlov and the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book according to the records of Shmuel Weiner, without seeing the Haggadah. Not in NLI.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $500
Unsold
Illustrated Passover Haggadah with Ladino translation. Livorno, [1839].
38 leaves. 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Wine and food stains to some leaves. Red edges. Original binding, with minor damage. Bookplates.
Yaari 587; Otzar HaHaggadot 808.
38 leaves. 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Wine and food stains to some leaves. Red edges. Original binding, with minor damage. Bookplates.
Yaari 587; Otzar HaHaggadot 808.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $2,500
Unsold
Roman-rite machzor, with the Kimcha DeAvishona commentary. Part I - prayers for weekdays, Shabbat and festivals, Passover Haggadah, Tractate Avot with the commentaries of the Rambam and "the leading physician Rabbenu Ovadia of Sforno". Bologna: [Menachem son of Abraham of Modena, Yechiel son of Solomon of Ravenna and Dan Aryeh son of Solomon Chaim of Monselice], [1540].
One of the most prominent machzorim printed in Italy. Only edition of Kimcha DeAvishona, comprehensive commentary to prayers and piyyutim, by R. Yochanan son of R. Yosef Treves (the commentary was published anonymously; regarding different copies of this machzor, some featuring the name of the author, see: Alexander Marx, R. Joseph Arli and R. Johanen Treves, Kovetz Mada'i LeZecher Moshe Schorr, New York 1945, pp. 193-194; Yitzchak Rivkind, Dikdukei Soferim, Kiryat Sefer, IV, 1927-1928, pp. 274-275).
The machzor contains many glosses in Italian script by an unidentified Torah scholar, from the time of the printing. Several glosses from other writers. Almost all the glosses are trimmed and some are faded, with damage to text. The glosses mention books published in that period (such as Meor Einayim by R. Azariah dei Rossi, Derech Chaim and Avodat HaMikdash by R. Menachem de Lonzano, commentary to Azharot by R. Yosef HaLoez, and others). The writer mentions various customs and textual variations, adding his own thoughts and those of contemporary Torah scholars (for instance: "They have already said that there must be a closing line… and in my opinion… in the Sephardi rite"; "…I was told that the exceptional Torah scholar [Pro]vencal…"; "So… R. Pinchas"; "The correct text in my opinion is…", and more).
Part I only. [200] leaves. 29 cm. Condition varies, some leaves in good or fair condition, and some in fair-poor condition. Stains. Dampstains. Extensive wear to some leaves. Worming. Many large tears to title page and approx. twenty first leaves, affecting border and text, with some loss. Many tears to other leaves in the middle of book, and to final leaf. Paper repairs in some places, with occasional damage to text. Detached leaves. Early leather binding, worn and damaged.
Less than twenty Hebrew titles were ever printed in Bologna, and this machzor was one of the last books printed there.
Stefansky Classics, no. 434.
One of the most prominent machzorim printed in Italy. Only edition of Kimcha DeAvishona, comprehensive commentary to prayers and piyyutim, by R. Yochanan son of R. Yosef Treves (the commentary was published anonymously; regarding different copies of this machzor, some featuring the name of the author, see: Alexander Marx, R. Joseph Arli and R. Johanen Treves, Kovetz Mada'i LeZecher Moshe Schorr, New York 1945, pp. 193-194; Yitzchak Rivkind, Dikdukei Soferim, Kiryat Sefer, IV, 1927-1928, pp. 274-275).
The machzor contains many glosses in Italian script by an unidentified Torah scholar, from the time of the printing. Several glosses from other writers. Almost all the glosses are trimmed and some are faded, with damage to text. The glosses mention books published in that period (such as Meor Einayim by R. Azariah dei Rossi, Derech Chaim and Avodat HaMikdash by R. Menachem de Lonzano, commentary to Azharot by R. Yosef HaLoez, and others). The writer mentions various customs and textual variations, adding his own thoughts and those of contemporary Torah scholars (for instance: "They have already said that there must be a closing line… and in my opinion… in the Sephardi rite"; "…I was told that the exceptional Torah scholar [Pro]vencal…"; "So… R. Pinchas"; "The correct text in my opinion is…", and more).
Part I only. [200] leaves. 29 cm. Condition varies, some leaves in good or fair condition, and some in fair-poor condition. Stains. Dampstains. Extensive wear to some leaves. Worming. Many large tears to title page and approx. twenty first leaves, affecting border and text, with some loss. Many tears to other leaves in the middle of book, and to final leaf. Paper repairs in some places, with occasional damage to text. Detached leaves. Early leather binding, worn and damaged.
Less than twenty Hebrew titles were ever printed in Bologna, and this machzor was one of the last books printed there.
Stefansky Classics, no. 434.
Category
Siddurim, Machzorim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $750
Sold for: $1,125
Including buyer's premium
Orden de Ros Asanah y Kypur. Traduzido en Espanol y de nueve emmedado y anadido el Keter Malchut, y otras cosas - machzor for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, translated into Spanish by David Fereira and Mosseh Moreno Henriques. Amsterdam, [1663]. Spanish.
This machzor was printed entirely in Spanish, and was intended for the community of ex-Marranos, who over the years lost familiarity with the Hebrew language.
Fine engraved title page depicting Biblical scenes, with Spanish captions.
304, 321-479 pages. Approx. 16 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, dampstains. Upper margin of title page trimmed, slightly affecting top of illustration. Minor marginal damage to title page. Early leather binding, with damage.
This machzor was printed entirely in Spanish, and was intended for the community of ex-Marranos, who over the years lost familiarity with the Hebrew language.
Fine engraved title page depicting Biblical scenes, with Spanish captions.
304, 321-479 pages. Approx. 16 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, dampstains. Upper margin of title page trimmed, slightly affecting top of illustration. Minor marginal damage to title page. Early leather binding, with damage.
Category
Siddurim, Machzorim and Prayer Books
Catalogue
Auction 70 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
March 31, 2020
Opening: $2,000
Sold for: $6,000
Including buyer's premium
Siddur with the commentary of R. Yaakov Emden, Part I - Amudei Shamayim (prayers for weekdays and Shabbat) and Part II - Shaarei Shamayim (prayers for festivals and more), Ashkenazi rite. Altona: [printed in the home of the author R. Yaakov Rabbi of Emden - the Yaavetz, 1745-1747]. First edition.
Two parts out of three of the siddur with R. Yaakov Emden's commentaries, based on revealed parts of the Torah and on Kabbalah - following the teachings of the Arizal. The first edition of this siddur is renowned for its great precision. R. Yaakov Emden expended great effort in establishing the exact text of the siddur, in the vocalization and accuracy of the words. This siddur was reprinted in many editions and was named by later printers "the Beit Yaakov siddur". In the siddur's later editions (Lviv and Warsaw), modifications and errors affected the text of the prayers, and all that remains of R. Yaakov Emden's corrections and precisions are his comments, integrated in his commentary printed in the margins.
R. Yaakov Emden's siddur became widely accepted in the Chassidic world, and its second edition was printed in Korets in 1818, at the initiative and with the approbation of great Chassidic leaders: the rabbi of Apta and R. Mordechai of Chernobyl. The latter describes in his approbation the rarity of the first edition - the teachings of the Yaavetz are so cherished that "the siddurim have already become worn out, and there is not one to be found in the whole city". The Korets edition included only parts I and II, and in 1836, the third part was printed in Berditchev at the initiative and with the approbation of R. Mordechai of Chernobyl and R. Yisrael of Ruzhin (who praised the siddur in his approbation: "It was established and originates from golden foundations, in order to indicate the correct path with pure intellect on the topic of prayer"). The Imrei Yosef of Spinka wrote in the name of the sons of the Divrei Chaim of Sanz, who heard from their father who had a tradition that the Baal Shem Tov told R. Efraim, brother of the Yaavetz: "Your brother the Yaavetz was connected to the Upper spheres all day" (approbation of R. Moshe Halberstam to the Eshkol edition of the siddur, Jerusalem 1993). Tzror HaChaim (by R. Ch. Liebersohn, Biłgoraj 1913, p. 22), quotes in the name of the Baal Shem Tov: "Chacham Tzvi had five sons, whom the Baal Shem Tov attested all merited Divine Inspiration, yet he offered especially effusive praise on one of them, without disclosing which one, but his friends confirmed that he was referring to the Yaavetz". The Yeshuot Moshe of Vizhnitz writes in his approbation to that same edition: "…This siddur did not depart from the tables of our teachers and ancestors, who utilized it constantly, especially while leading the Seder on Passover night". Rebbe Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch quoted precisions and practices from this siddur several times in his discourses, and once remarked "R. Yaakov Emden exercised ultimate precision in every way, to the point of being meticulous even regarding the letters etc." (BeTzel HaChochma, p. 265). Title page of Part I: "Palatin Bet El, resting upon seven Amudei Shamayim, also called Ohr Shivat HaYamim". On the verso of the title page, approbation by R. Yechezkel Katzenellenbogen Rabbi of Altona-Hamburg-Wandsbek, extolling the virtues of the siddur. He relates in his approbation of cantors who are not meticulous to follow the rules of grammar "and sometimes upon hearing such mistakes, I berated them…". Title page of Part II: "The palace of the city of G-d, is open to 14 gates… Shaarei Shamayim… for the days and months of the year". The approbation of R. Aryeh Leibush Rabbi and yeshiva dean of Amsterdam, brother-in-law of the author and outstanding Torah scholar, is presented on p. 159b, followed by the author's apology for printing the approbation at the end of the siddur (rather than at the beginning, as is customary), explaining that it was received only at the end of the printing: "…and it is already known that the position does not bring honor to the person, and we find that the last one is the most cherished, and the Torah does not follow chronological order...".
Two parts in two volumes. Vol. I: [1], 356, 354-385, 389-415, 417-418 leaves. Vol. II: 159 leaves. 16.5-17 cm. Some leaves significantly darkened. Good-fair condition. Stains. Dampstains to title page of Part I and other places. Stamps on title pages and other leaves. New matching leather bindings.
Stefansky Classics, no. 415.
Two parts out of three of the siddur with R. Yaakov Emden's commentaries, based on revealed parts of the Torah and on Kabbalah - following the teachings of the Arizal. The first edition of this siddur is renowned for its great precision. R. Yaakov Emden expended great effort in establishing the exact text of the siddur, in the vocalization and accuracy of the words. This siddur was reprinted in many editions and was named by later printers "the Beit Yaakov siddur". In the siddur's later editions (Lviv and Warsaw), modifications and errors affected the text of the prayers, and all that remains of R. Yaakov Emden's corrections and precisions are his comments, integrated in his commentary printed in the margins.
R. Yaakov Emden's siddur became widely accepted in the Chassidic world, and its second edition was printed in Korets in 1818, at the initiative and with the approbation of great Chassidic leaders: the rabbi of Apta and R. Mordechai of Chernobyl. The latter describes in his approbation the rarity of the first edition - the teachings of the Yaavetz are so cherished that "the siddurim have already become worn out, and there is not one to be found in the whole city". The Korets edition included only parts I and II, and in 1836, the third part was printed in Berditchev at the initiative and with the approbation of R. Mordechai of Chernobyl and R. Yisrael of Ruzhin (who praised the siddur in his approbation: "It was established and originates from golden foundations, in order to indicate the correct path with pure intellect on the topic of prayer"). The Imrei Yosef of Spinka wrote in the name of the sons of the Divrei Chaim of Sanz, who heard from their father who had a tradition that the Baal Shem Tov told R. Efraim, brother of the Yaavetz: "Your brother the Yaavetz was connected to the Upper spheres all day" (approbation of R. Moshe Halberstam to the Eshkol edition of the siddur, Jerusalem 1993). Tzror HaChaim (by R. Ch. Liebersohn, Biłgoraj 1913, p. 22), quotes in the name of the Baal Shem Tov: "Chacham Tzvi had five sons, whom the Baal Shem Tov attested all merited Divine Inspiration, yet he offered especially effusive praise on one of them, without disclosing which one, but his friends confirmed that he was referring to the Yaavetz". The Yeshuot Moshe of Vizhnitz writes in his approbation to that same edition: "…This siddur did not depart from the tables of our teachers and ancestors, who utilized it constantly, especially while leading the Seder on Passover night". Rebbe Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch quoted precisions and practices from this siddur several times in his discourses, and once remarked "R. Yaakov Emden exercised ultimate precision in every way, to the point of being meticulous even regarding the letters etc." (BeTzel HaChochma, p. 265). Title page of Part I: "Palatin Bet El, resting upon seven Amudei Shamayim, also called Ohr Shivat HaYamim". On the verso of the title page, approbation by R. Yechezkel Katzenellenbogen Rabbi of Altona-Hamburg-Wandsbek, extolling the virtues of the siddur. He relates in his approbation of cantors who are not meticulous to follow the rules of grammar "and sometimes upon hearing such mistakes, I berated them…". Title page of Part II: "The palace of the city of G-d, is open to 14 gates… Shaarei Shamayim… for the days and months of the year". The approbation of R. Aryeh Leibush Rabbi and yeshiva dean of Amsterdam, brother-in-law of the author and outstanding Torah scholar, is presented on p. 159b, followed by the author's apology for printing the approbation at the end of the siddur (rather than at the beginning, as is customary), explaining that it was received only at the end of the printing: "…and it is already known that the position does not bring honor to the person, and we find that the last one is the most cherished, and the Torah does not follow chronological order...".
Two parts in two volumes. Vol. I: [1], 356, 354-385, 389-415, 417-418 leaves. Vol. II: 159 leaves. 16.5-17 cm. Some leaves significantly darkened. Good-fair condition. Stains. Dampstains to title page of Part I and other places. Stamps on title pages and other leaves. New matching leather bindings.
Stefansky Classics, no. 415.
Category
Siddurim, Machzorim and Prayer Books
Catalogue