Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
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Displaying 205 - 216 of 336
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $1,125
Including buyer's premium
Eight publications by Dr. Nehemiah Robinson, published by the Institute of Jewish Affairs of the World Jewish Congress. New York, ca. 1945-1950. English. Two volumes (mimeographed typescript).
Two volumes containing eight publications by Dr. Nehemiah Robinson. The publications review the legislation of Germany, Austria and other European countries after World War II, pertaining to the compensation and restitution of Jewish property.
1-4. Volume I (four publications):
• First supplement to indemnification and reparations. Recent events (this report covers the period up to the end of February 1945). [ca. 1945]. [3], 32 ff.
• Indemnification and reparations, second supplement. [1946]. [7] ff (including front cover), 181 pp.
• Indemnification and reparations, third (special) supplement (United States Zone of Germany). [2], 23 ff (including front cover).
• Indemnification and reparations, fourth supplement (The working and the results of the German reparation program). 1949. [2], 43 ff (including front cover).
5-8. Volume II (four publication):
• Restitution legislation in Germany (A survey of enactments). 1949. [2], 59 ff (including cover).
• Compensation Legislation in Germany (A survey of enactments). 1950. [2], 45 ff (including cover).
• Restitution and compensation legislation in Austria (A survey of enactments). 1949. [1], 23 ff (including cover).
• Information on restitution and related subjects. Four parts. 1950. [1], 8 ff; [1], 5 leaves; [1], 8 ff; [1], 8 ff.
Dr. Nehemiah Robinson (1898-1964), a jurist, expert on international law, born in Lithuania. Immigrated to New York in December 1941. From 1947 until his passing in 1964, he was the director of the Institute for Jewish Affairs of the World Jewish Congress, and was the legal counsel of the World Jewish Congress, and represented it in Hague in the negotiation with the West German and Austrian authorities on indemnification and reparations to Holocaust survivors. He practiced law with his brother, the attorney, diplomat and Zionist activist Dr. Jacob Robinson, who served as consultant at the Nuremberg trials and the Eichmann Trial. Dr. Nehemiah Robinson published many articles dealing with Jewish communities around the world.
Two volumes, 27.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains. Ex-library copies. Fabric-covered bindings.
Two volumes containing eight publications by Dr. Nehemiah Robinson. The publications review the legislation of Germany, Austria and other European countries after World War II, pertaining to the compensation and restitution of Jewish property.
1-4. Volume I (four publications):
• First supplement to indemnification and reparations. Recent events (this report covers the period up to the end of February 1945). [ca. 1945]. [3], 32 ff.
• Indemnification and reparations, second supplement. [1946]. [7] ff (including front cover), 181 pp.
• Indemnification and reparations, third (special) supplement (United States Zone of Germany). [2], 23 ff (including front cover).
• Indemnification and reparations, fourth supplement (The working and the results of the German reparation program). 1949. [2], 43 ff (including front cover).
5-8. Volume II (four publication):
• Restitution legislation in Germany (A survey of enactments). 1949. [2], 59 ff (including cover).
• Compensation Legislation in Germany (A survey of enactments). 1950. [2], 45 ff (including cover).
• Restitution and compensation legislation in Austria (A survey of enactments). 1949. [1], 23 ff (including cover).
• Information on restitution and related subjects. Four parts. 1950. [1], 8 ff; [1], 5 leaves; [1], 8 ff; [1], 8 ff.
Dr. Nehemiah Robinson (1898-1964), a jurist, expert on international law, born in Lithuania. Immigrated to New York in December 1941. From 1947 until his passing in 1964, he was the director of the Institute for Jewish Affairs of the World Jewish Congress, and was the legal counsel of the World Jewish Congress, and represented it in Hague in the negotiation with the West German and Austrian authorities on indemnification and reparations to Holocaust survivors. He practiced law with his brother, the attorney, diplomat and Zionist activist Dr. Jacob Robinson, who served as consultant at the Nuremberg trials and the Eichmann Trial. Dr. Nehemiah Robinson published many articles dealing with Jewish communities around the world.
Two volumes, 27.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains. Ex-library copies. Fabric-covered bindings.
Category
Antisemitism, the Holocaust and Sh'erit ha-Pletah
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Large map (approx. 200X200 cm.) of Kudirkos Naumiestis in Lithuania. Edited and sketched by Rachmiel (Ralf) Goldberg. Mimeographed manuscript. Chicago, 1971. Yiddish and some English.
A map of the Lithuanian city of Kudirkos Naumiestis, documenting the local Jewish community before its destruction in the Holocaust in 1941. Marked on the map are the houses of the Jewish residents, the institutions of the community (the synagogue, the Kloyz and the Beit Midrash, Chevra Kaddisha, and more) as well as the mass graves of the Jews who were murdered during the months of June-September 1941. On the lower part appears a small map of Lithuania.
In the margins, a short historical review of the 250 years of Jewish settlement in Kudirkos Naumiestis, until the destruction of the Jewish community during the Holocaust, and a description of the creation of the map by editor Rachmiel (Ralf) Goldberg. Goldberg writes that he sketched the map from memory, with the help of his friends, and notes that he chose to sketch the streets large and wide so that names could be added to them and mistakes that were surely made could be corrected (indeed, several names were added by hand to this map). He emphasizes the importance of the map for future generations, writing: "Perhaps … an offspring might randomly unfold the map, out of curiosity, and see a name he has once heard, or maybe he might notice how and when the destruction occurred, and then perhaps he might recall: do not forget and do not forgive" (Hebrew).
On verso, a sticker with information and folding instructions (Yiddish and English).
Approx. 200X200 cm (two conjoined sheets of paper, 200X100 cm each). Good-fair condition. Strips of tape to edges and center, front and back. Tears along edges and fold lines, some reinforced with tape. Paper yellow in part.
A map of the Lithuanian city of Kudirkos Naumiestis, documenting the local Jewish community before its destruction in the Holocaust in 1941. Marked on the map are the houses of the Jewish residents, the institutions of the community (the synagogue, the Kloyz and the Beit Midrash, Chevra Kaddisha, and more) as well as the mass graves of the Jews who were murdered during the months of June-September 1941. On the lower part appears a small map of Lithuania.
In the margins, a short historical review of the 250 years of Jewish settlement in Kudirkos Naumiestis, until the destruction of the Jewish community during the Holocaust, and a description of the creation of the map by editor Rachmiel (Ralf) Goldberg. Goldberg writes that he sketched the map from memory, with the help of his friends, and notes that he chose to sketch the streets large and wide so that names could be added to them and mistakes that were surely made could be corrected (indeed, several names were added by hand to this map). He emphasizes the importance of the map for future generations, writing: "Perhaps … an offspring might randomly unfold the map, out of curiosity, and see a name he has once heard, or maybe he might notice how and when the destruction occurred, and then perhaps he might recall: do not forget and do not forgive" (Hebrew).
On verso, a sticker with information and folding instructions (Yiddish and English).
Approx. 200X200 cm (two conjoined sheets of paper, 200X100 cm each). Good-fair condition. Strips of tape to edges and center, front and back. Tears along edges and fold lines, some reinforced with tape. Paper yellow in part.
Category
Antisemitism, the Holocaust and Sh'erit ha-Pletah
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $600
Sold for: $2,500
Including buyer's premium
Passover Haggadah, She'erit hapletah in Landsberg. Landsberg DP Camp, Germany: Landsberger Lager Cajtung, [1946].
Illustrated Haggadah, with traditional passages, biblical verses and poetry, including a quote from "Al HaDerech" (On the Road) by Y.C. Brener, Yiddish passages, and prophecies of consolation from the Book of Ezekiel 36. Title page illustration depicts the Egyptian pyramids, a guard hut in the camp, barbed wire fences and chains versus fields and flowers in a blossoming sunny land.
Yidlov, Otzar HaHaggadot, no. 4005.
[16] ff, 28.5 cm. Good condition. Tears and minor blemishes.
Illustrated Haggadah, with traditional passages, biblical verses and poetry, including a quote from "Al HaDerech" (On the Road) by Y.C. Brener, Yiddish passages, and prophecies of consolation from the Book of Ezekiel 36. Title page illustration depicts the Egyptian pyramids, a guard hut in the camp, barbed wire fences and chains versus fields and flowers in a blossoming sunny land.
Yidlov, Otzar HaHaggadot, no. 4005.
[16] ff, 28.5 cm. Good condition. Tears and minor blemishes.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Passover Haggadah / Hagadá de Péssach, translated and edited by Ruth and Henrique Jusim. Rio de Janeiro: Circulo Bibliófilo Hebráico, 1947. Hebrew and Portuguese.
Traditional Passover Haggadah, partly translated into Portuguese. The Haggadah is accompanied by illustrations by Siegmund (Asher) Forst, Saul Raskin, Ze'ev Raban, Jacob Steinhardt, Gustave Doré and others. Copy no. 95 of the Haggadah (the total number of copies in not noted), dedicated to Gabriel Doron (with a handwritten dedication, from 1966, signed by Henrique Jusim).
Henrique Jusim (1916-1986), born in Sokyriany, in a province of Serbia; a Zionist activist and one of the leaders of the pioneering Socialistic youth movement "Gordonia". In 1937, he immigrated to Brazil. He served as the principal of the Jewish high-school in Rio de Janeiro and taught Hebrew and Yiddish literature at the Jewish seminar for teachers in the town, alongside his work as a translator and publisher and his activity at the Jewish Agency in the fields of education and culture. He immigrated to Israel in 1968.
[80] pp. 23 cm. Good conditions. Minor stains. Minor blemishes to binding, mainly along the spine.
Traditional Passover Haggadah, partly translated into Portuguese. The Haggadah is accompanied by illustrations by Siegmund (Asher) Forst, Saul Raskin, Ze'ev Raban, Jacob Steinhardt, Gustave Doré and others. Copy no. 95 of the Haggadah (the total number of copies in not noted), dedicated to Gabriel Doron (with a handwritten dedication, from 1966, signed by Henrique Jusim).
Henrique Jusim (1916-1986), born in Sokyriany, in a province of Serbia; a Zionist activist and one of the leaders of the pioneering Socialistic youth movement "Gordonia". In 1937, he immigrated to Brazil. He served as the principal of the Jewish high-school in Rio de Janeiro and taught Hebrew and Yiddish literature at the Jewish seminar for teachers in the town, alongside his work as a translator and publisher and his activity at the Jewish Agency in the fields of education and culture. He immigrated to Israel in 1968.
[80] pp. 23 cm. Good conditions. Minor stains. Minor blemishes to binding, mainly along the spine.
Category
Passover Haggadot
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $400
Sold for: $2,375
Including buyer's premium
A section of a letter handwritten by Moses Mendelssohn – seven lines, hand-signed by him. [Berlin, June 25, 1782]. German.
A piece of paper with the final lines of a long philosophical letter that was sent by the Jewish-German philosopher, one of the forefathers of Jewish Enlightenment, Moses Mendelssohn (1729-1786) to his friend, the Danish writer and politician, August Adolph Friedrich Hennings (1746-1826): " And it is as if I were suddenly thrown off the rail and given a good opportunity to end here. I will probably return to the subject another time, when a bright morning such as this will motivate me again to such exploration. Until then be well and loved. Yours, Moses Mendelssohn".
The name Henriette is impressed (a dry seal) on verso of the piece of paper, which was cut at the margins. This is possibly the seal of Mendelssohn's daughter, Henriette (1775-1831). A fragmented inscription alongside the seal "Berlin d…".
The complete letter, dealing with progress of mankind versus individual progress, was published in the Jubilee edition of the collected writings of Moses Mendelssohn, Gesammelte Schriften – Jubiläumsausgabe, edited by Alexander Altmann (Stuttgart and Bad Cannstatt, 1977. Volume 13, p. 66).
[1] f, 10.56 cm. Good-fair condition. A long tear in the center of the leaf. Open tears to margins (not affecting text).
A piece of paper with the final lines of a long philosophical letter that was sent by the Jewish-German philosopher, one of the forefathers of Jewish Enlightenment, Moses Mendelssohn (1729-1786) to his friend, the Danish writer and politician, August Adolph Friedrich Hennings (1746-1826): " And it is as if I were suddenly thrown off the rail and given a good opportunity to end here. I will probably return to the subject another time, when a bright morning such as this will motivate me again to such exploration. Until then be well and loved. Yours, Moses Mendelssohn".
The name Henriette is impressed (a dry seal) on verso of the piece of paper, which was cut at the margins. This is possibly the seal of Mendelssohn's daughter, Henriette (1775-1831). A fragmented inscription alongside the seal "Berlin d…".
The complete letter, dealing with progress of mankind versus individual progress, was published in the Jubilee edition of the collected writings of Moses Mendelssohn, Gesammelte Schriften – Jubiläumsausgabe, edited by Alexander Altmann (Stuttgart and Bad Cannstatt, 1977. Volume 13, p. 66).
[1] f, 10.56 cm. Good-fair condition. A long tear in the center of the leaf. Open tears to margins (not affecting text).
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $1,500
Sold for: $2,500
Including buyer's premium
Collection of printed items by Samuel David Luzzatto – Shadal; most of them bound together. Italy, ca. 1819-1859. Hebrew and Italian.
Approx. 25 printed items by Samuel David Luzzatto (Shadal, 1800-1865), a member of the Jewish Enlightenment, one of the first members of "Chochmat Israel", the head of the Rabbinic seminary in Padua, poet, Biblical commentator, linguist, philosopher, scholar and translator.
A collection which includes early compositions and poems by Shadal, bound together in a paper cover (possibly bound by Shadal himself). Among the items:
• Eulogy upon the death of R. Avraham Eliezer Halevi, 1825 (bilingual booklet, Hebrew and Italian). • Poems in honor of Franz Joseph, 1854, 1856. • Poems in honor of the Austrian Monarchy, in several languages, 1853. • Wedding poem for the Morpurgo-Segre families, Trieste, 1826. • Poems in honor of Shlomo Lo-Ly / Lolli, Padua, 1850, Gorizia, 1842. • Wedding poem for Viterbi-Loria family, 1847. • Eulogy upon the death of Rabbi Mordecai Samuel Ghirondi, Rabbi of Padua (Padua, 1852). • Hebrew-Aramaic wedding poem in honor of Avraham Shalom's wedding, 1855. • Bibliographic study about De-Rossi, 1857. • Composition about Dante, 1844. • Printed pamphlet, "Hosafot meHaRav HaChacham Shadal", 1859. • Introduction to a Machzor according to the Roman rite, Livorno, [1856]. • And additional items.
Several of the items are not bound, including: • Italian translation of the Ketubah recording the marriage of Rachel Luzzatto (Shadal's sister) with Marco Koen / Coen, Trieste, October 1829, signed by the groom, the bride, and the bride's brother - Shadal. • Dissertation by Shadal about sayings in Targum Onkelos (no date of printing; not in NLI). • Calendar for 2000 years edited by Shadal.
Approx. 25 items. Size and condition vary. Some of the bound leaves are large and folded. Several leaves detached. Creases, tears and stains. Paper cover worn; its edges torn.
Enclosed:
• Pamphlet written by hand (unknown writer), Italian translation of the first ten chapters of Shmuel I. [Italy], June 1865. [32] handwritten pages (numbered 187-218), 21.5 cm.
• Two pamphlets, handwritten by the author and scholar Abraham Kahana, composition about Shadal (26; 20 pp).
• Two pamphlets, handwritten by Yitzchak Haim Castiglioni - translation of "Toldot HaLashon HaIvrit" by Shadal (published under the title "Toldot Leshon Ever" in Krakow in 1895).
• Four handwritten letters, an official envelope (torn) of the Chief Rabbinate of Corfu and several additional printed items.
Provenance:
1. The Ben-Zion Kahana Collection.
2. Sold at "Kedem", Auction 60 (March 2018), item 236.
Approx. 25 printed items by Samuel David Luzzatto (Shadal, 1800-1865), a member of the Jewish Enlightenment, one of the first members of "Chochmat Israel", the head of the Rabbinic seminary in Padua, poet, Biblical commentator, linguist, philosopher, scholar and translator.
A collection which includes early compositions and poems by Shadal, bound together in a paper cover (possibly bound by Shadal himself). Among the items:
• Eulogy upon the death of R. Avraham Eliezer Halevi, 1825 (bilingual booklet, Hebrew and Italian). • Poems in honor of Franz Joseph, 1854, 1856. • Poems in honor of the Austrian Monarchy, in several languages, 1853. • Wedding poem for the Morpurgo-Segre families, Trieste, 1826. • Poems in honor of Shlomo Lo-Ly / Lolli, Padua, 1850, Gorizia, 1842. • Wedding poem for Viterbi-Loria family, 1847. • Eulogy upon the death of Rabbi Mordecai Samuel Ghirondi, Rabbi of Padua (Padua, 1852). • Hebrew-Aramaic wedding poem in honor of Avraham Shalom's wedding, 1855. • Bibliographic study about De-Rossi, 1857. • Composition about Dante, 1844. • Printed pamphlet, "Hosafot meHaRav HaChacham Shadal", 1859. • Introduction to a Machzor according to the Roman rite, Livorno, [1856]. • And additional items.
Several of the items are not bound, including: • Italian translation of the Ketubah recording the marriage of Rachel Luzzatto (Shadal's sister) with Marco Koen / Coen, Trieste, October 1829, signed by the groom, the bride, and the bride's brother - Shadal. • Dissertation by Shadal about sayings in Targum Onkelos (no date of printing; not in NLI). • Calendar for 2000 years edited by Shadal.
Approx. 25 items. Size and condition vary. Some of the bound leaves are large and folded. Several leaves detached. Creases, tears and stains. Paper cover worn; its edges torn.
Enclosed:
• Pamphlet written by hand (unknown writer), Italian translation of the first ten chapters of Shmuel I. [Italy], June 1865. [32] handwritten pages (numbered 187-218), 21.5 cm.
• Two pamphlets, handwritten by the author and scholar Abraham Kahana, composition about Shadal (26; 20 pp).
• Two pamphlets, handwritten by Yitzchak Haim Castiglioni - translation of "Toldot HaLashon HaIvrit" by Shadal (published under the title "Toldot Leshon Ever" in Krakow in 1895).
• Four handwritten letters, an official envelope (torn) of the Chief Rabbinate of Corfu and several additional printed items.
Provenance:
1. The Ben-Zion Kahana Collection.
2. Sold at "Kedem", Auction 60 (March 2018), item 236.
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $1,800
Sold for: $2,750
Including buyer's premium
Approx. 90 handwritten letters sent to Samuel David Luzzatto by scholars and poets, linguists and translators, and biblical commentators – members of the Jewish Enlightenment movement. [Europe, first half of 19th century - most letters are from 1830s-40s]. Hebrew and some German.
A large collection of letters concerning research, copying of manuscripts, debates, scholarly comments about the bible and other compositions, sent to Samuel David Luzzatto (Shadal, 1800-1865) - a member of the Jewish Enlightenment movement, one of the first scholars of "Chochmat Israel", head of Rabbinic Seminary in Padua, poet, biblical commentator, linguist, philosopher, scholar and translator.
The collection includes:
• 14 letters from the researcher and historian Ya'akov Reifman [enclosed: 2 letters from Reifman addressed to Rabbi Mordechai Samuel Ghirondi, Rabbi of Padua, a single letter to Rabbi Prof. Hillel Della Torre and several booklets and handwritten leaves – study on prayers and Piyyutim]. • 14 letters from Josua Höschel Schorr of Brody (some letters are particularly long). • 3 letters from Adam Hacohen Lebensohn (pen-name of Avraham Dov-Ber Michailishker, first Hebrew poet in the Russian Enlightenment movement, a pioneer of new Hebrew literature and one of the leaders of the enlightenment movement in Lithuania), a letter from his student, Yosef Noah Vilkover and a letter from his son, Micha Yosef Hacohen (Michal). • 6 letters from Raphael Kirchheim. • 7 letters from Shaul Yitzchak Kampf. • 17 letters from Shlomo Zalman ben Gottlieb (Salomon Gottlieb) Stern ("Kochav Tov"). • 7 letters from Yitzchak Rietenberg. • 2 letters from Yissachar Ber Blumenfeld. • 5 letters from Itzek (Yitzchak) Blumenfeld. • 2 letters from Shimon Santo. • 9 additional letters, sent to Shadal from Shmuel Shoenblum, David Halevi, Ya'akov Halevi, Gabriel Rosenthal from Komarno, Moshe Reicherson, Mordechai Hacohen (Marcus Stum), Julius Fürst, Hirsch Mendel Pineles and Zelig Leib (Leopold) Schick.
In some of the letters the writers mention outstanding personalities of the period, such as Rabbi Prof. Hillel Della Torre, Avraham Firkovich and Yom Tov Lipman Zunz. Many letters include copyings of poems or literary passages, piyyutim, missives etc. On the upper part of some of the letters appears the number of the reply letter sent by Shadal to the writer, as it is numbered in "Igrot Shadal".
Enclosed: envelope from Adam Hacohen and Gabriel Rosenthal; title page and pages with table of contents of booklet no. 3 of "HeChalutz"; two letters from Shadal's grandson, I. A. Luzzatto, which accompanied the above letters (apparently, sent to the researcher Abraham Kahana): "please have… letters from the sages of this generation sent to my grandfather Shadal…".
Size and condition vary. Good overall condition. Most letters are folded. Tears and minor blemishes. Ink erosion to several letters. Some stains. Worming to several letters.
Provenance:
1. The Ben-Zion Kahana Collection.
2. Sold at "Kedem", Auction 60 (March 2018), item 237.
A large collection of letters concerning research, copying of manuscripts, debates, scholarly comments about the bible and other compositions, sent to Samuel David Luzzatto (Shadal, 1800-1865) - a member of the Jewish Enlightenment movement, one of the first scholars of "Chochmat Israel", head of Rabbinic Seminary in Padua, poet, biblical commentator, linguist, philosopher, scholar and translator.
The collection includes:
• 14 letters from the researcher and historian Ya'akov Reifman [enclosed: 2 letters from Reifman addressed to Rabbi Mordechai Samuel Ghirondi, Rabbi of Padua, a single letter to Rabbi Prof. Hillel Della Torre and several booklets and handwritten leaves – study on prayers and Piyyutim]. • 14 letters from Josua Höschel Schorr of Brody (some letters are particularly long). • 3 letters from Adam Hacohen Lebensohn (pen-name of Avraham Dov-Ber Michailishker, first Hebrew poet in the Russian Enlightenment movement, a pioneer of new Hebrew literature and one of the leaders of the enlightenment movement in Lithuania), a letter from his student, Yosef Noah Vilkover and a letter from his son, Micha Yosef Hacohen (Michal). • 6 letters from Raphael Kirchheim. • 7 letters from Shaul Yitzchak Kampf. • 17 letters from Shlomo Zalman ben Gottlieb (Salomon Gottlieb) Stern ("Kochav Tov"). • 7 letters from Yitzchak Rietenberg. • 2 letters from Yissachar Ber Blumenfeld. • 5 letters from Itzek (Yitzchak) Blumenfeld. • 2 letters from Shimon Santo. • 9 additional letters, sent to Shadal from Shmuel Shoenblum, David Halevi, Ya'akov Halevi, Gabriel Rosenthal from Komarno, Moshe Reicherson, Mordechai Hacohen (Marcus Stum), Julius Fürst, Hirsch Mendel Pineles and Zelig Leib (Leopold) Schick.
In some of the letters the writers mention outstanding personalities of the period, such as Rabbi Prof. Hillel Della Torre, Avraham Firkovich and Yom Tov Lipman Zunz. Many letters include copyings of poems or literary passages, piyyutim, missives etc. On the upper part of some of the letters appears the number of the reply letter sent by Shadal to the writer, as it is numbered in "Igrot Shadal".
Enclosed: envelope from Adam Hacohen and Gabriel Rosenthal; title page and pages with table of contents of booklet no. 3 of "HeChalutz"; two letters from Shadal's grandson, I. A. Luzzatto, which accompanied the above letters (apparently, sent to the researcher Abraham Kahana): "please have… letters from the sages of this generation sent to my grandfather Shadal…".
Size and condition vary. Good overall condition. Most letters are folded. Tears and minor blemishes. Ink erosion to several letters. Some stains. Worming to several letters.
Provenance:
1. The Ben-Zion Kahana Collection.
2. Sold at "Kedem", Auction 60 (March 2018), item 237.
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $1,625
Including buyer's premium
Approx. 45 handwritten letters, sent to Isaac Samuel Reggio (Yashar) and an additional letter to his father Avraham Chai Reggio, by rabbis, scholars, commentators and intellectuals of the Jewish Enlightenment movement and the "Chochmat Israel" movement. [Europe, ca. first half of 19th century]. Hebrew and some Yiddish.
Isaac Samuel Reggio ("The Yashar from Gorizia", 1784-1855) served as rabbi of Gorizia; philosopher, scholar of Judaism, biblical commentator and author, one of the heads of "Chochmat Israel" movement and a close friend of Shadal.
The collection includes:
• Letter from Rabbi Naftali Benet, son of Rabbi Mordechai Benet (Av Beit Din and head of Nikolsburg Yeshiva, chief rabbi of Moravia). • Letter from Rabbi Leopold Löw, Av Beit Din of Szeged. • Letter from Yehoshua Höschel Schorr. • Letter from Adam Hacohen Lebensohn. • 3 Letters from Meir Halevi Letteris (signed "MAHAL"). • 6 letters from Nachman Yitzchak Fishman Hacohen of Lvov. • 10 letters from Itzek (Yitzchak) Blumenfeld of Brody. • 2 letters from Shlomo Zalman ben Gottlieb (Solomon Gottlieb) Stern ("Kochav Tov"). • Letter and a poem handwritten by Alexander Halevi Langbank from Yaroslav. • 4 letters from Avraham Mendel Mehr (Mendel Mor). • 3 letters from Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Chen Tov (Edelman) "of Lithuania". • A letter and a poem handwritten by Menachem Mendel Rosenthal of Varaždin. • Several letters from Ya'akov Bodek of Lvov, Ya'akov Goldenberg, Hirsch (Herman) Wassertrilling, Shimon Santo, Mordechai Motl Brahn, Yisrael Yaakov Stern of Belgrade, Leib Eisler and an additional segment of a letter by an unknown writer. • Letter from Rabbi Avraham Ben Yosef Yisrael of Brody (author of "Devar Hamelech") which he sent to Yashar's father, Avraham Chai Reggio, Av Beit Din of Gorizia.
Enclosed: letter sent by Silvio Michlstädter from Trieste to Abraham Kahana in Kiev in 1913, concerning letters by Yashar.
Size and condition vary. Good overall condition. Most letters are folded. Tears and minor blemishes to several letters. Some stains.
Provenance:
1. The Ben Zion Kahana Collection.
2. Sold at "Kedem", Auction 60 (March 2018), item 239.
Isaac Samuel Reggio ("The Yashar from Gorizia", 1784-1855) served as rabbi of Gorizia; philosopher, scholar of Judaism, biblical commentator and author, one of the heads of "Chochmat Israel" movement and a close friend of Shadal.
The collection includes:
• Letter from Rabbi Naftali Benet, son of Rabbi Mordechai Benet (Av Beit Din and head of Nikolsburg Yeshiva, chief rabbi of Moravia). • Letter from Rabbi Leopold Löw, Av Beit Din of Szeged. • Letter from Yehoshua Höschel Schorr. • Letter from Adam Hacohen Lebensohn. • 3 Letters from Meir Halevi Letteris (signed "MAHAL"). • 6 letters from Nachman Yitzchak Fishman Hacohen of Lvov. • 10 letters from Itzek (Yitzchak) Blumenfeld of Brody. • 2 letters from Shlomo Zalman ben Gottlieb (Solomon Gottlieb) Stern ("Kochav Tov"). • Letter and a poem handwritten by Alexander Halevi Langbank from Yaroslav. • 4 letters from Avraham Mendel Mehr (Mendel Mor). • 3 letters from Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Chen Tov (Edelman) "of Lithuania". • A letter and a poem handwritten by Menachem Mendel Rosenthal of Varaždin. • Several letters from Ya'akov Bodek of Lvov, Ya'akov Goldenberg, Hirsch (Herman) Wassertrilling, Shimon Santo, Mordechai Motl Brahn, Yisrael Yaakov Stern of Belgrade, Leib Eisler and an additional segment of a letter by an unknown writer. • Letter from Rabbi Avraham Ben Yosef Yisrael of Brody (author of "Devar Hamelech") which he sent to Yashar's father, Avraham Chai Reggio, Av Beit Din of Gorizia.
Enclosed: letter sent by Silvio Michlstädter from Trieste to Abraham Kahana in Kiev in 1913, concerning letters by Yashar.
Size and condition vary. Good overall condition. Most letters are folded. Tears and minor blemishes to several letters. Some stains.
Provenance:
1. The Ben Zion Kahana Collection.
2. Sold at "Kedem", Auction 60 (March 2018), item 239.
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $500
Unsold
The Complete Poems of Yehuda Leib Gordon, in four volumes – third volume. St. Petersburg: Society of the lovers of the Hebrew language, G.P. Pines and Yeshaya Zederboim Press, 1884. An additional title page in Russian. First edition (one of the two variants published in 1884). Hebrew.
The third volume of the first edition of "The Complete poems Yehuda Leib Gordon", featuring seven poems revolving around biblical and historical themes.
Author's copy, with dozens of glosses, comments, emendations and additions by Yehuda Leib Gordon. Y.L.G. wrote the glosses and comments at various times (the glosses are written in pen and pencil, in both cursive and square script; some are vowelized while others are not), presumably towards the printing of a new edition. The imprint of the second edition, published in Vilnius in 1898 by Mordechai Katzenelboigen and the Bletnitzki brothers, is handwritten on the title page.
Most of the glosses and comments were embedded in the following editions of the book. One of the unpublished comments includes an interesting reference to the affair of Gordon's arrest in 1879. In this comment (p. 145), appearing alongside the poem "Osnat the daughter of Potipherah" which describe Joseph's wish to be let out of the Egyptian prison, Gordon writes: "I had written these words in the summer of 1865, fourteen years before I experienced them firsthand in the summer of 1879" (this comment was not printed in following editions).
One of the comments (p. 208) is hand-signed by Gordon.
Yehuda Leib Gordon (1830-1892), a poet, writer, journalist and critic, born in Vilnius. One of the greatest Jewish poets of the Jewish Enlightenment and one of its prominent spokesmen. He worked as a teacher in Ponivezh, Šiauliai and Telz for 20 years. In the 1860s he started publishing articles in Russian Jewish newspapers, and was a constant contributor to the newspaper "Hamelitz". He was one of the editors of "Hamagid", the Russian-Jewish journal "Voskhod" and the "Brockhaus-Efron" Jewish-Russian encyclopedia. In his articles, he called for the promotion of Enlightenment among the Jewish masses and for a reform in religious institutions. In 1872, he moved to St. Petersburg, where he became the secretary of the Jewish community and the first secretary of the Society for the Promotion of Culture among the Jews of Russia. In 1879, he was arrested for undermining the regime of the Russian Tzar, spending 40 days in prison, and then was exiled to Pudazh, Olonets district (where he wrote the poem King Zedekiah in Prison).
[4], 1-16, 19-209, [3] pp. (missing pp. 17-18). Approx. 25 cm. Fair condition. Stains, including ink stains. Creases. Tears to several leaves, including some open tears. Notations and scribbles to several leaves (in pencil). Several leaves partly detached. Censor's approval (in red ink) and stamp as well as bookstore stamp, reading "Buchhandlung S. Funk" on title page. Inscribed in Yiddish on inside front board. Cloth-covered card binding, with leather spine. Binding scuffed and worn, partly detached. Open tear to spine.
The third volume of the first edition of "The Complete poems Yehuda Leib Gordon", featuring seven poems revolving around biblical and historical themes.
Author's copy, with dozens of glosses, comments, emendations and additions by Yehuda Leib Gordon. Y.L.G. wrote the glosses and comments at various times (the glosses are written in pen and pencil, in both cursive and square script; some are vowelized while others are not), presumably towards the printing of a new edition. The imprint of the second edition, published in Vilnius in 1898 by Mordechai Katzenelboigen and the Bletnitzki brothers, is handwritten on the title page.
Most of the glosses and comments were embedded in the following editions of the book. One of the unpublished comments includes an interesting reference to the affair of Gordon's arrest in 1879. In this comment (p. 145), appearing alongside the poem "Osnat the daughter of Potipherah" which describe Joseph's wish to be let out of the Egyptian prison, Gordon writes: "I had written these words in the summer of 1865, fourteen years before I experienced them firsthand in the summer of 1879" (this comment was not printed in following editions).
One of the comments (p. 208) is hand-signed by Gordon.
Yehuda Leib Gordon (1830-1892), a poet, writer, journalist and critic, born in Vilnius. One of the greatest Jewish poets of the Jewish Enlightenment and one of its prominent spokesmen. He worked as a teacher in Ponivezh, Šiauliai and Telz for 20 years. In the 1860s he started publishing articles in Russian Jewish newspapers, and was a constant contributor to the newspaper "Hamelitz". He was one of the editors of "Hamagid", the Russian-Jewish journal "Voskhod" and the "Brockhaus-Efron" Jewish-Russian encyclopedia. In his articles, he called for the promotion of Enlightenment among the Jewish masses and for a reform in religious institutions. In 1872, he moved to St. Petersburg, where he became the secretary of the Jewish community and the first secretary of the Society for the Promotion of Culture among the Jews of Russia. In 1879, he was arrested for undermining the regime of the Russian Tzar, spending 40 days in prison, and then was exiled to Pudazh, Olonets district (where he wrote the poem King Zedekiah in Prison).
[4], 1-16, 19-209, [3] pp. (missing pp. 17-18). Approx. 25 cm. Fair condition. Stains, including ink stains. Creases. Tears to several leaves, including some open tears. Notations and scribbles to several leaves (in pencil). Several leaves partly detached. Censor's approval (in red ink) and stamp as well as bookstore stamp, reading "Buchhandlung S. Funk" on title page. Inscribed in Yiddish on inside front board. Cloth-covered card binding, with leather spine. Binding scuffed and worn, partly detached. Open tear to spine.
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $2,000
Unsold
23 autograph letters by Ephraim Deinard, addressed to Elkan Nathan Adler. New Jersey (USA), Ferrara, Ancona, Mantua, Thessaloniki, Constantinople, Beirut, Jerusalem and Ramleh. Most letters from 1902 to 1910. Hebrew (two letters in English).
Deinard's letters to Adler are mainly concerned with books, and include lists of books for sale, descriptions of rare books which he discovered throughout his travels, instructions and comments concerning shipment of books and payment for them, and more. In the letters, written in his unique style full of witty criticism and humor, Deinard refers , to life in the USA and England, to politics and religion, to his travels and visits to various Jewish congregations, and more.
The letters shed light on Deinard's occupation as collector and book dealer; they reveal the scope of Deinard's library (in many letters he refers to shipment of cases full of books, and in one letter he even mentions shipment of 22 cases), as well as the richness of the library, Deinard's love of books and his bibliographic expertise. More than once he mentions rare and precious books and Hebrew manuscripts, or writes to his friend about an unknown book he found .In some of the letters Deinard mentions dignitaries who purchased books from him, among them Mayer Sulzberger (1843-1923), judge, public activist and Jewish-American leader, one of the founders of several Jewish organizations in the USA, who held in his library numerous rare and precious Hebrew books.
Some letters were written during Deinard's travels in various places around the world - Italy, Turkey, Palestine, and more - describing his impressions of various encounters, and his search for manuscripts. For example, in one letter he describes a visit to Nablus:"[…] we went directly to the high priest Jacob Ben Aaron, and after he showed me the whole of his treasure […] I began pleading him to give me, or even just show me, the Book of Joshua. He pledged never to have seen this book, claiming it is not sacred to them, and that they perceive it merely as a history book." In another letter he sums up one of his journeys: "I did not complete my travels, particularly, I did not travel to China to search for the Jews who are dwelling there since ancient times [...] I knew such a journey will cost me much time and great expenses, and a society which supports Hebrew travelers does not yet exist […] and how my heart aches, knowing that to this day, not one of the multitudes of Jews has risen to the task of searching for his lost brothers in this faraway land".
In a letter from 1902 Deinard mentions the fifth Zionist Congress, in which Adler participated, and writes about "the noise which was aroused by delegates who are concerned with their people's wellbeing…", about the "Hibbat Zion" movement and the opposition against it: "Jews in Western Europe - and mainly the rich ones - became like despicable slaves, and this moved them away from Hibbat Zion".
In another letter Deinard writes about the United States: "compared with old arrogant Europe, we lack nothing under Columbus' sky: not money, not objects and not ancient books. Just one thing [is lacking]: 'men-and-Jews'; even though, thank God, we have both, the men are not Jews and the Jews are not men…".
Ephraim Deinard (1846-1930) - Hebrew bibliographer and author, book collector and book dealer; one of the greatest Hebrew bibliographers in modern times; historian and polemicist, considered a fascinating and colorful figure. Deinard was born in Sasmaka (present day Valdemārpil, Latvia). When still young he travelled around the world, studied various Jewish congregations, and collected Hebrew books and manuscripts. In the 1880s he maintained a book shop in Odessa. In 1888 he immigrated to the United States, where he continued to sell books and attempted to establish a Jewish agricultural colony in Nevada. When his attempt failed, he immigrated to Palestine in 1913, and settled in Ramleh. There too he tried to establish a Jewish agricultural settlement, but in 1916 he was deported by the Turks and was obliged to return to the United States.
Deinard's collections served to found departments of Hebrew books in leading libraries in the USA, and catalogues of his books were an important source for research of Hebrew literature and culture. Deinard composed dozens of books, among them study books and controversial polemic books (against Christianity, against Hassidism, and more). Deinard was considered a provocative author, and many of his books aroused harsh criticism..
The addressee of the letters, Elkan Nathan Adler (1861-1946), was a Jewish-British attorney, author and collector of Hebrew books and manuscripts; son of Nathan Marcus Adler, chief rabbi of the British Empire. Adler spent several years journeying to the East and visiting various Jewish congregations. Among other places, he visited Egypt (he was one of the first to study the documents in the Cairo Genizah), Syria, Persia, India and Yemen. During his journey he searched for Hebrew books and manuscripts, and over the years established a collection which was considered one of the largest private book collections in the world.
23 letters (out of which five are written on postcards), and two excerpts from letters. Many of the letters were written on Deinard's official stationery in New Jersey. One letter was written on his stationery in Ramleh - "Deinard Garden, Ramleh (Palestina)". All Hebrew letters (except one) are handwritten in legible square script.
Enclosed: two envelopes addressed to Elkan Nathan Adler and two leaves (on blue paper) with lists of books.
Size and condition vary. Good overall condition. Fold lines, tears to some letters (one letter torn in half at the fold line). Stains (some dampstains, with ink smears).
Deinard's letters to Adler are mainly concerned with books, and include lists of books for sale, descriptions of rare books which he discovered throughout his travels, instructions and comments concerning shipment of books and payment for them, and more. In the letters, written in his unique style full of witty criticism and humor, Deinard refers , to life in the USA and England, to politics and religion, to his travels and visits to various Jewish congregations, and more.
The letters shed light on Deinard's occupation as collector and book dealer; they reveal the scope of Deinard's library (in many letters he refers to shipment of cases full of books, and in one letter he even mentions shipment of 22 cases), as well as the richness of the library, Deinard's love of books and his bibliographic expertise. More than once he mentions rare and precious books and Hebrew manuscripts, or writes to his friend about an unknown book he found .In some of the letters Deinard mentions dignitaries who purchased books from him, among them Mayer Sulzberger (1843-1923), judge, public activist and Jewish-American leader, one of the founders of several Jewish organizations in the USA, who held in his library numerous rare and precious Hebrew books.
Some letters were written during Deinard's travels in various places around the world - Italy, Turkey, Palestine, and more - describing his impressions of various encounters, and his search for manuscripts. For example, in one letter he describes a visit to Nablus:"[…] we went directly to the high priest Jacob Ben Aaron, and after he showed me the whole of his treasure […] I began pleading him to give me, or even just show me, the Book of Joshua. He pledged never to have seen this book, claiming it is not sacred to them, and that they perceive it merely as a history book." In another letter he sums up one of his journeys: "I did not complete my travels, particularly, I did not travel to China to search for the Jews who are dwelling there since ancient times [...] I knew such a journey will cost me much time and great expenses, and a society which supports Hebrew travelers does not yet exist […] and how my heart aches, knowing that to this day, not one of the multitudes of Jews has risen to the task of searching for his lost brothers in this faraway land".
In a letter from 1902 Deinard mentions the fifth Zionist Congress, in which Adler participated, and writes about "the noise which was aroused by delegates who are concerned with their people's wellbeing…", about the "Hibbat Zion" movement and the opposition against it: "Jews in Western Europe - and mainly the rich ones - became like despicable slaves, and this moved them away from Hibbat Zion".
In another letter Deinard writes about the United States: "compared with old arrogant Europe, we lack nothing under Columbus' sky: not money, not objects and not ancient books. Just one thing [is lacking]: 'men-and-Jews'; even though, thank God, we have both, the men are not Jews and the Jews are not men…".
Ephraim Deinard (1846-1930) - Hebrew bibliographer and author, book collector and book dealer; one of the greatest Hebrew bibliographers in modern times; historian and polemicist, considered a fascinating and colorful figure. Deinard was born in Sasmaka (present day Valdemārpil, Latvia). When still young he travelled around the world, studied various Jewish congregations, and collected Hebrew books and manuscripts. In the 1880s he maintained a book shop in Odessa. In 1888 he immigrated to the United States, where he continued to sell books and attempted to establish a Jewish agricultural colony in Nevada. When his attempt failed, he immigrated to Palestine in 1913, and settled in Ramleh. There too he tried to establish a Jewish agricultural settlement, but in 1916 he was deported by the Turks and was obliged to return to the United States.
Deinard's collections served to found departments of Hebrew books in leading libraries in the USA, and catalogues of his books were an important source for research of Hebrew literature and culture. Deinard composed dozens of books, among them study books and controversial polemic books (against Christianity, against Hassidism, and more). Deinard was considered a provocative author, and many of his books aroused harsh criticism..
The addressee of the letters, Elkan Nathan Adler (1861-1946), was a Jewish-British attorney, author and collector of Hebrew books and manuscripts; son of Nathan Marcus Adler, chief rabbi of the British Empire. Adler spent several years journeying to the East and visiting various Jewish congregations. Among other places, he visited Egypt (he was one of the first to study the documents in the Cairo Genizah), Syria, Persia, India and Yemen. During his journey he searched for Hebrew books and manuscripts, and over the years established a collection which was considered one of the largest private book collections in the world.
23 letters (out of which five are written on postcards), and two excerpts from letters. Many of the letters were written on Deinard's official stationery in New Jersey. One letter was written on his stationery in Ramleh - "Deinard Garden, Ramleh (Palestina)". All Hebrew letters (except one) are handwritten in legible square script.
Enclosed: two envelopes addressed to Elkan Nathan Adler and two leaves (on blue paper) with lists of books.
Size and condition vary. Good overall condition. Fold lines, tears to some letters (one letter torn in half at the fold line). Stains (some dampstains, with ink smears).
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
A letter handwritten and signed by the Viennese psychoanalyst Herbert Silberer. Vienna, March 19, 1914. German.
The letter is written on the official stationery of St. Annahof in Vienna – a multi-story building in the city center, which was owned by his father, Viktor Silberer; at the time, it's basement housed a theater. The letter is hand-signed by Silberer and stamped.
In his letter, which is presumably addressed to the managers of the theater in St. Annahof, Silberer writes that he is submitting a play titled "Die Weihe" (The Dedication) and that he is expecting their decision on the matter.
Herbert Silberer (1882-1923), a member of the Viennese Psychoanalytic Association (Wiener Psychoanalytische Vereinigung) and a close associate of the fathers of modern psychology - Sigmund Freud, Carl Gustav Jung, Wilhelm Stekel and Alfred Adler, was born to a bourgeois family in Vienna; the only son of the businessman, journalist, and politician Viktor Silberer, who was a renowned figure in the city in the turn of the 19thcentury.
Silberer was self-taught in psychology and philosophy. In a letter from 19.7.1909 to Carl Gustav Jung, Sigmund Freud wrote: "Silberer is an unknown young man, probably a better-class degenerate; his father is a well-known figure in Vienna, a member of the city council and an 'operator'. But his piece is good and throws light on an aspect of dream work".
Silberer's varied studies deal with the formation of symbols and their meaning, the meaning of dreams as well as mysticism, alchemy, astrology and parapsychology. His major study Problems of Mysticism and its Symbolism (Probleme der Mystik und ihrer Symbolik) was published in 1914. In October 1910, Silberer was accepted as a member of the Viennese Psychoanalytic Association which was founded by Freud in the early 20th century, remaining a member for more than a decade, until 1922. Over the years, and due to dissensions which arose between Freud and his disciples, Jung, Stekel and Adler, the relationship between Freud and Silberer ended. On January 12, 1923, Herbert Silberer committed suicide by hanging himself in the St. Annahof building. Years after his death, Carl Gustav Jung wrote of him: "Herbert Silberer has the merit of being the first to discover the secret threads that lead from alchemy to the psychology of the unconscious".
[1] f, 20.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and creases. Minor stains. Long tear, partly reinforced with tape on verso.
The letter is written on the official stationery of St. Annahof in Vienna – a multi-story building in the city center, which was owned by his father, Viktor Silberer; at the time, it's basement housed a theater. The letter is hand-signed by Silberer and stamped.
In his letter, which is presumably addressed to the managers of the theater in St. Annahof, Silberer writes that he is submitting a play titled "Die Weihe" (The Dedication) and that he is expecting their decision on the matter.
Herbert Silberer (1882-1923), a member of the Viennese Psychoanalytic Association (Wiener Psychoanalytische Vereinigung) and a close associate of the fathers of modern psychology - Sigmund Freud, Carl Gustav Jung, Wilhelm Stekel and Alfred Adler, was born to a bourgeois family in Vienna; the only son of the businessman, journalist, and politician Viktor Silberer, who was a renowned figure in the city in the turn of the 19thcentury.
Silberer was self-taught in psychology and philosophy. In a letter from 19.7.1909 to Carl Gustav Jung, Sigmund Freud wrote: "Silberer is an unknown young man, probably a better-class degenerate; his father is a well-known figure in Vienna, a member of the city council and an 'operator'. But his piece is good and throws light on an aspect of dream work".
Silberer's varied studies deal with the formation of symbols and their meaning, the meaning of dreams as well as mysticism, alchemy, astrology and parapsychology. His major study Problems of Mysticism and its Symbolism (Probleme der Mystik und ihrer Symbolik) was published in 1914. In October 1910, Silberer was accepted as a member of the Viennese Psychoanalytic Association which was founded by Freud in the early 20th century, remaining a member for more than a decade, until 1922. Over the years, and due to dissensions which arose between Freud and his disciples, Jung, Stekel and Adler, the relationship between Freud and Silberer ended. On January 12, 1923, Herbert Silberer committed suicide by hanging himself in the St. Annahof building. Years after his death, Carl Gustav Jung wrote of him: "Herbert Silberer has the merit of being the first to discover the secret threads that lead from alchemy to the psychology of the unconscious".
[1] f, 20.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and creases. Minor stains. Long tear, partly reinforced with tape on verso.
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 80 - Part I - Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
June 29, 2021
Opening: $250
Sold for: $313
Including buyer's premium
Die Flora der Juden [The Flora of the Jews], by Rabbi Dr. Immanuel Löw. Vienna-Leipzig: R. Löwit, 1924-1934. German (some Hebrew and other Semitic languages). First edition. Four parts in five volumes.
The monumental work of Rabbi Dr. Immanuel Löw – a comprehensive botanic-linguistic study dealing with the plants of Palestine mentioned in Jewish sources (the Bible, Mishnah and Talmud, the legends and Midrashim of the Sages, and late rabbinic literature), their scientific identification, classification and description.
Rabbi Dr. Immanuel [Avraham Chaim] Löw (1854-1944), was a Biblical and Talmudic scholar, one of the greatest scholars of Semitic linguistics. Son of the Neolog rabbi Leopold Löw (1811-1875). Served as Chief Rabbi of Szeged and was one of the leaders of Neolog Judaism in Hungary. Published various essays and scientific studies, including "Aramäische Pflanzennamen" (Aramaic Names of Plants) and "Die Flora der Juden" – a study to which he dedicated most of his life and which to this day is considered one of the fundamental texts of its field.
One of Löw's students and followers was Prof. Yehuda Feliks (1922-2005), a scholar of biblical and Talmudic botany and zoology. The volumes contain notes handwritten by Feliks. One volume bears an ownership inscription handwritten by Feliks.
Four parts in five volumes. Volume I (first part - Kryptogamae. Acanthaceae – Composaceae, 1926): XII, 448 pp. Missing one leaf (with the title Die Flora der Juden). Volume II (first part, second section, Convolvulaceae – Graminaceae, 1928): [7], 449-807 pp. Volume III (second part, Iridaceae – Papilionaceae, 1924): XII, 532 pp. + [2] plates. Volume IV (third part, Pedaliaceae – Zygophyllaceae, 1924): XI, 522 pp. Volume V (fourth part, Zusammenfassung, Nachträge, Berichtigungen, Indizes, Abkürzungen, 1934): XV, 740 pp. The second section of the first part and the third part are bound with printed front covers (the other volumes are missing covers).
23-24 cm. Good overall condition. Stains (most of the leaves are clean). Some creases and minor blemishes. Tears to margins of several leaves (some of them open; one tear to the last leaf of volume I, slightly affecting text). Tears to several leaves reinforced with tape. Some unopened sheets. Ex-library copies.
The monumental work of Rabbi Dr. Immanuel Löw – a comprehensive botanic-linguistic study dealing with the plants of Palestine mentioned in Jewish sources (the Bible, Mishnah and Talmud, the legends and Midrashim of the Sages, and late rabbinic literature), their scientific identification, classification and description.
Rabbi Dr. Immanuel [Avraham Chaim] Löw (1854-1944), was a Biblical and Talmudic scholar, one of the greatest scholars of Semitic linguistics. Son of the Neolog rabbi Leopold Löw (1811-1875). Served as Chief Rabbi of Szeged and was one of the leaders of Neolog Judaism in Hungary. Published various essays and scientific studies, including "Aramäische Pflanzennamen" (Aramaic Names of Plants) and "Die Flora der Juden" – a study to which he dedicated most of his life and which to this day is considered one of the fundamental texts of its field.
One of Löw's students and followers was Prof. Yehuda Feliks (1922-2005), a scholar of biblical and Talmudic botany and zoology. The volumes contain notes handwritten by Feliks. One volume bears an ownership inscription handwritten by Feliks.
Four parts in five volumes. Volume I (first part - Kryptogamae. Acanthaceae – Composaceae, 1926): XII, 448 pp. Missing one leaf (with the title Die Flora der Juden). Volume II (first part, second section, Convolvulaceae – Graminaceae, 1928): [7], 449-807 pp. Volume III (second part, Iridaceae – Papilionaceae, 1924): XII, 532 pp. + [2] plates. Volume IV (third part, Pedaliaceae – Zygophyllaceae, 1924): XI, 522 pp. Volume V (fourth part, Zusammenfassung, Nachträge, Berichtigungen, Indizes, Abkürzungen, 1934): XV, 740 pp. The second section of the first part and the third part are bound with printed front covers (the other volumes are missing covers).
23-24 cm. Good overall condition. Stains (most of the leaves are clean). Some creases and minor blemishes. Tears to margins of several leaves (some of them open; one tear to the last leaf of volume I, slightly affecting text). Tears to several leaves reinforced with tape. Some unopened sheets. Ex-library copies.
Category
Manuscripts, Autographs
Catalogue