Auction 92 Part 1 Rare and Important Items
- book (65) Apply book filter
- chassidut (25) Apply chassidut filter
- import (21) Apply import filter
- manuscript (21) Apply manuscript filter
- ownership (21) Apply ownership filter
- print (21) Apply print filter
- letter (18) Apply letter filter
- chassid (15) Apply chassid filter
- earli (15) Apply earli filter
- kabbalist (15) Apply kabbalist filter
- autograph (11) Apply autograph filter
- eretz (11) Apply eretz filter
- from (11) Apply from filter
- israel (11) Apply israel filter
- israel, (11) Apply israel, filter
- notabl (11) Apply notabl filter
- person (11) Apply person filter
- zionism (11) Apply zionism filter
- zionism, (11) Apply zionism, filter
- commentari (7) Apply commentari filter
- talmud (7) Apply talmud filter
- italian (6) Apply italian filter
- item (6) Apply item filter
- jewri (6) Apply jewri filter
- prayer (6) Apply prayer filter
- art (5) Apply art filter
- ceremoni (5) Apply ceremoni filter
- jewish (5) Apply jewish filter
- miscellania (5) Apply miscellania filter
- object (5) Apply object filter
- polem (5) Apply polem filter
- various (5) Apply various filter
- esther (4) Apply esther filter
- parchment (4) Apply parchment filter
- scroll (4) Apply scroll filter
- gloss (3) Apply gloss filter
Illustrated parchment manuscript, Seder Tikunei Shabbat. [Germany/Austria, 18th century].
Pocket format. Ink on parchment, with colorful illustrations. Ashkenazic square script, vocalized, in various sizes; and semi-cursive (Rashi) script.
This illustrated manuscript is characteristic of the Moravian school of art, of 18th century Germany or Austria. The illustrator of this manuscript was presumably familiar with manuscripts produced by members of this school: Aaron Wolf Schreiber Herlingen of Gewitsch, Meshulam Simmel of Polna and others, and his illustrations were inspired by their works.
The manuscript opens with an illustrated title page, depicting a three-arched gateway, with Moses and Aaron in the side archways and the manuscript's title in the central archway. The title ends with the words "in Amsterdam typeface"; the word "Amsterdam" is enlarged (as was often done by printers in those days). A walled European city is depicted at the top of the title page, with a wanderer walking along a path near it. At the foot of the page, dedication to the woman for whom the manuscript was prepared, encircled by a wreath tied with a ribbon: "In honor of the prominent woman… Gittel daughter of the community leader…" (some of the letters are erased or faded, and the inscription is difficult to decipher).
Each page of the manuscript is enclosed in an orange border. Eight enlarged and decorated initial words (pp. 2a, 4a, 7a, 16a, 22b, 24a, 29b, 37a). Illustration depicting the Havdalah ceremony (on p. 33b), based on a woodcut printed in Sefer HaMinhagim in Germany and Amsterdam in the 16th and 17th centuries. The initial words are decorated in various styles, mostly inspired by printed books and decorated manuscripts from the 17th and 18th centuries. They are set within colorful borders and are decorated with illustrations of flowers and branches, birds, seashells, lions, putti, curtains and crowns.
The manuscript ends on p. 48a (with a statement of the manuscript's completion). On the verso, wedding blessings and Sheva Berachot were added in a later hand.
[40] parchment leaves. 11 cm. Fair-good condition. Many stains. Tears to title page and three other leaves. Faded ink and blemishes. Several leaves with damage to text. Repairs in several places. New binding.
Regarding the artists of the Moravian school, see: Shalom Sabar, Seder Birkat HaMazon, Vienna, 1719/20 – The Earliest Known Illuminated Manuscript by the Scribe-Artist Aaron Wolf Schreiber Herlingen of Gewitsch, in: Zechor Davar LeAvdecha: Essays and Studies in Memory of Prof. Dov Rappel, edited by Shmuel Glick and Avraham Grossman, Jerusalem: The Center for Jewish Educational Thought in Memory of Dov Rappel, Lifshitz College, pp. 455-472 and plates 8-17.
Decorated Esther scroll, including the blessings over the Megillah reading recited prior to and following the traditional reading of the scroll on Purim. Housed in a decorated silver case created by the silversmith Angelo Giannotti, Rome. Scroll: [ca. 1800]. Silver case: [first half of 19th century].
Ink and paint on parchment; silver (marked in several places with city mark and maker's mark), cast, turned, pierced and engraved; gilt.
Esther scroll; inscribed in Sephardic-Italian script on four parchment membranes. Text of Book of Esther inscribed in 46 columns, averaging 13 rows per column. Just before the main body of text is a single column inscribed with the blessings over the megillah reading. Following the main body are additional five columns inscribed with the blessing recited after the Megillah reading, followed by the liturgical poem "Korei Megillah" by Rabbi Abraham Ibn Ezra. The first column is left blank. The text is enclosed within decorative greenish-golden rectangular frames. Similarly colored in greenish gold are the letters of the word "Barukh" ("Blessed") at the beginning and end of the scroll, as well as the letters of the opening words to each of the verses of "Korei Megillah".
The scroll is housed within a cylindrical silver case whose surface is decorated with vegetal patterns; toward the top and bottom, the cylinder in encircled by slender, elegant decorative bands. The case is surmounted by a serrated crown with a dome-like ornament at its center. This is in turn surmounted by an additional, smaller crown with more numerous serrations and with a similar dome at its center. An elegant ornament in the shape of a rampant lion grasping a palm frond, made of cast and gilt silver, surmounts the center of the upper crown. This ornament is most probably meant to represent the emblem of Rome's Di Castro family; it also appears on an embroidered textile (mappa) donated in 1699 to Rome's Scola Nuova synagogue, as well as on the family's ketubot (marriage contracts), on an additional Esther scroll (in the Israel Museum Collection); and on several spice containers from Rome dating from the 18th and 19th centuries.
The silversmith Angelo Giannotti was active in Rome circa 1815-65. He created a variety of silver articles, including many candlesticks, hanging lamps, a goblet, and other items. Among his works are a small number of Judaica items, including a silver binding dated circa 1840 (see Sotheby's, December 13, 2006, item no. 81) and a spice container (see "Arte ebraica a Roma e nel Lazio", p. 104, item no. 82) with the emblem of the Di Castro family at the top. The present Esther scroll is therefore part of a very short list of Judaica items created by this silversmith, and, to the best of our knowledge, is the only extant Esther scroll case produced by him.
For Esther scrolls similar in design to this one – some of them dated to the 18th century – see the Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item no. 34639 (Collection of Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme [mahJ], Paris); The Israel Museum Collection, item no. B39.11.6484; the René Braginsky Collection (formerly in the Furman Collection), scroll no. 94. Interestingly, unlike the three Esther scrolls mentioned above which are housed in polygonal silver cases, the present scroll is housed in a cylindrical silver case, a fact which sets it apart from other known Italian silver Esther scroll cases from that period. On spice containers from Rome surmounted by the emblematic ornament of a rampant lion grasping a palm frond, see: Sotheby's, June 5, 2019, item no. 123; Sotheby's, December 15, 2022, item no. 109; The Israel Museum Collection (appears on an Israeli postage stamp dated 1990 and titled [Hebrew] "Mo'adim 5755"). See also enclosed material.
Height of silver case (including handle and surmounting ornament): 27 cm. Overall good condition. Possibly missing a tiny handle originally part of the silver piece sewn onto the first membrane. Height of parchment: 8 cm. Good condition. Some stains to scroll, occasional spots of faded ink in text and faded paint in decorative rectangular frames.
Reference:
1. Daniela Di Castro and Filomena Del Regno, Arte ebraica a Roma e nel Lazio, Palombi, Rome, 1994, p. 104 (item no. 82), p. 154.
2. Jacobo Furman, Treasures of Jewish art: From the Jacobo and Asea Furman Collection of Judaica, Hugh Lauter Levin Associates, New York, 1997, pp. 210-11.
3. Doretta Davanzo Poli, Olga Melasecchi, and Amedeo Spagnoletto, eds., Antiche mappòt romane, il prezioso archivio tessile del Museo Ebraico di Roma, Campisano Editore, Rome, 2017, item no. 60.
Provenance: Private collection.
Esther scroll, housed in large silver case. [Probably Poland, 19th century].
Ink on parchment; silver (unmarked), repoussé, engraved, and turned.
Ashkenazic script with crownlet decorations (script characteristic of western Poland in the first half of the 19th century), on three parchment membranes. Text of the Book of Esther inscribed in 11 columns, with 39 rows per column. Decoration above first line.
This Esther scroll is housed in a large, cylindrical silver case with silver handle at bottom and a finial in the shape of large, soaring bird on top. The surface is decorated with vegetal patterns – flowers and acanthus leaves – interspersed with architectural ornaments resembling column capitals or Corinthian columns. In terms of its shape and decorative patterns (and especially the bird-shaped finial on top), this silver case bears a strong resemblance to numerous other objects made in Poland and throughout the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the 19th century and into the early 20th century.
Height of case: approx. 50 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Height of parchment: 24.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Creases and stains. Several tears. Late corrections to text in a number of places. On last column, correction to several words made on strip of parchment glued to scroll.
Ketubah recording the marriage of the groom Shabbetai son of Avraham Zevi to the bride Devorah daughter of Eliezer Di Castro. Rome, 3rd Adar I 1837.
Ink and paint on parchment.
Elaborate, elegant ketubah, framed in a wide, rectangular border, with symmetric vegetal and geometric patterns. Decorative lower edge, typical of Roman ketubot.
The text of the ketubah is scribed in the center, in black ink, with verses of blessing inscribed above it in red ink; the word "BeRevii" is written within a cartouche, in ornamented letters. The ketubah also mentions a civil document drawn up in front of a notary. The text of the ketubah is followed by witnesses' signatures: Yaakov Yosef son of Shlomo Fasano, Mahalalel son of Yosef Baruch HaKohen.
The upper border of the ketubah contains an illustration of an elderly man reaching out to a younger man holding a staff or shepherd's crook. Illustrations depicting human figures in ketubot were usually allegorical scenes or biblical scenes related to the names of the groom or bride; in the present case, there appears to be no direct relation between the illustration and the names of the groom and bride, yet the illustration may be depicting Avraham and Eliezer, in reference to the names of the fathers of the groom and bride.
For other ketubot of the Di Castro family, see: The René Braginsky collection, ketubah no. 44 (Rome, 1763); State Archives of Rome, Ms. 264/6 (Rome, 1879); and Antique Roman Ketubot (2019).
For other ketubot from Rome, see: Shalom Sabar, Ketubbah (1990), pp. 146-157.
87X50.5 cm. Minor creases and stains. Losses to upper corners and to margins.