Auction 98 Early Printed Books, Chassidut and Kabbalah, Books Printed in Jerusalem, Letters and Manuscripts, Jewish Ceremonial Art
- letter (164) Apply letter filter
- book (139) Apply book filter
- print (115) Apply print filter
- earli (99) Apply earli filter
- jerusalem (81) Apply jerusalem filter
- booklet (75) Apply booklet filter
- booklets, (75) Apply booklets, filter
- proclam (75) Apply proclam filter
- sign (75) Apply sign filter
- import (66) Apply import filter
- manuscript (64) Apply manuscript filter
- rabbi (47) Apply rabbi filter
- chassidut (27) Apply chassidut filter
- 17 (24) Apply 17 filter
- 17th (24) Apply 17th filter
- centuri (24) Apply centuri filter
- th (24) Apply th filter
- chassid (20) Apply chassid filter
- chabad (19) Apply chabad filter
- copi (19) Apply copi filter
- chalukkot (17) Apply chalukkot filter
- from (17) Apply from filter
- lubavitch (17) Apply lubavitch filter
- pamphlet (17) Apply pamphlet filter
- rebb (17) Apply rebb filter
- hanukkah (16) Apply hanukkah filter
- jewish (16) Apply jewish filter
- lamp (16) Apply lamp filter
- poland (16) Apply poland filter
- russia (16) Apply russia filter
- russia-poland (16) Apply russia-poland filter
- russiapoland (16) Apply russiapoland filter
- slavita (16) Apply slavita filter
- zhitomir (16) Apply zhitomir filter
- zhitomir, (16) Apply zhitomir, filter
- 16 (15) Apply 16 filter
- 16th (15) Apply 16th filter
- dedic (14) Apply dedic filter
- gloss (14) Apply gloss filter
- signatur (14) Apply signatur filter
- stamp (14) Apply stamp filter
- stamps, (14) Apply stamps, filter
- art (12) Apply art filter
- ceremoni (12) Apply ceremoni filter
- document (12) Apply document filter
- bibl (11) Apply bibl filter
- psalm (11) Apply psalm filter
- 18 (9) Apply 18 filter
- 18th (9) Apply 18th filter
- prayer (7) Apply prayer filter
Ahavat HaKadmonim – year-round siddur, according to the original rite of the community of Fez (Morocco). Jerusalem: Shmuel HaLevi Zuckerman, 1889. Rare first edition. Two title pages, the first colored. Illustrations of holy sites on verso of second title page and last leaf.
Weekday, Shabbat and festival prayers, according to the original Fez rite before the arrival of Spanish exiles with the Sephardic rite. According to the introduction by the proofreader, this siddur, the first printed edition of this rite, is based on a manuscript from the one synagogue in Fez that preserved the original rite.
On leaves 79-83, halachic ruling (dated 1715) on ownership and division of income from that synagogue.
Signature on second title page.
[9]; [1], 2-84 leaves. 18.5 cm. Fair-good condition. Stains. Wear and tears, affecting text (without loss). Detached leaves. Original decorated leather binding. Damage to binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 636 (recorded based on a copy held in the Ben-Zvi Institute).
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Shaarei Chesed booklet, regulations of the gemilut chassadim society Shaarei Chesed, from the day of its establishment in 1970, until 1980. Jerusalem: Yoel Moshe Salomon, 1880.
In original color paper wrapper, with a printed title page.
A certificate appears on p. 22 at the end of the booklet, with space for completing the details of donations and of donors to the society, bearing the society's stamp (the leaf has no entries).
Between the front paper wrapper and the title page, another folded printed leaf was bound, titled "Proclamation calling for assistance!", requesting donations to the society. The proclamation bears the printed signatures of R. Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld and of other rabbis. The date Iyar 1891 is printed at the end of the leaf with the original stamp of the "General Gemilut Chasadim Shaarei Chesed".
[1] paper wrapper leaf, [1] folded leaf, [2], 5-15, 17-22 pages, [1] back paper wrapper. 17.5 cm. Dry paper. Good-fair condition. Stains. Wear and creases. Tears, including open tears to both sides of the jacket and to the first leaves, slightly affecting text (back paper wrapper repaired with paper). New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 355 (Sh. Halevy listed a copy containing 21 leaves, noting that the copy in Jew's College is composed of 22 leaves, as in the the present copy).
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Collection of booklets, activity reports and protocols of the "Ezrat Niddachim" society – "For the glory of Moses and Judith Montefiore". Jerusalem, 1884-1891. Six booklets (out of dozens printed in those seven years).
* Year 1, 1884, Book 2 and 3. 18; 17 pages.
* Year 3, 1886, Book 2. 20 pages.
* Year 5, 1888, Book 2. 48 pages.
* Year 6, 1890, Book 2. 28, XX pages (possibly, incomplete at the end).
* Year 7, 1891. 40, XVI pages. Missing the final XXIV pages.
The "Ezrat Niddachim" society was established on the initiative of R. Israel Dov Frumkin on the centennial of Moses Montefiore. The society's goal was to help the poor of Jerusalem by teaching trades and finding employment and livelihood, so that they would not turn to Christian missionary aid.
6 booklets. Approx. 17.5-19 cm. Partially dry and brittle paper (especially Year 7 booklet). Overall good-fair condition. Stains. Wear. Tears. Detached leaves in Year 7 booklet. Stamps and inscriptions. Two booklets with original paper wrappers.
These booklets are exceptionally rare, it is unknown how many of them were printed. According to records in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book, it seems that between 20 to 32 booklets were printed over seven years, see there.
Sh. Halevy, no. 453 (Sh. Halevy did not record the final volume of Year 7).
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Pri Etz Hadar, statutes of the Etz Hadar Torah school and yeshiva society, founded in 1883 in Safed. [Jerusalem]: Y. D. Frumkin, [1887].
Includes letters of support and other content related to the institution.
24 pages. 28.5 cm (uneven trimming). Dry, somewhat brittle paper. Good-fair condition. Stains. Light wear. Tears, including small marginal open tears to several leaves, not affecting text. New leather binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 600.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Booklet of regulations and guidelines of the Degel HaTorah Society in Jerusalem, signed by the society's heads. Jerusalem: Yoel Moshe Salomon, [1891?].
Listed on the title page are the objectives of the society, its activities from the time it was established until this printing and regulations of its yeshivas and schools.
The first pages contain a historical review of the reasons leading to the founding of the society, and the final pages bear the signatures of the heads of the society: Mendel Wolpert, Chaim Yeshaya Hirschsohn, Michel Avraham Hirschsohn and Yehoshua Meir Reichman, and the society's stamp, dated "Rosh Chodesh Adar Sheni Bo [1891]".
Page 7 poses the objective of the society: to raise the banner of the Torah (in Hebrew: "Degel HaTorah") in the holy land and continues to list in brief, procedures for conducting the society, its income, the curriculum of the schools and yeshivas and regulations of benefits for the students.
8 pages. Possibly, the booklet was originally printed with an additional page. 14 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor tears and blemishes to title page. A dark strip of paper was glued to the inner margins of the title page. New binding.
Bibliographically unknown.
Sh. Halevy listed a booklet with a similar name which was printed in 1876 as no. 284, however the present booklet differs from the one listed by her.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Takanat HaShavim, words of encouragement and inspiration for repentance, by R. Chaim Yitzchak Aharon Rappaport, the Magid of Vilkomir. [Jerusalem: the Shovavim society, ca. 1890].
Apparently, this edition was printed without a title page, and was not completed.
A letter to the author was printed on the first leaf, by the gabbai and managers of the Shovavim holy society, R. Moshe Slatky and R. Aharon Bruckenstein, with a request to reprint the booklet which was first printed about one year previously (see Sh. Halevy, no. 687).
[5] leaves. 21 cm. Dry paper. Fair-good condition. Stains. Tears, including minor open tears, affecting the text in several places, repaired with paper (many repairs around margins of some leaves). New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 741.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Kol Kore – Mi Yirpa Lach, printed broadside and signed letter, call for assistance from the Sephardi and Ashkenazi rabbis of Jerusalem, asking for food packages from abroad due to the harsh conditions in the city, after three years of the heavy famine that was then in Jerusalem. Jerusalem: printer not indicated, [1879].
The top of the printed leaf is addressed in handwriting to R. "Dov Ber son of R. Yitzchak Moshe" [apparently R. Dov Ber Rabinowitz, Rabbi of Jassy (1794-1884), son of R. Yitzchak Moshe of Jassy, a disciple of the Baal HaTanya]. The middle of the leaf contains a personal letter in handwriting, signed by six people: R. "Shalom Shmuel, shochet in Jerusalem" [who signed other official documents from Jerusalem]; R. "Baruch[?] HaLevi[?] son of R. Aryeh Leib"; R. "Eizik son of Yitzchak Moshe" [possibly the brother of the addressee]; R. "Tzvi, shochet and prayer leader of Podolia[?]", R. "Moshe Rokeach" [apparently R. Moshe Rokeach of Jassy, son of R. Yitzchak Yosef Rokeach, a follower of R. Yisrael of Ruzhin], R. "Gershon Sofer" (apparently R. Gershon Sofer (Rokeach), a Chabad Chassid who established a Torah study group in the synagogue of the Or HaChaim). At the end of the leaf is added an English signature of "Zalman Schechter" of Jerusalem.
The broadside is signed by the heads of the Sephardi and Ashkenazi communities, the Rishon LeTzion R. Avraham Ashkenazi, R. Refael Meir Panigel, and heads of the Sephardic Kollel Committee; R. Shmuel Salant and heads and rabbis of the Ashkenazi community.
At the bottom of the broadside is printed a recommendation in English by the English consul Temple Moore.
[1] leaf. 25X36.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Folding marks. Small tears to folding marks, slightly affecting text.
Not documented by Sh. Halevy.
Rare. Two variants of this broadside were sold at auction by Asufa (Kislev 2004, no. 465; Cheshvan 2005 no. 504), one with another printed recommendation by the German consul and one with no recommendation. The present copy is an unknown variant with only the recommendation by the English consul.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Printed proclamation, Lemaan Zion Lo Echeshe U'l'maan Yerushalayim Lo Eshkot" [For the sake of Zion, I will not be silent, and for the sake of Jerusalem I will not rest (Isaiah, 62:1)], a letter calling for assistance from Jews abroad, due to the famine and dire situation in Jerusalem, stamped by Kollel Zhitomir-Volhyn, and bearing seven handwritten signatures of the heads of the kollel. Jerusalem: printer not indicated, [1887].
At the bottom of the leaf, before the signatures, is a handwritten date: "15th of the month of MarCheshvan [November 1887]. Signed by the heads of the kollel in Jerusalem: R. "Avraham Yitzchak of Ludmir", R. "Yaakov Gedalia of Konstantin Yashan" [Starokostiantyniv, Ukraine], R. "Moshe Nachman Kahana", R. "Yisrael Meir Perlmutter" and R. "Asher of Ludmir".
A proclamation addressing Jews abroad bemoaning the poverty and difficult economic and sanitary situation in Jerusalem and the dire lack of food and lack of funds for rental fees and tuition, etc.
23X36 cm. Dry, brittle paper. Fair-good condition. Stains. Folding marks and creases. Tears to margins and to folds, including small open tears, affecting text. Filing holes.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Printed leaf, Yerushalayim TIten Kolah – call for tzedakah collectors in England and America to support the united fundraising effort of three institutions: the Etz Chaim Torah school and yeshiva and the Bikur Cholim hospital, on the authority of R. Shmuel Salant and the rabbis of Jerusalem. Jerusalem, Kislev 1889.
The bottom of the leaf contains R. Shmuel Salant's signature in print, as well as the signatures of R. Avraham Abba Yaakov Sendrowitz, R. Moshe Eliezer Dan Ralbag, along with other rabbis and officials. The poster is stamped with an original stamp of the Etz Chaim Torah school and yeshiva.
[1] leaf. 27 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Folding marks. Tears to folds, repaired with tape. Small marginal open tear. New binding.
Rare. Does not appear in Sh. Halevy.
Provenance: Formerly of the collection of Dr. I. Mehlman, with his handwritten inscriptions.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Luchot HaEdut, containing letters of rabbis supporting R. Yechiel Michel Pines. [Jerusalem: printer not indicated, 1882].
Printed without title page.
The booklet contains letters supporting R. Yechiel Michel Pines following the ban placed on him by the Gaon of Brisk – R. Yehoshua Leib (Maharil) Diskin. Most rabbis of Jerusalem and Lithuania opposed the ban, including R. Shmuel Salant, Rabbi of Jerusalem. R. Shmuel Salant eventually headed a Beit Din which relieved the ban.
The present booklet contains eight of the fifteen letters of rabbis appearing in the original (the end is lacking), including those of his teacher R. Mordechai Gimpel Yaffe Rabbi of Ruzhany, R. Shmuel Salant Rabbi of Jerusalem and his brother-in-law R. David Friedman Rabbi of Karlin.
12 pages (of original 20). Lacking last 8 pages, with letters 9-15. Approx. 19 cm. Dry, brittle paper. Fair condition. Stains. Tears, including many open tears, mainly to margins, affecting text, repaired with paper filling. New binding.
Sh. Halevy, no. 400.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Printed proclamation regarding "schools" in Jerusalem, by the Sephardi sages of Jerusalem, with a call to join the cherem of the Ashkenazi rabbis of Jerusalem, placed on the new school, Lemel, founded by Dr. Ludwig Frankel. [Jerusalem: printer not indicated, 1882].
The Lemel school was founded in Jerusalem by the affluent Lemel family from Austria, headed by the teacher and journalist Ludwig August Frankel. The school served as a hostel for needy children and for orphans, and its curriculum included general studies and foreign languages, incorporating song and dance, and many games and activities for the children. The Yishuv HaYashan firmly opposed the establishment of the school, and the Ashkenazi sages of Jerusalem were very wary of the general studies and foreign languages and new teaching methods in the school. The leading Jerusalem rabbis headed by the Maharil Diskin and R. Shmuel Salant proclaimed a cherem on the school, as a continuation of the cherem of Jerusalem rabbis from 1866.
This proclamation announces the joining of the Sephardi rabbis with the Ashkenazi rabbis in proclaiming a cherem on the school. It begins with trenchant words by the Kabbalist R. Yedidyah Raphael Abulafiya, who joins the opposition of the Ashkenazi rabbis against the school and against its principal, Dr. Frankel. Further in the proclamation, this stance is supported by more sages: R. Nisim Yisrael Sassoon, R. Rephael Elazar HaLevi and others.
At that time, "schools" was the common name used for the new schools, which incorporated secular subjects into their curriculum such as history, science and foreign languages.
21X34 cm. Good condition. Few stains. Folding mark and creases. Minor tears. Handwritten inscriptions.
The proclamation is not recorded by Sh. Halevy and in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book. Only a photocopy appears in the NLI catalogue.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.
Printed booklet, Kol Yerushalayim, anthology of rabbis' letters, prohibiting and proclaiming a cherem on new schools which teach secular subjects. Jerusalem: [Yoel Moshe Salomon]. 1887.
The booklet begins with harsh criticism of the "schools" which introduce the study of secular subjects and foreign languages, bearing the printed signatures of many Jerusalem rabbis.
The booklet includes a printed copy of the rabbis' letter from 1857, against the Lemel school, one of the first schools in Jerusalem which incorporated secular subjects, bearing the signatures of R. Shmuel Salant and R. Yosef Zundel of Salant, and many more rabbis; a letter from 1862 signed by R. Moshe Yehuda Leib Silberberg of Kutno (author of Zayit Raanan) and by R. Nachum of Shadik (Szadek), and another letter by R. Meir Auerbach rabbi of Kalisz (Kalisch) and Jerusalem, author of Imrei Bina.
Apparently, the booklet was printed by R. Yaakov Yehuda Leib Levi, head of the Jerusalem Beit Din, younger brother of R. Nachum of Shadik. His name and address appear at the end of the booklet.
"Schools" was the name commonly used for the new schools, which taught secular subjects such as history, science and foreign languages.
Double leaf ([4] printed pages). Approx. 34 cm. Fair condition. Stains. Wear. Folding marks and creases. Many tears, including open tears (including a tear in the center of a leaf), affecting text, restored with adhesive tape. Unbound.
Sh. Halevy, no. 601.
PLEASE NOTE: Some lot descriptions were shortened in translation. For further information, please refer to the Hebrew text.