Auction 91 Part 1 Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
- palestin (83) Apply palestin filter
- palestine, (83) Apply palestine, filter
- jewish (38) Apply jewish filter
- british (33) Apply british filter
- camp (33) Apply camp filter
- camps, (33) Apply camps, filter
- detent (33) Apply detent filter
- illeg (33) Apply illeg filter
- immigr (33) Apply immigr filter
- immigration, (33) Apply immigration, filter
- israel (33) Apply israel filter
- mandatori (33) Apply mandatori filter
- ottoman (33) Apply ottoman filter
- state (33) Apply state filter
- art (32) Apply art filter
- bibliophil (32) Apply bibliophil filter
- edit (32) Apply edit filter
- editions, (32) Apply editions, filter
- isra (32) Apply isra filter
- limit (32) Apply limit filter
- print (32) Apply print filter
- prints, (32) Apply prints, filter
- "shanah (31) Apply "shanah filter
- card (31) Apply card filter
- postcard (31) Apply postcard filter
- postcards, (31) Apply postcards, filter
- shanah (31) Apply shanah filter
- souvenir (31) Apply souvenir filter
- tovah (31) Apply tovah filter
- tovah" (31) Apply tovah" filter
- studi (28) Apply studi filter
- literatur (23) Apply literatur filter
- period (23) Apply period filter
- map (19) Apply map filter
- travelogu (19) Apply travelogu filter
- travelogues, (19) Apply travelogues, filter
- antisemit (17) Apply antisemit filter
- antisemitism, (17) Apply antisemitism, filter
- book (17) Apply book filter
- children (17) Apply children filter
- hapletah (17) Apply hapletah filter
- holocaust (17) Apply holocaust filter
- sheerit (17) Apply sheerit filter
- photographi (15) Apply photographi filter
- herzl (13) Apply herzl filter
- herzl, (13) Apply herzl, filter
- jnf (13) Apply jnf filter
- theodor (13) Apply theodor filter
- zionism (13) Apply zionism filter
- zionism, (13) Apply zionism, filter
Decorative frame incorporating the symbols of the twelve tribes of Israel. The certificate was signed in 1932; inked stamp (Bulgarian) dated 1942.
26.5X38 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Some stains. Minor tears to edges. One tear mended with tape. Strip of tape to upper edge, on verso.
1. Five Palestine Pounds, the Anglo-Palestine Bank, [1948]. Pick# 16.
2-3. Two fractional currency notes, 50 Prutah, [1952]. Signatures of Eshkol-Ne'eman. Pick# 10c.
4-7. Four fractional currency notes, 100 Prutah. Signatures of Eshkol-Ne'eman. Pick# 12c.
8. 250 Prutah, [1953]. Series a, without menorah. Pick# 13b.
9. 500 Prutah, Bank Leumi Le-Israel, [1952]. Pick# 19.
10. One Israel Pound, Bank Leumi Le-Israel, [1952]. Pick# 20.
11. Five Israel Pounds, Bank Leumi Le-Israel, [1952]. Pick# 21.
12. Ten Israel Pounds, Bank Leumi Le-Israel, [1952]. Pick# 22.
13-17. Five banknotes, Bank of Israel, series a (landscapes), [1955]: • 500 Prutah, Pick# 24. • One Israeli Pound, Pick# 25. • 5 Israeli Pounds, Pick# 26. • 10 Israeli Pounds, Pick# 27b (black s/n). • 50 Israeli Pounds, Pick# 28b (red s/n).
18-19. Two banknotes, Bank of Israel, series b (figures), [1958-1960]: • 1/2 Israeli Lira, Pick# 29. • 50 Israeli Lirot, Pick# 33e (brown s/n).
20. 50 Israeli Lirot, Bank of Israel, series c (notable personalities), [1968]. Pick# 36a (black s/n).
Size and condition vary.
Lot 183 Dinner Gong Constructed from a Shell Case – Souvenir from the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936
A badge of the Cheshire Regiment of the British Army is attached to top-center of shell case. Shell case engraved: "Palestine, 1936, Gaza, Haifa, Jaffa, Samakh, Tulkarm, Sarafand, Jerusalem".
Stand: Maximum height – approx. 18 cm. Base: approx. 20X14 cm. Shell case: height – 25 cm, diameter: 5.5 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes.
Green box, bearing a Star of David and an inscription in Hungarian; issued by the "Magyar Izraeliták Szentföldi és Egyéb Településeit Támogató Egyesület" [Association for Hungarian Israelite Settlements in the Holy Land and Elsewhere].
13X8.5X5.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Paint chipped and blemished. Dents. Rust.
Silver, etched and repoussé; Eilat stone.
The central image on the front cover depicts Moses; topped with an Eilat stone. The back cover depicts the emblems of the twelve tribes of Israel.
10.5X14.5 cm. Good condition. Missing clasp (which was marked "Bezalel").
De Arte Cabalistica ["On the Art of Kabbalah"], by Johannes Reuchlin. Hagenau: Thomas Anshelm, 1517 (print details from colophon). Latin, with some Hebrew and Greek. First edition.
First edition of the seminal work on the subject of Kabbalah as understood from a Christian perspective, by the German scholar Johannes Reuchlin. The title page features a large woodcut of Reuchlin's coat of arms: a knight's helmet bearing the inscription "ARACAP / NIONIS" ("Ara Capnionis"). Decorative woodcut initial; two illustrations of mystical symbols appear in the margins of one of the pages.
In this book, Reuchlin develops ideas he first introduced in his previous work, "De Verbo Mirifico." It is written as a three-way conversation involving the Jewish kabbalist Simeon ben Elazar (a fictitious character whose name is meant to be reminiscent of Simeon Bar Yohai, who, according to Jewish tradition, was the author of the "Zohar, " the foundational book on Kabbalah), a Pythagorean philosopher, and a Muslim. In the spirit of the Renaissance, in the present book Reuchlin strives to return to "the basics" as he perceives them, namely Jewish Kabbalah and Pythagorean philosophy, whose origins he traces all the way back to Moses. He then takes these "basics" and interweaves them into Christian theology.
This book does not have a missionary agenda and was never in fact aimed at Jews; rather, Reuchlin directs his attention to his Christian co-religionists, attempting to familiarize them with the sources of their own religion and thus deepen their faith. The term "Kabbalah" here is not at all restricted to the mystical and esoteric aspects of the Jewish faith, but rather to Jewish sources in general; the approach adopted in the book derives broadly and indiscriminately from extra-Biblical Jewish traditions, in the belief that the Christian faith is rendered incomplete and poorer in the absence of exposure to these realms of Jewish thought, namely the Oral Torah (the Talmud and midrashic literature) and esoteric material that includes the Kabbalah, the "Zohar", the writings of Rabbi Yehuda HeHasid [Judah ben Samuel of Regensburg], Rabbi Abraham Abulafia, Rabbi Joseph ben Abraham Gikatilla, and others, and mystical letter combinations and "Gematria" (Hebrew numerology). This concept is founded on the belief that, like the Bible itself, all of the above were delivered to Moses at Mt. Sinai.
Johannes Reuchlin (1455-1522), among the most prominent of German humanist scholars in the Renaissance period. Outspoken proponent of an attitude of tolerance toward the Jews. Invested much of his energies in enriching his Christian co-religionists with the wisdom of Jewish sacred writings and Greek philosophy, and in teaching them the Hebrew and Greek languages. Studied Hebrew under Jakob ben Jehiel Loans and under Rabbi Ovadia ben Jacob Sforno of Cesena. Continued with advanced studies in Kabbalah in Italy, and was influenced by the writings of the Italian philosopher Giovanni Pico della Mirandola (1463-1494). Reuchlin was considered to be among the fathers of the Reformation, even though he personally placed himself in opposition to that movement, and remained steadfast in his loyalty to Catholicism and the Vatican throughout his life.
In the famous debate that erupted between him and the German Catholic theologian and convert from Judaism, Johannes (Josef) Pfefferkorn, Reuchlin emphatically denounced the burning of the Talmud. Consequently, and because of his insistence on the need to study and teach the Jewish religious texts, he found himself targeted by the Church's institutions. His pamphlet titled "Augenspiegel" ("Eyeglasses") was banned and condemned by force of an official decree issued by Pope Leo X on June 23, 1520.
[4], LXXIX, [1] ff. (misfoliation), 28.5 cm. Good condition. Stains, including dampstains, and several ink stains, some dark. Closed and open tears to edges of title page and several other leaves, some mended with paper. Minute worming to title page and several other leaves, with minor damage to text. Hand signature on title page. Modern vellum boards.
For additional reading, see: Joseph Dan, "The Kabbalah of Johannes Reuchlin and its Historical Significance, " in: Aviezer Ravitzky, ed., "Jerusalem Studies in Jewish Thought, Joseph Baruch Sermoneta Memorial Volume, " Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies, Jerusalem, 1998, pp. 455-85.
Printer's device on title page. Ornate initials.
[39] ff. Missing last, blank leaf. 12.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor creases. Top edge trimmed at a slant. Fine binding (paper over parchment). Photocopy of title page mounted to front board.
Catálogo de incunables y obras impresas del Siglo XVI (Madrid, 2002), no. 241.
Four parts of a pocket size edition of the Bible, in Latin. Paris: Simon de Colines, 1529-1532. Three volumes.
In 1524-1526, the Parisian printer Simon de Colines published a sexto-decimo edition of the Bible in seven or eight parts. All parts were reprinted over the next fifteen years. This lot comprises four of the reprints:
• Part I (printing completed in December 1532): The Pentateuch, Joshua, Judges and Ruth.
[8], 439 ff.
• Part II (printing completed in May 1529) – Samuel, Kings, Chronicles, Ezra, Tobias, Judith, Esther, Job. Text within red-ruled frame.
[5], 587 ff.
• Part V (1513) – "Libri Prophetarum": Isaiah, Jeremiah, Baruch, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Zechariah and Malachi. Bound with Part VI – 1 and 2 Maccabees.
436 ff.; 100 ff.
Woodcut initials.
Approx. 10.5-11.5 cm. Overall good condition. Stains, including dampstains. Large dark stains to title pages. Creases and minor wear. Worming to most leaves of Part I and to some leaves in other volumes, with minor damage to text. Large, blue inked-stamps on several pages. Minor repair to title page of Part V. Marking to f. 486 of Part II. New, matching leather bindings, with remnants of the original, gilt-decorated leather bindings. Edges painted black.
See: Darlow & Moule, Historical catalogue of the printed editions of Holy Scripture in the library of the British and Foreign Bible Society, Vol. II, note following 6105.
Sententiae hebraicae ad vitae institutionem perutiles / Schöne vnnd heilsame Hebraische Sprüch, a collection of Hebrew proverbs, with translation to Latin and German, by Paulus Weidner von Billerburg. Vienna: Michael Zimmermann, 1563.
A collection of proverbs, mainly from Pirkey Avot, in Hebrew, Latin and German, with commentary. The proverbs were compiled and translated by Paulus Weidner (né Asher Judah Ashkenazi; ca. 1525-1585), a Jewish convert to Christianity, doctor and professor of Hebrew at the University of Vienna.
A woodcut portrait of Weidner appears on verso of title page.
[112] ff., approx. 20 cm. Good condition. Stains, including dampstains. Minor tears to endpapers and to leaf [111]. Notation on title page. Ex-library copy: Inked stamps to inside front board and several pages; notation on spine. Limp vellum binding, with four ties (three ties are torn; only a small part remains). Minor wear to binding.
43 works by Philo of Alexandria, translated from Greek by Sigmund Gelen, with four introductions. Woodcut initial at the beginning of each work. Two additional works at the end, one by Athenagoras of Athens and one by Aeneas of Gaza.
[4] ff., 720, [28] pp., 31 cm. Good condition. Stains, including dampstains. Some leaves browned. Worming to some leaves (with minor damage to text). Markings and notations by hand to title page and several other leaves. Open tear to title page (from ink erosion), damaging several words. Worn and damaged binding (with tears). New strip of leather to spine, for reinforcement.
French scholar and priest Samuel Buchart's (1599-1667) notable work, in which he attempts to identify biblical animals based on a variety of ancient sources: The Holy Scriptures, Near Eastern literature and Greek and Latin sources. First edition, with four in-text illustrations of animals and a portrait of the author.
Part I: [48] ff., 1094 columns, [64] pp. + [1] plate (portrait of the author); Part II: [4] ff. (bound out of order, at the end of the book), 888 columns, [56] pp. Approx. 37 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Label, inked stamp and handwritten notation on inside boards and a blank leaf at the beginning. Fine parchment binding, with title handwritten on spine; worn.
1. Historische Nachrichten von der Juden-Gemeinde welche ehehin in der Reichsstadt Nürnberg. Nuremberg: Georg Peter Monath, 1755. German, Latin and some Hebrew.
History of the Jews of Nuremberg. Fine engraved frontispiece showing the Nuremberg synagogue and six figures, each in distinct medieval Jewish costume.
[3] ff., 164 pp. + [1] engraved plate.
2. Historische Nachricht von der Judengemeinde in dem Hofmarkt Fürth unterhalb Nürnberg. Frankfurt and Prague, 1754. German and some Hebrew. Two parts.
History of the Jews of Fürth.
[2] ff., 170 pp.
Bound together. 19.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains and creases (mostly minor). Inked stamps, including library stamps, and handwriting on several leaves. Binding and several leaves partrially detached. Some worming, with minor damage to text. Old binding, worn; cloth tape along spine.