Auction 97 Part 2 Rare and Important Items
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Printed Aleph-Bet chart, with an abridged Birkat HaMazon and additional blessings, Shema and additional prayer texts. Ferrara: Filoniana, [ca. 1690].
Chart for the instruction of Hebrew to children. The upper part of theleaf shows the letters of the Hebrew alphabet with various vowel points. The alphabet is flanked on the right by the first paragraph of Shema, the blessing recited over washing the hands and foods; and on the left by verses including HaMalach HaGoel and an abridged version of Birkat HaMazon. The chart also features several Psalms, including Psalm 91 (starting with Psalms 90:17 – Viyhi Noam), and an additional text "the small boy will be great".
The center of the leaf is occupied by a fine illustration of a class of students. Several students are seen studying by a table, with a winged figure hovering over them and showering them with treats. Near them is a teacher brandishing a whip, ready to hit a disobedient student.
Charts such as this one were printed in Italy from the mid-17th century until the 19th century. Most of the charts were printed in a similar format, with the Aleph-Bet chart in the center and accompanying texts (with typographic variations). The illustration at the center of this leaf also appears in all other charts, with minor variations in the details (in earlier charts the illustration is a woodcut, while in later ones it is engraved).
Approx. 47X34 cm. Good condition. Stains. Folds and creases. Minute tears and damage, repaired with paper filling. Handwritten inscriptions on the reverse side of the leaf. Matted.
Rare chart. Listed in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book based on a photocopy and does not appear in the NLI catalogue.
For details about other Aleph-Bet charts printed in Italy, and about the variations between the illustrations, see: Y. Yudlov, Italian Alphabet Charts, Kiryat Sefer, 62, 1988-1989, pp. 930-932 (Hebrew; the present chart is no. 6 in Yudlov's list).
Printed Aleph-Bet chart, with morning prayers, an abridged Birkat HaMazon and other blessings, Shema and other prayer texts. Livorno: Moise ed Israel Palagi e Salomone Belforte, 1846. Hebrew, Italian and some Ladino.
Chart for the instruction of Hebrew and Italian to children. The upper part of the leaf shows the letters of the Hebrew alphabet with various vowel points, as well as the Latin alphabet and the digits. The alphabet is flanked on the right by the morning prayers, Shema and blessings over food; and on the left by an abridged version of Birkat HaMazon and other blessings. The chart also contains Torah Tzivah Lanu Moshe and other verses.
Adjacent to the center of the leaf, in two separate columns, the letters of the Latin alphabet with various vowels are shown in a smaller size, with basic texts for learning to read in Italian. There also appear numbers (normal digits and Roman numerals), a multiplication table, and the days of the week, months and seasons, in Italian.
The short titles introducing the blessings and prayer sections are printed in Ladino.
The center of the leaf is occupied by an illustration of a class of students. Several students are shown studying by a table, with a winged figure hovering over them and showering them with treats. Near them is a teacher brandishing a whip, ready to hit a disobedient student.
Charts such as this one were printed in Italy from the mid-17th century until the 19th century. Most of the charts were printed in a similar format, with the Aleph-Bet chart in the center and accompanying texts (with typographic variations). The illustration at the center of this leaf also appears in all other charts, with minor variations in the details (in earlier charts the illustration is a woodcut, while in later ones it is engraved). Charts printed from the mid-19th century, such as the present item, along with the Hebrew text, which was left practically unchanged over the years, added the letters of the Latin alphabet, digits and numbers, syllables, words and short texts for beginning to learn to read in Italian.
Approx. 57X44 cm. Good condition. Stains. Folds and creases. Tear, affecting text (without loss), repaired with paper filling. Minute tears to folds, repaired with paper filling. Blurred stamp.
For details about other Aleph-Bet charts printed in Italy, and about the variations between the illustrations, see: Y. Yudlov, Italian Alphabet Charts, Kiryat Sefer, 62, 1988-1989, pp. 930-932 (Hebrew; the present chart is no. 10 in Yudlov's list).
Matching Torah Ark Curtain ("parochet") and Torah Ark Valance ("kaporet"). [Duchy of Kleve (Cleves), Western Germany], 1768.
Pieces of brocade silk fabric with colorful silk-thread embroidery (vegetal, floral, and fruit patterns); gilt and silver metal-thread embroidery in a variety of techniques; colorful metal thread and silk thread embroidered onto sheets of cotton with cardboard underpinnings; embroidered appliqués; metal lace bands in a wide array of techniques; metal sequins; brass suspension rings.
Magnificent matching pair of cloth fabric items – adorned in rich embroidery in an extraordinarily diverse combination of techniques – donated to the synagogue by the "state lobbyist" and "Schutzjude" ("Protected Jew") Salman son of Jakob Cleve Gomperz, and his wife.
The valance ("kaporet") consists of a rectangular fabric cloth, bearing large, embroidered illustrations of five of the elements connected to Jerusalem’s Great Temple: the so-called "Copper Altar", with a sacrificial goat upon it; the ritual "Copper Laver"; the tent of the Tabernacle (this illustration in three-dimensional embroidery, with the cloth panels of the façade of the tent protruding outward); the Firepan; and the Showbread laid down upon the Table of Showbread.
The cloth fabric forming the Torah ark curtain ("parochet") is almost square, with undulating borders on the right and left, and like the valance, it is adorned with embroidery in a wide variety of techniques. The upper part bears a large depiction of the Tablets of the Law (with the abbreviated Ten Commandments embroidered onto them) surmounted by a large crown and symmetrically flanked on either side by a large pair of heraldic rampant lions, langued. Above the crown is a banner inscribed with the Hebrew words "Keter Torah" ("Crown of Torah"); beneath the crown is a rich appliqué with a rococo-style design characteristic of the contemporary art of that period.
At the center of the curtain is a rather lengthy and detailed Hebrew dedicatory inscription (embroidered using coiled metal thread, wound around cardboard underpinnings): "As a memory in the Lord’s Sanctuary for us, R. Zalman son of community leader and state lobbyist R. Yakob Cleve, and his wife Mrs. Bella daughter of R. David Gans of Bonn". Beneath this inscription is an additional embroidered inscription on a banner, alluding to the Hebrew year 5528 (1768).
The provenance of the Torah ark curtain and valance is the Duchy of Kleve, northwestern Germany, presumably the town of Kleve. The presence of Jews in the town was first documented in 1242; even at its height, the Jewish population numbered no more than 200 individuals. The community appears to have been entirely wiped out because of pogroms waged against the Jews during the onslaught of the Black Death, but it was reestablished, following the Thirty Years’ War, by one of the branches of the renowned Gomperz banking family. In 1670, the banker Elias Gomperz founded a synagogue and built a mikveh. A new synagogue and Jewish school were established in the early decades of the 19th century. With the rise of Nazis to power in Germany, the community rapidly began to crumble; during the Kristallnacht in 1938, the synagogue was burnt down, the cemetery desecrated, and the homes of the local Jews were plundered. The last of the town’s Jews were deported to concentration camps and death camps early in the 1940s.
Jakob Cleve Gomperz (1653-1743), son of Joseph Elias Gomperz, followed in his father’s footsteps as a banker, "state lobbyist", and Jewish community leader in the Duchy of Kleve. A native of Emmerich, he managed the family businesses – most notably, the Gebrüder Gomperz banking enterprises – in conjunction with his brother-in-law, Rabbi Judah Leib Levin Cleve, the chief rabbi of the Duchy. His vast network of business connections extended as far as the cities of Cologne, Leipzig, and Berlin. In return for the financial services they offered the authorities, he and his brother-in-law were granted special privileges by Frederick III, Prince-Elector of Brandenburg. Over time, the Writ of Privilege extended to Jakob and Judah Leib was broadened by King Frederick William I of Prussia, son of Frederick III (the Prince-Elector), and a royal permit was issued to them and their families, giving them complete freedom of movement throughout the kingdom and enabling them to conduct trade anywhere they desired. Jakob Cleve Gomperz and Rabbi Levin Cleve made use of their extensive connections and their considerable financial resources to improve the living conditions of the Jewish population of the Duchy; they donated generously to local charities and were regarded as the community’s vital guiding hands for contributing their own personal administrative skills to the successful management of its affairs. In 1703, the Jewish community of the city of Kleve elected Jakob to be its official lobbyist, representing the community before the authorities in all matters of significance. Thanks to his efforts, the tax burden on the community was alleviated, and in 1707, the Jews of the Duchy of Kleve were granted special privileges.
Jakob’s son, Salomon Salman Jakob Cleve Gomperz (1712-1775), recognized as a "Schutzjude" (lit. "Protected Jew"); continued in his father’s and grandfather’s footsteps in managing the family’s business enterprises. As lobbyist, in 1742 he conceived a program to abolish the so-called "Leibzoll" (lit. "body tax", i.e., poll tax) originally imposed on the Jews of Mainz (as it was on many Jewish communities throughout much of German-speaking Europe); he appealed to the Archbishop of Mainz, Philipp Karl, to abolish the burdensome and discriminatory tax, and convinced the authorities that as compensation for their loss of revenue, they could hold an annual lottery wherein local Jewish participants could win the right to acquire passports enabling them to move about freely and conduct trade anywhere they desired for a period of 25 years. The authorities in Mainz (as well as those in Frankfurt and Leipzig) expressed great interest in the program, but it was unfortunately never implemented. In the end, the "Leibzoll" remained in effect until it was finally abolished in the wake of Napolean Bonaparte’s conquest in 1798.
Still, Salman Jakob managed to significantly aid the Jews of Kleve in several different ways; he raised the salary of the local rabbi, funded the rebuilding of the walls surrounding the local cemetery, and generously contributed money for the day-to-day functioning of the community. For all this and more, he was granted the official title of "Assistence Vorsteher" ("Community Deputy Chairman"), a title he retained until his death in 1775. He was survived by his wife, Bella, daughter of Reinches and Rabbi David Gans of Bonn. The couple was childless.
For more information, see:
· "Pinkas Hazkarat Neshamot BiKehillat Kleve" (record book of deceased individuals of the Kleve Jewish community), original document, National Library of Israel (NLI), Ms. Heb. 2398=8 (Hebrew).
· David Kaufmann and Max Freudenthal, "Die Familie Gomperz", Frankfurt am Main: Kommissionsverlag von J. Kauffmann, 1907.
Valance: Height: 44-48 cm. Width: 182 cm. With 18 suspension rings (not original). Torah ark curtain: Height: 181.5 cm. Width: 186 cm. With 20 suspension rings (not original). Overall good condition. Blemishes to fabric, metal threads missing or unraveled, stains and wear to brocade underpinnings. Strips of fabric missing or torn, from both the upper depiction of a banner at the top, and the lower banner depiction underneath the dedicatory inscription. Both items are sewn onto new cotton fabric cloths.
Provenance: Collection of Mozes Heiman Gans (1917-1987), Amsterdam. The items were in his possession prior to the outbreak of World War II (see enclosed letter).
Torah case with matching pair of finials. [Rangoon, Burma (today, Yangon, Myanmar)], dedicatory inscription dated 5684 [1924].
Wood dressed in a coat of sheet silver, repoussé, stamped, and engraved (unmarked); silver, cast, turned and engraved; silver rivets and brass screws. Velvet cloth. Without Torah scroll.
A fine, magnificent, and rare example of a Torah case typical of Burmese Jewish communities of Iraqi origin, which on one hand adheres to distinctive aspects from Iraq and the Near East but is on the other hand adorned using techniques and patterns characteristic of the Far East (China, Burma, and India). Large case, dressed in a coat of sheet silver, repoussé, and adorned with distinctive, rich vegetal motifs (large flowers – probably roses – in a recurrent pattern). The upper rim of the body is surmounted by a circular tiara-shaped adornment ("atarah") with a recurrent pattern. The "roof" of the case is a large, dome-like structure with matching vegetal patterns, finally surmounted with a pear-shaped ornament. A dozen chains with bells at their ends are suspended from the base of the domed "roof". The top of the case is flanked on either side by a pair of removable finials. Like the top of the case, the two finials are pear-shaped and adorned with matching vegetal patterns. Near the top of each finial is a disk from which six chains with bells at their ends are suspended. The bottom surface of the case is also coated in silver sheet. The case is opened and closed by means of a pair of silver buckles. A red velvet cloth lines the inside of the case.
A Hebrew dedicatory inscription is engraved in the upper and lower margins of the body of the case: "This case and the Torah scroll contained within are of Aharon Shalom Yechezkel Ezra Aharon David, he passed away Monday 24th Nissan 1924" / "On condition that the owners of the Torah scroll and its case may, whenever they wish, remove it and take it, and even to send it elsewhere, they and their representative are allowed". More inscriptions are engraved on the interior surfaces of the case; on the right side of the case are verses from the Torah, and on the left side is another dedicatory inscription: "This case and the Torah scroll contained within were dedicated for the soul of Aharon Shalom Yechezkel Ezra Aharon David, he passed away Monday 24th Nissan 1924". Yet another dedicatory inscription is engraved on the shaft of one of the two Torah finials: "Aharon Shalom Yechezkel Ezra Aharon David, may he rest in Eden".
The Center for Jewish Art (CJA) is in possession of records regarding a "parochet" (Torah ark curtain) bearing a virtually identical inscription, dedicated to the transcendence of the soul of Aharon Shalom Yechezkel Ezra Aharon David – with an identical date of passing – of Rangoon, Burma (from the collection of the Memorial Museum of Hungarian-Speaking Jewry, Safed); see: The Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item no. 9611. For a similar Torah case also from Rangoon, see: Collection of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, no. B94.0541.
The Jewish community of Burma is and was one of the smallest of Jewish communities in East Asia. It was established in the 19th century with the arrival of Jews from Baghdad, Kolkata (Calcutta), Cochin, and Persia.
Height of case: 88.5 cm. Diameter at base: 27.5 cm. Height of finials: 18 cm. Overall good condition. Slight warping to one of the two finials. Shafts of finials trimmed diagonally to fit curvature of case’s domed "roof".
Pair of Torah finials. Rotterdam, the Netherlands, [ca. 1860].
Silver, cast; filigree.
Hallmarks: · Fineness mark; · Maker's mark, "Freen W." (active Dordrecht, near Rotterdam, ca. 1856-1866).
Weighty pair of Torah finials, exhibiting dense filigree in vegetal patterns. Hexagonal, three-tiered tower-shaped bodies, with "balconies" separating the various tiers. The body of each finial consists of seven distinct parts, including the three tiers. Each face features a window with a small aperture for a bell; most of the bells are missing. Each finial is surmounted by a crown, in turn surmounted by a large sphere. The lower tier of each finial has a filigreed, cup-shaped hexagonal base, with bells suspended above it. Each base is supported by a short cylindrical shaft.
The collection of the Joods Historisch Museum, Amsterdam, includes a Torah crown, as well as two other pairs of Torah finials very similar to the present finials. All three items (nos. MB00285, M014232, and MB00685) were created by the silversmith Freen W.
Height: 42 cm. Overall good condition. Numerous bells are missing.
Provenance: Synagogue of the Beth Juliana Parents Home, Herzliya.
Torah shield. Italy, [Late 18th century].
Cut silver sheet, repoussé and engraved (unmarked); iron sheet.
Crown-shaped Torah shield, bearing ornaments in the form of acanthus leaves and scallop seashells, characteristic of Rococo-style art. At its base, it is inscribed with the Hebrew words "Sefer Rishon" ("First Book"). On the reverse side are a pair of rings to which the suspension chain is attached. The back of this Torah shield is reinforced with a plate of sheet iron, attached with five sets of nuts and bolts. Crown-shaped Torah shields are peculiar to the Jewish communities of Italy and the Balkans and are termed "half-crowns" to distinguish them from the ornaments known as Torah crowns, which are placed on top of Torah scrolls.
The Moldovan Family Collection includes a similar Torah shield, originating from Ancona, Italy, and dated 1792 (see: A Mirror of Jewish Life: A Selection from The Moldovan Family Collection, Tel Aviv, 1999, item no. 48).
For similar items, see: Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item no. 37212 (Gross Family Collection); and the Israel Museum Collection, item no. B50.06.2642.
Height: 15.5 cm (incl. chain: 45 cm). Width: 26 cm. Good condition. Minor warping and cracks. Handwritten inscription on back: "No 118".
Torah shield and Torah pointer, both created by silversmith Antoni Riedel (active 1878-1910), Warsaw.
1. Torah shield. Warsaw, 1884.
Silver, repoussé, cast, and engraved; parcel gilt.
Hallmarks: · Maker's mark, "A. Riedel"; · Workshop mark (logo); · Municipal mark of the city of Warsaw; · Fineness mark, "84"; · Assayer's and year mark, "OC 1884" [= Osip Sosnkowski].
Torah shield in shape of a cartouche, consisting of a plate of repoussé silver with the surface and borders adorned with rich vegetal patterns including branches, flowers and rocailles. In the upper portion is an ornate, convex crown flanked by a pair of rampant lions. At the center is a small, fancy cartouche framing a surface left blank for an engraved dedicatory inscription. The cartouche is flanked by a pair of architectonic columns, in turn flanked by a cast pair of bouquets of flowers in vases; it is surmounted by a balcony railing immediately beneath the crown. Over the center of the band at the base of the crown is a relief of a deer, and a tiny pair of lions. Toward the bottom is a rectangular box with a door, enabling the insertion of interchangeable plaques. The principal ornaments – the bouquets, columns, railing, crown, and lions – are all attached to the plate of the Torah shield by means of nuts and bolts. Three long silver chains connect the top of the shield to a large suspension ring (also marked). Includes two silver interchangeable plaques engraved with the names (in Hebrew, on either side) of the holidays of "Passover" and "Shavuot".
For similar Torah shields by Riedel, see: The Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item nos. 338 and 11434; "Crowning Glory", item nos. 204 and 206; and see also "The Stieglitz Collection", item no. 3.
Height: 30 cm. Width: 26 cm. Height incl. chains: 55.5 cm. Overall good condition. Gilt coating faded.
2. Torah pointer. Warsaw, [late 19th or early 20th century].
Silver, cast and engraved; parcel gilt.
Hallmarks: · Maker's mark, "A. Riedel"; · Workshop mark (logo); · Municipal mark of the city of Warsaw; · Fineness mark, "84".
Adorned in vegetal patterns. Upper section cylindrical, alternately widening and narrowing. Lower section spiraling, and at its tip is the "hand", emerging from a lengthy, decorated "cuff". At the end of the upper section is a dome-shaped ornament, surmounted by a tiny lion (matching the lions appearing on the Torah shield described above). A suspension chain is connected to the lion.
For similar Torah pointers by Riedel, see: The Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item nos. 542 and 659.
Length (Torah pointer): 26.5 cm; incl. chain: 46 cm. Good Condition.
See also following item.
Hanukkah lamp, created by silversmith Antoni Riedel (active 1878-1910), Warsaw, 1892.
Silver, repoussé, stamped, and cast.
Hallmarks: · Maker's mark, "A. Riedel"; · Workshop mark (logo); · Municipal mark of the city of Warsaw; · Fineness mark, "84"; · Assayer's and year mark, "OC 1892" [= Osip Sosnkowski]; several later Polish marks.
The back plate enclosed within a frame consisting of rocaille, flowers, and leaves, extending widthwise above the row of candleholders. Surmounted by an ornate crown – in turn surmounted by a crouched deer – and flanked on either side by a large pair of heraldic rampant lions, langued. At the center of the back plate is a seven-branched menorah, flanked by elaborate architectonic pillars.
Protruding frontward at the base of the back plate is a shelf in the form of a balcony enclosed by a railing, consisting of pillars connected by sloping floral garlands. Toward the rear of the "balcony" is a row of five coiled, silver-thread posts. The posts at either end are surmounted by a pair of roosters; two of the posts in between are surmounted by another type of bird and a deer; the tallest, center post is topped with an eagle perched on a silver sphere. The bottom section of the back plate is flanked on either side by a tall pair of palms, in turn flanked by another (protruding) pair of heraldic langued and rampant lions. Toward the front of the "balcony" is the row of eight candleholders, each supported on the back of an eagle, between its outstretched wings. The lamp is set on four foliate legs with ball supports. A removable servant light is attached to the upper right of the back plate, and a similarly removable oil jug is symmetrically attached to upper left; both are positioned on top of coiled, sigmoid, silver-thread wires.
For other Hanukkah lamps created by Riedel, see: The Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item no. 1861; and The Jewish Museum, New York, item nos. JM 1-72, and JM 120-65. See also previous item.
Height: 34.5 cm. Width: approx. 27.5 cm. Good condition. Minor warping. Slight fractures.
Provenance:
1. Private collection, The Netherlands.
2. On loan to the Jewish Historical Museum, Amsterdam, 1967-2017, item no. MB00355.
Hanukkah Lamp. Italy, [probably 18th-19th century].
Brass, cast, chased.
The triangular back plate features various decorative motifs typical of Italian Hanukkah Lamps of the 16th and 17th centuries: the lower part consists of two seated cherubs (Putti), holding bouquets of flower, flanking a female face (Medusa?); between the cherubs' wings is located a blank cartouche, topped by a vase of flowers, whose large, stylized handles are modeled as grotesque masks. A row of rectangular oil fonts with long, pinched spouts for wicks is fastened to the back plate with screws and nuts (the row of oil fonts is shorter than the back plate and was likely added later).
Rare model.
For an identical Hanukkah Lamp, see: Sotheby’s, New York, the Steinhardt Collection, April 29, 2013, item no. 203; a similar lamp, with additional decorations, formerly part of the S.M. Solomon collection, is illustrated in: Hebraica, Documents d'Art Juif Orfèvrerie, Peinture, Préface de Henri Guttman, pl. XII. This lamp was sold at Bonhams Skinner, Boston, May 21, 2009, item no. 175.
Height: 18.5 cm, width: 21.5 cm. Overall good Condition. Suspension ring. Without servant light.
Hanukkah Lamp – Produced by "She'erit HaPletah" in Germany. Marktredwitz displaced persons camp, American occupation zone in Germany, 1947-1948.
Ceramic painted green, glazed.
The center of the lamp features a tree stump, half of which is cut down, and lying on the ground. The servant light is located on top of a young shoot, branching out of the stump, a symbol for the revival of the Jewish nation. The line of oil fonts is located in the front of the lamp, flanked by the inscription: "The Central Committee in Munich – 5708 [1947-1948]".
The bottom part of the lamp is marked with a stamp (somewhat blurred): "Produced by She'erit HaPletah in the German Exile – EMPLOYMENT BOARD".
According to the archives of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), the present lamp is one of a series of 351 Hanukkah lamps produced in the ceramic workshop of the Marktredwitz DP camp in north-eastern Bavaria between June 1947 and February 1948. The workshop was established by the "Employment Board", an organization founded by the JDC, the Jewish Agency for Palestine and the Central Committee of Liberated Jews of Bavaria (ZK), with the aim to provide work for holocaust survivors, equip them with new skills, and furnishing them with materials for everyday life and religious observance.
A report from November 1947, recording the activities of the JDC in the American Zone, reports on the ceramics workshop of the Marktredwitz DP camp, and on the production of Hanukkah lamps by holocaust survivors: "the ceramic workshop is one of our best producing units... an order received from the religious department for Chanukah candleholders has been completed and a very successful product has been manufactured, delivered, and is now being distributed". The report goes on to say: "the people employed in this workshop have never had any previous experience with ceramic work but have made remarkable progress in learning the trade. The work is dirty and hard, and the workers must be given credit for their efforts" (see: JDC Archives, Artifact_00580).
Exhibition: Munich, the Jewish Museum, 2011-2012: Jews 45/90 From here and there – Survivors from East Europe. This item was Illustrated in the exhibition catalogue, "Juden 45/90 Von da und dort – Überlebende aus Osteuropa", Berlin, 2011, no. 5.5.
Height: 11 cm, length: 25.5, depth: approx. 14 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes.
Amulet case. Ferrara, Italy, second half of the 18th century.
Silver, cast, repoussé, punched and engraved.
Hallmarks: · Marked with the emblem of the city of Ferrara (double-headed eagle, the city’s emblem in the years 1762-1776); · Maker’s mark: "[F]R" – Francesco Rubini II, active 1744-1784.
Double-sided amulet case, decorated with rocailles and rococo-style vegetal patterns and motifs. At the top is a wedding canopy surmounted by a suspension ring (part of a clover-shaped ornament). Dangling from the bottom is a bunch of grapes, symbolizing fertility and prosperity. At the center of both faces is a cartouche bearing the Divine name "Shaddai". Two additional ornaments – also labeled "Shaddai" – appear on one face: a depiction of the Ark of the Covenant, bearing wings; and a conical ritual priestly head covering (or mitre). At the bottom of the case is an opening for insertion of the amulet; it is capped with a removable cover secured with a bolt with a flower-shaped nut.
Amulet cases of this type were intended for folded amulets, to be kept inside their inner cavity. At times, such amulets were written with a specific person or purpose in mind; such amulets would be exchanged when the amulet case changed hands. Over the years, the amulet cases themselves would begin serving as amulets.
For similar items similarly created by the silversmith Francesco Rubini II, see: Center for Jewish Art (CJA), item no. 5022; and Christie’s, January 1, 1970, item no. 397.
Height: 12.5 cm. Width: 9 cm. Thickness: 3 cm. Overall good condition. Missing two cast ornaments. Minor warping.
Four ornamental amulets. [India, Iraq / Near East, late 19th to early 20th centuries].
1-2. Two ornamental amulets, 21K gold, stamped in the center with a two-line (Hebrew) inscription: The Holy Name Shin Dalet Yod (top line) and the Tetragrammaton (bottom line). The inscription is encircled by geometric and vegetal patterns.
Diameter: 3 cm; 3.5 cm. Suspension rings.
3. Gold amulet, 21K, to be sewn onto garment. Stamped at its center is the three-line (Hebrew) inscription of the Holy Name Shin Dalet Yod, the Tetragrammaton, and again the Holy Name.
Diameter: 3 cm. Pair of holes for sewing. Warping and blemishes.
4. Ornamental amulet, 21K gold, sawed into shape of Star of David, with the Hebrew letter "Heh" engraved into each of its six points.
2.8 cm. Suspension ring.
Provenance: Kedem, auction 52, lot 423 (formerly of the Sassoon Family Collection).