Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
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Displaying 409 - 420 of 511
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $150
Sold for: $200
Including buyer's premium
Eight postcards with anti-Semitic caricatures. Paris and elsewhere, [ca. late 19th century to early 20th century]. French.
Four of the postcards were published by Librarie Antisémite (first series); one of them features an illustration of the officer Ferdinand Esterhazy as the "Wandering Jew" making his way from Paris to London with a knife raised over his back.
Six undivided postcards. Five postcards were mailed.
Approx. 14X9 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes. Small tears at edges of two postcards. Abrasions on verso of one postcard.
Four of the postcards were published by Librarie Antisémite (first series); one of them features an illustration of the officer Ferdinand Esterhazy as the "Wandering Jew" making his way from Paris to London with a knife raised over his back.
Six undivided postcards. Five postcards were mailed.
Approx. 14X9 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes. Small tears at edges of two postcards. Abrasions on verso of one postcard.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Eight anti-Semitic postcards with illustrations of "The Little Cohn" (Der Kleine Cohn). Various publishers and places of printing [ca. late 19th century early 20th century]. German.
Seven of them are undivided. One postcard appears in two copies.
Approx. 9X14 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Some of them were mailed.
Seven of them are undivided. One postcard appears in two copies.
Approx. 9X14 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Some of them were mailed.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
Four anti-Semitic postcards with illustrations and poems about "The Little Cohn" (Der Kleine Cohn). Various publishers and places of printing [ca. late 19th century early 20th century]. German.
Three of them are undivided. One postcard appears in two copies.
Approx. 9X14 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Two of them were mailed.
Three of them are undivided. One postcard appears in two copies.
Approx. 9X14 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Two of them were mailed.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
16 Nazi propaganda postcards, some of them with anti-Semitic illustrations, inked stamps and postage stamps of the German Reich. Germany and Austria, [1930s-1940s].
* Official postcard of a Nazi party conference held in Nürnberg in 1933 and two postcards with stamps of Nazi party conferences from the years 1937 and 1938. * "Mander s'ischt Zeit!", an anti-Semitic postcard issued after the Anschluss (with a color illustration by Franz Köck). * "Bolschewismus ohne Maske" [Bolshevism without a mask], a postcard from the Great anti-Bolshevik Exhibition (Grosse Anti-bolschewistiche Ausstellung) that was held in Vienna in 1939. Two copies. * "Der Jude verlässt das Ghetto" [The Jew escapes the Ghetto], a postcard from the Great anti-Bolshevik Exhibition. Two copies, with stamps of the Eternal Jew exhibition that was held in Berlin in November 1938. * Two postcards from the Great Exhibition 1918 (Großausstellung 1918) which was held in Vienna in 1944 and presented the Jews as guilty of the defeat of Germany in World War I. One of the postcards depicts portraits of Jewish dignitaries, including Albert Einstein. The second postcard, which is titled "Das Kriegsziel der Weltplutokratie" [The War Goal of World Plutocracy], appears in two copies. * A postcard with an illustration of the Judengasse in Vienna. Printed on verso: "Wien vor 1938" [Vienna before 1938]. * And more.
16 postcards (some of them duplicate). 14X9 cm to 10.5X15 cm. Condition varies.
* Official postcard of a Nazi party conference held in Nürnberg in 1933 and two postcards with stamps of Nazi party conferences from the years 1937 and 1938. * "Mander s'ischt Zeit!", an anti-Semitic postcard issued after the Anschluss (with a color illustration by Franz Köck). * "Bolschewismus ohne Maske" [Bolshevism without a mask], a postcard from the Great anti-Bolshevik Exhibition (Grosse Anti-bolschewistiche Ausstellung) that was held in Vienna in 1939. Two copies. * "Der Jude verlässt das Ghetto" [The Jew escapes the Ghetto], a postcard from the Great anti-Bolshevik Exhibition. Two copies, with stamps of the Eternal Jew exhibition that was held in Berlin in November 1938. * Two postcards from the Great Exhibition 1918 (Großausstellung 1918) which was held in Vienna in 1944 and presented the Jews as guilty of the defeat of Germany in World War I. One of the postcards depicts portraits of Jewish dignitaries, including Albert Einstein. The second postcard, which is titled "Das Kriegsziel der Weltplutokratie" [The War Goal of World Plutocracy], appears in two copies. * A postcard with an illustration of the Judengasse in Vienna. Printed on verso: "Wien vor 1938" [Vienna before 1938]. * And more.
16 postcards (some of them duplicate). 14X9 cm to 10.5X15 cm. Condition varies.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
Three printed items by the anti-Semitic Catholic priest Charles Edward Coughlin: a book, a journal and a letter with his handwritten signature. Detroit and Royal Oak, 1930s. English.
1. Letter of gratitude, typewritten on official stationery and hand-signed by Charles Coughlin, Detroit, 1931. Addressed, presumably, to one of the donators who helped him distribute his writings.
[1] leaf, 27 cm. Horizontal fold line. Several minor stains and tears along edges.
2. Am I an Anti-Semite?, by Charles Coughlin. Detroit: The Condon printing Co., 1939.
150, [2], 56 pp, 18.5cm. Good condition. Many penciled markings and a few stains. An open tear to one of the leaves (slightly affecting the text).
3. Issue of the journal Social Justice edited by Charles Coughlin. Royal Oak: Cuneo press, January 23, 1939. On the title page, an article about an "original" White Paper that was allegedly cancelled due to the pressure of the Jews of Britain.
19, [1] pp, approx. 42 cm. Good condition. Tears along edges (mainly of the first and last leaves). Minor stains.
Charles Edward Coughlin (1891-1979) was an American Catholic priest who gained wide popularity in the USA during the 1930s. At the peak of his career, he broadcasted a radio program and edited a journal which had millions of listeners and readers and by which he spread his support of Nazi Germany and his anti-Semitic ideas. In 1942, after the USA joined World War II, the American government stepped in to stop his activity.
1. Letter of gratitude, typewritten on official stationery and hand-signed by Charles Coughlin, Detroit, 1931. Addressed, presumably, to one of the donators who helped him distribute his writings.
[1] leaf, 27 cm. Horizontal fold line. Several minor stains and tears along edges.
2. Am I an Anti-Semite?, by Charles Coughlin. Detroit: The Condon printing Co., 1939.
150, [2], 56 pp, 18.5cm. Good condition. Many penciled markings and a few stains. An open tear to one of the leaves (slightly affecting the text).
3. Issue of the journal Social Justice edited by Charles Coughlin. Royal Oak: Cuneo press, January 23, 1939. On the title page, an article about an "original" White Paper that was allegedly cancelled due to the pressure of the Jews of Britain.
19, [1] pp, approx. 42 cm. Good condition. Tears along edges (mainly of the first and last leaves). Minor stains.
Charles Edward Coughlin (1891-1979) was an American Catholic priest who gained wide popularity in the USA during the 1930s. At the peak of his career, he broadcasted a radio program and edited a journal which had millions of listeners and readers and by which he spread his support of Nazi Germany and his anti-Semitic ideas. In 1942, after the USA joined World War II, the American government stepped in to stop his activity.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Archiv für Judenfragen [Archive for Jewish Questions]. Issue no. 1. Berlin: Anti-jüdische Aktion, 1943. German.
Issue no. 1 of the anti-Semitic journal "Archiv für Judenfragen" (only three issues were published). Includes an editorial with a short manifesto and three "academic articles" about the Jews (one of them by the anti-Semitic theologian Gerhard Kittel). At the end is a list of issues that were planned to be published (most of them were never published).
64 pp, 24 cm. good condition. Stains and blemishes to margins and cover. Tears to spine. Stamp of the front cover (contemporary).
Issue no. 1 of the anti-Semitic journal "Archiv für Judenfragen" (only three issues were published). Includes an editorial with a short manifesto and three "academic articles" about the Jews (one of them by the anti-Semitic theologian Gerhard Kittel). At the end is a list of issues that were planned to be published (most of them were never published).
64 pp, 24 cm. good condition. Stains and blemishes to margins and cover. Tears to spine. Stamp of the front cover (contemporary).
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
Témoignages de Notre Temps [Contemporary Accounts], Issue No. 2, Les Juifs [The Jews]. Paris: Société anonyme les illustrés français, 1933. French.
The issue, which was published upon Hitler's rise to power and the spread of anti-Semitism throughout Europe, offers a comprehensive assessment of Jewish life all over the world. It contains hundreds of pictures (including photographs by Helmar Lerski) that are divided by various aspects of the Jewish people's culture and day-to-day life, together with articles and essays: synagogues and study halls; books and Judaica; Jews in science, arts and sports; Jews in the army and the financial world; Jewish nomads; Jewish communities in Arab countries, America, Poland, and France, and more. Two chapters are devoted to the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe, offer a disturbing picture of the humiliations, persecutions, and pogroms in Germany and Ukraine. The issue closes with an exposition of Jewish life being built and developed in Palestine, with pictures of Zionist leaders, portraits of Jews in Palestine, pictures of streets, buildings, and fields, of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, of settlers at their work, and farming the soil.
Among the various chapters are several articles, surveys, and open letters by influential Jews throughout the world, including Albert Einstein, Sholem Asch, Chaim Weizmann, and Rabbi Israël Lévi, Chief Rabbi of France.
105, [1] pp, 30.5 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Small tears to the first leaf.
The issue, which was published upon Hitler's rise to power and the spread of anti-Semitism throughout Europe, offers a comprehensive assessment of Jewish life all over the world. It contains hundreds of pictures (including photographs by Helmar Lerski) that are divided by various aspects of the Jewish people's culture and day-to-day life, together with articles and essays: synagogues and study halls; books and Judaica; Jews in science, arts and sports; Jews in the army and the financial world; Jewish nomads; Jewish communities in Arab countries, America, Poland, and France, and more. Two chapters are devoted to the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe, offer a disturbing picture of the humiliations, persecutions, and pogroms in Germany and Ukraine. The issue closes with an exposition of Jewish life being built and developed in Palestine, with pictures of Zionist leaders, portraits of Jews in Palestine, pictures of streets, buildings, and fields, of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, of settlers at their work, and farming the soil.
Among the various chapters are several articles, surveys, and open letters by influential Jews throughout the world, including Albert Einstein, Sholem Asch, Chaim Weizmann, and Rabbi Israël Lévi, Chief Rabbi of France.
105, [1] pp, 30.5 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Small tears to the first leaf.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
The Life We Live, the Death We Die, a booklet of caricatures by John Olday. [London]: Freedom Press, [the second half of the 1940s]. English.
Twenty one caricatures blatantly depicting Europe during World War II: street fights, the bombing of cities, wounded veterans, beggars and more. Bound in an original cardboard cover, printed in red and black.
John Olday (1905-1977; born Arthur William Oldag) was a German-English caricaturist, journalist and playwright of the anarchist circle.
In his youth, he took part in a row of coup attempts and uprisings in Germany (including the Kiel Mutiny, the November Revolution and the Spartacist Uprising) and after the Nazi rise to power, escaped to England. In 1943, he defected from the British Army and turned to underground anarchistic activity – distributing anti-war posters, poems and caricatures (including the booklet before us). After the war he was sentenced to a year of imprisonment due to his defection.
[21] leaves, approx. 24X35 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains (mostly on the first leaves). A fold line in the center of the booklet. Tears and open tears along the edges and fold line in some of the leaves. The cover is worn and damaged. There is a large tear to the front cover, along almost the entire fold line.
Twenty one caricatures blatantly depicting Europe during World War II: street fights, the bombing of cities, wounded veterans, beggars and more. Bound in an original cardboard cover, printed in red and black.
John Olday (1905-1977; born Arthur William Oldag) was a German-English caricaturist, journalist and playwright of the anarchist circle.
In his youth, he took part in a row of coup attempts and uprisings in Germany (including the Kiel Mutiny, the November Revolution and the Spartacist Uprising) and after the Nazi rise to power, escaped to England. In 1943, he defected from the British Army and turned to underground anarchistic activity – distributing anti-war posters, poems and caricatures (including the booklet before us). After the war he was sentenced to a year of imprisonment due to his defection.
[21] leaves, approx. 24X35 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains (mostly on the first leaves). A fold line in the center of the booklet. Tears and open tears along the edges and fold line in some of the leaves. The cover is worn and damaged. There is a large tear to the front cover, along almost the entire fold line.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $150
Unsold
Two publications of the Conference for the Relief of German Jewry. [London], October 31, 1933. English. Two classified publications - "Private and confidential, not for publication". The Conference for the Relief of German Jewry ("The International Jewish Conference for the Relief of the German Jewry" / "The London Conference") convened in London in October 29 and continued until November 1, 1933. The conference was held by the Joint Foreign Committee of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the Anglo-Jewish Association and was attended by representatives of the largest Jewish organizations and communities (the JOINT, the JCA, the Jewish Agency, and more).
Before us:
1. "Resolutions", resolutions of the Conference for the Relief of German Jewry, publication no. 5.
"The Conference of Representatives of Jewish communities in all parts of the world records its belief that among the countries to which Jewish refugees from Germany can look for the opportunity of permanent settlement and absorption Palestine occupies a pre-eminent position […] The conference hopes that His Majesty's Government will do everything in its power to enable the largest possible number of Jews from Germany to settle in Palestine".
[1] leaf, 33 cm.
2. "Report of Reconstruction Committee", publication no. 6.
The report was written by Prof. D. Cohen and Dr. Max Gottschalk and describes the financial and social difficulties facing the Jews of Germany after the Nazis rise to power. The report suggests giving financial support to rehabilitating the institutions of the community, vocational training and giving loans to businesses.
Good condition. A few stains.
Before us:
1. "Resolutions", resolutions of the Conference for the Relief of German Jewry, publication no. 5.
"The Conference of Representatives of Jewish communities in all parts of the world records its belief that among the countries to which Jewish refugees from Germany can look for the opportunity of permanent settlement and absorption Palestine occupies a pre-eminent position […] The conference hopes that His Majesty's Government will do everything in its power to enable the largest possible number of Jews from Germany to settle in Palestine".
[1] leaf, 33 cm.
2. "Report of Reconstruction Committee", publication no. 6.
The report was written by Prof. D. Cohen and Dr. Max Gottschalk and describes the financial and social difficulties facing the Jews of Germany after the Nazis rise to power. The report suggests giving financial support to rehabilitating the institutions of the community, vocational training and giving loans to businesses.
Good condition. A few stains.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Emigration eventuelle Juive en Angola [Potential Emigration of Jews to Angola], by Jacques N. Politis. [France, ca. 1938]. French.
The plan for Jewish settlement in Angola was one of a series of plans to settle Jews in remote places in the world, which were suggested as "alternate homelands for the Jewish People" throughout the 1930s (among these homelands were the Virgin islands, Belgian Kongo, Costa Rika and British Guyana). The plan was supported by USA President Franklin D. Roosevelt, yet was accepted with indifference by the British government and was therefore abandoned.
This booklet documents a private attempt to promote the plan, done by a member of the French branch of the Rothschild family, the lawyer Jacques N. Politis. The booklet contains four short chapters summarizing the proposal (the agreements reached during negotiations with the government of Portugal, the steps that should be taken to enable the emigration, the advantages of settlement in Angola and conclusions) as well as a color map of Angola (cut from another book and mounted to one of the leaves), on which the areas suitable for settlement are marked by hand. Printed on bottom of the front cover is the name of the person to whom this copy of the booklet was given – Madam Halphen.
[2], 9 pp + [1] map, 27.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes.
Not in OCLC.
The plan for Jewish settlement in Angola was one of a series of plans to settle Jews in remote places in the world, which were suggested as "alternate homelands for the Jewish People" throughout the 1930s (among these homelands were the Virgin islands, Belgian Kongo, Costa Rika and British Guyana). The plan was supported by USA President Franklin D. Roosevelt, yet was accepted with indifference by the British government and was therefore abandoned.
This booklet documents a private attempt to promote the plan, done by a member of the French branch of the Rothschild family, the lawyer Jacques N. Politis. The booklet contains four short chapters summarizing the proposal (the agreements reached during negotiations with the government of Portugal, the steps that should be taken to enable the emigration, the advantages of settlement in Angola and conclusions) as well as a color map of Angola (cut from another book and mounted to one of the leaves), on which the areas suitable for settlement are marked by hand. Printed on bottom of the front cover is the name of the person to whom this copy of the booklet was given – Madam Halphen.
[2], 9 pp + [1] map, 27.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes.
Not in OCLC.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Unsold
Ivrit LeChol Ish - Hebräisch für Jedermann [Hebrew for everybody], by S. Kaléko (Shaul Barkali). Part II, for advanced students. Berlin: Jüdischer Kulturbund in Deutschland, 1939. Hebrew and German.
Textbook for learning Hebrew, published by the Judischer Kulturbund, on the eve of WWII. This textbook is intended for advanced students (a textbook for beginners was published in 1935), and includes an assortment of stories and poems by Hebrew writers (the difficult words are explained at the end of each story), verb inflection tables, chapters dedicated to the grammatical use of nouns, adjectives and numbers, etc.
103 pages. Approx. 23.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes. Small closed and open tears to edges of cover and spine.
Textbook for learning Hebrew, published by the Judischer Kulturbund, on the eve of WWII. This textbook is intended for advanced students (a textbook for beginners was published in 1935), and includes an assortment of stories and poems by Hebrew writers (the difficult words are explained at the end of each story), verb inflection tables, chapters dedicated to the grammatical use of nouns, adjectives and numbers, etc.
103 pages. Approx. 23.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes. Small closed and open tears to edges of cover and spine.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue
Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
January 14, 2020
Opening: $200
Sold for: $325
Including buyer's premium
Kennkarte, an identity document issued for a Jewish girl in Nazi Germany. Frankfurt am Mein, 1939. German.
The certificate, printed and filled-in by hand, was issued for a student of the Ruth Sopie Heinmann Gymnasium in June 1939. Appearing in the certificate are a passport photo, personal details, the handwritten signature of the chief of the Frankfurt police and several distinctive marks for Jews: on the first and second pages, the letter "J" (Jude) was printed and the middle name "Sarah" was added to the girl's name (in accordance with the law that was enacted in Nazi Germany in 1938).
The "Kennkarte" was an identity document issued in Nazi Germany since October 1938, which served as the basic identity document in the areas of the Third Reich. It was issued in two copies, with one copy remaining in the government offices and the second handed out by local police authorities. According to the Nazi racial theory, the certificates of non -Aryan residents were marked with different letters and colors: U for Ukrainians, R for Russians, K for Georgians, Z for Gypsies, and for Jews – the letter J. A special law required all Jews to apply for receiving the document until December 31, 1938 and to present it in any official appeal to governmental offices, whether they were asked to do so or not.
[2] leaves, 15 cm. Good condition. Stains, creases and minor blemishes.
The certificate, printed and filled-in by hand, was issued for a student of the Ruth Sopie Heinmann Gymnasium in June 1939. Appearing in the certificate are a passport photo, personal details, the handwritten signature of the chief of the Frankfurt police and several distinctive marks for Jews: on the first and second pages, the letter "J" (Jude) was printed and the middle name "Sarah" was added to the girl's name (in accordance with the law that was enacted in Nazi Germany in 1938).
The "Kennkarte" was an identity document issued in Nazi Germany since October 1938, which served as the basic identity document in the areas of the Third Reich. It was issued in two copies, with one copy remaining in the government offices and the second handed out by local police authorities. According to the Nazi racial theory, the certificates of non -Aryan residents were marked with different letters and colors: U for Ukrainians, R for Russians, K for Georgians, Z for Gypsies, and for Jews – the letter J. A special law required all Jews to apply for receiving the document until December 31, 1938 and to present it in any official appeal to governmental offices, whether they were asked to do so or not.
[2] leaves, 15 cm. Good condition. Stains, creases and minor blemishes.
Category
Antisemitism, Holocaust and She'erit HaPletah
Catalogue