Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
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Displaying 13 - 24 of 490
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $138
Including buyer's premium
Brass letter opener, a gift of the Jewish National Fund in the USA. USA, [ca. 1930s].
One side inscribed "Compliments of the Jewish National Fund of America"; the other side inscribed "When drawing up wills, please remember the Jewish National Fund. The fund redeems the soil of Palestine as the inalienable property of the Jewish People".
Approx. 23 cm. Good condition. Stains. A large round hole in the upper edge, where, presumably, a magnifying glass (now missing) was originally set.
Provenance: The Morton Leventhal Collection, New York.
One side inscribed "Compliments of the Jewish National Fund of America"; the other side inscribed "When drawing up wills, please remember the Jewish National Fund. The fund redeems the soil of Palestine as the inalienable property of the Jewish People".
Approx. 23 cm. Good condition. Stains. A large round hole in the upper edge, where, presumably, a magnifying glass (now missing) was originally set.
Provenance: The Morton Leventhal Collection, New York.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $200
Sold for: $300
Including buyer's premium
Two of the renowned "Blue Boxes" used for raising money on behalf of the Jewish National Fund. Palestine and Israel, 1940s and 1950s.
1. Collection box depicting a map of Palestine, without the southern Negev. Manufacturer's name not indicated. Palestine, [1940s?].
17X12.5X7.5 cm. Good condition. Blemishes. Bends. Stains.
2. Collection box depicting a map of Palestine, including the southern Negev. Product of A. Salzmann Ltd., Jerusalem, [late 1940s or early 1950s].
12X10X5 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Minor rusting.
1. Collection box depicting a map of Palestine, without the southern Negev. Manufacturer's name not indicated. Palestine, [1940s?].
17X12.5X7.5 cm. Good condition. Blemishes. Bends. Stains.
2. Collection box depicting a map of Palestine, including the southern Negev. Product of A. Salzmann Ltd., Jerusalem, [late 1940s or early 1950s].
12X10X5 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Minor rusting.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Unsold
Approx. 70 badges, pins, stickers and paper labels most of which were issued for the Independence Days of the State of Israel and some for other seminal events in its history, many of them by the Jewish National Fund. 1949-2016.
The collection spans sixty-eight Independence Days and contains badges that were issued for forty-seven of them, including several copies of pins that were issued for the tenth and twentieth anniversary of the State. In addition, the collection contains a badge for Tu Bishvat 1949, the day of the opening of the Constituent Assembly.
Approx. 70 items. Size and condition vary. Good overall condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
The collection spans sixty-eight Independence Days and contains badges that were issued for forty-seven of them, including several copies of pins that were issued for the tenth and twentieth anniversary of the State. In addition, the collection contains a badge for Tu Bishvat 1949, the day of the opening of the Constituent Assembly.
Approx. 70 items. Size and condition vary. Good overall condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $200
Sold for: $813
Including buyer's premium
Letter handwritten and signed by Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Kalischer. Addressed to his daughter Malka and her husband Falk, mentioning an attempt to purchase land near the city of Jaffa. Thorn (Torun, Poland), 5633 [1873]. Yiddish and Hebrew.
The first page of the letter is written in Yiddish. It is addressed to Kalischer's daughter and son-in-law, and is personal in nature; the rabbi speaks of his plans for the period between Passover and Shavu'ot and the invitation he received to visit Jerusalem, and sends regards to his grandchildren. The second page is a separate note, in Hebrew, and is addressed to Falk alone: "And to you, my son… I am telling you that I received a telegram from Jerusalem the Holy City… and they informed me that they had purchased a parcel of good land very close to Jaffa… filled with springs and good for planting grain and vegetables, and they asked me whether they could obtain from me an order of payment in the sum of 2,000 Reichsthaler which must be immediately paid…"
Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Kalischer (1795-1874), scholar and author, was an early proto-Zionist. In 1862, Kalischer published his important work "Drishat Zion" (i.e., "Seeking Zion") in which he called for the renewal of Jewish immigration and settlement in the Land of Israel. The name of the book was chosen as a rhetorical response to the biblical passage "This is Zion, whom no man seeketh after" (Jeremiah 30:17). Kalischer was one of the foremost supporters of the creation of the Jewish agricultural school Mikveh Yisrael, and after its establishment near Jaffa in 1870, he invested considerable effort into purchasing land that could potentially be used for Jewish agricultural settlement.
[1] f. folded in half (2 written pages), 22.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines, creases, and few stains. Minor tears and minute holes along fold lines and to edges.
The first page of the letter is written in Yiddish. It is addressed to Kalischer's daughter and son-in-law, and is personal in nature; the rabbi speaks of his plans for the period between Passover and Shavu'ot and the invitation he received to visit Jerusalem, and sends regards to his grandchildren. The second page is a separate note, in Hebrew, and is addressed to Falk alone: "And to you, my son… I am telling you that I received a telegram from Jerusalem the Holy City… and they informed me that they had purchased a parcel of good land very close to Jaffa… filled with springs and good for planting grain and vegetables, and they asked me whether they could obtain from me an order of payment in the sum of 2,000 Reichsthaler which must be immediately paid…"
Rabbi Zvi Hirsch Kalischer (1795-1874), scholar and author, was an early proto-Zionist. In 1862, Kalischer published his important work "Drishat Zion" (i.e., "Seeking Zion") in which he called for the renewal of Jewish immigration and settlement in the Land of Israel. The name of the book was chosen as a rhetorical response to the biblical passage "This is Zion, whom no man seeketh after" (Jeremiah 30:17). Kalischer was one of the foremost supporters of the creation of the Jewish agricultural school Mikveh Yisrael, and after its establishment near Jaffa in 1870, he invested considerable effort into purchasing land that could potentially be used for Jewish agricultural settlement.
[1] f. folded in half (2 written pages), 22.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines, creases, and few stains. Minor tears and minute holes along fold lines and to edges.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $200
Sold for: $400
Including buyer's premium
Invoice submitted by Aaron Aaronsohn, bearing his signature, to the Anglo-Palestine Company for reimbursement of travel expenses incurred in Palestine in the course of his research work in agronomy. Zikhron Ya'akov, February 28, 1905. French.
The invoice is handwritten, on official stationery, and it lists a number of journeys taken by Aaronsohn in Palestine: a trip to study the wetlands and sand dunes between Jaffa and Haifa, another to study the thermal springs of Al-Hamma (today Hamat Gader), and other journeys. Stamped "Paid" and signed, with a comment, written in a different hand, probably by the Anglo-Palestine Company representative.
Aaron Aaronsohn (1876-1919) was an agronomist and botanist, and the commander of the Jewish underground "Nili." In the early twentieth century he traveled the length and breadth of the country, conducting a broad range of important agronomic studies, some of these on behalf of the Zionist institutions. In the course of a journey to Rosh Pinna in 1906, he discovered wild emmer, presumed to be the wild ancestor, domesticated some 10,000 years ago, of modern wheat. This discovery earned him international acclaim as an agronomist.
[1] f., 27 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Minor stains. Several tears and pinholes, mostly to margin and edges (not affecting text).
The invoice is handwritten, on official stationery, and it lists a number of journeys taken by Aaronsohn in Palestine: a trip to study the wetlands and sand dunes between Jaffa and Haifa, another to study the thermal springs of Al-Hamma (today Hamat Gader), and other journeys. Stamped "Paid" and signed, with a comment, written in a different hand, probably by the Anglo-Palestine Company representative.
Aaron Aaronsohn (1876-1919) was an agronomist and botanist, and the commander of the Jewish underground "Nili." In the early twentieth century he traveled the length and breadth of the country, conducting a broad range of important agronomic studies, some of these on behalf of the Zionist institutions. In the course of a journey to Rosh Pinna in 1906, he discovered wild emmer, presumed to be the wild ancestor, domesticated some 10,000 years ago, of modern wheat. This discovery earned him international acclaim as an agronomist.
[1] f., 27 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Minor stains. Several tears and pinholes, mostly to margin and edges (not affecting text).
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $138
Including buyer's premium
"Statutes of the 'Zichron Moshe' Society", a booklet issued by the "Mazkeret Hasar Moshe Montefiore" fund in Jerusalem. [Jerusalem, early 20th century].
A printed booklet (four pages) listing the statutes of the "Zichron Moshe" society, which dealt with the planning of the Zichron Moshe neighborhood in Jerusalem. The statutes pertain to the manner of joining the society, purchasing land, building houses and paying the various payments. Ten statutes (12-21) deal with the modern appearance of the neighborhood, paving roads, building sidewalks and digging drainage ditches ("The Society must build its houses exactly according to the layout done by the expert engineer"; "Built fences will be set up around the estate of each and every house"; "The roads should be paved, with trees planted on both sides, and tunnels will be made for sewer", and more).
The Zichron Moshe neighborhood of Jerusalem was established in 1904 by David Yellin, Yechiel Michel Pines, Yeshayahu Press and others, representatives of the "Mazkeret Moshe Montefiore" fund (a fund for commemorating the activity of Moses Montefiore which was established in 1874 in London, with the objective of establishing residential neighborhoods outside the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, bearing Montefiore's name). Beside Zichron Moshe, four additional neighborhoods were established in Jerusalem with the aid of the Fund – Mazkeret Moshe, Ohel Moshe, Yemin Moshe and Kiryat Moshe.
[1] f. folded in half (4 pp.), 21 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and creases. Stains. Several minute holes and small tears. Pen notation to margin of first page.
Not in OCLC.
A printed booklet (four pages) listing the statutes of the "Zichron Moshe" society, which dealt with the planning of the Zichron Moshe neighborhood in Jerusalem. The statutes pertain to the manner of joining the society, purchasing land, building houses and paying the various payments. Ten statutes (12-21) deal with the modern appearance of the neighborhood, paving roads, building sidewalks and digging drainage ditches ("The Society must build its houses exactly according to the layout done by the expert engineer"; "Built fences will be set up around the estate of each and every house"; "The roads should be paved, with trees planted on both sides, and tunnels will be made for sewer", and more).
The Zichron Moshe neighborhood of Jerusalem was established in 1904 by David Yellin, Yechiel Michel Pines, Yeshayahu Press and others, representatives of the "Mazkeret Moshe Montefiore" fund (a fund for commemorating the activity of Moses Montefiore which was established in 1874 in London, with the objective of establishing residential neighborhoods outside the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem, bearing Montefiore's name). Beside Zichron Moshe, four additional neighborhoods were established in Jerusalem with the aid of the Fund – Mazkeret Moshe, Ohel Moshe, Yemin Moshe and Kiryat Moshe.
[1] f. folded in half (4 pp.), 21 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and creases. Stains. Several minute holes and small tears. Pen notation to margin of first page.
Not in OCLC.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
1. Der Kolonist, Landvirthshaftlikher Organ. Published by Menashe Maierovitch ["Last of the Bilu Pioneers"] and Abraham Moses Luncz. Jerusalem: Luncz Press,5654 [1894]. Third issue.
12 pp., 17.5 cm. Fair condition. Numerous stains. Punch holes and tears, professionally restored. New paper cover.
2. Statuts de la Societé d'Agriculture des Colonies de Judée. Palestine [Statutes of the Agricultural Society of the Judean Colonies, Palestine]. Jerusalem: Hashkafa Press, "Year 1834 Since the Destruction [of the Second Temple]" [1904].
4 pp., 14 cm. Good condition. New paper cover.
Not in OCLC. Bibliographically unlisted.
3. Statutes of the Union of Judean Colonies for the Year 5674. Jaffa: A. Ittin Press, 5674 [1914].
8 pp., 13.5 cm. Good condition. Trimmed margins. Inked stamp. Bound in a new paper binding, with the original cover.
Not in OCLC.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
12 pp., 17.5 cm. Fair condition. Numerous stains. Punch holes and tears, professionally restored. New paper cover.
2. Statuts de la Societé d'Agriculture des Colonies de Judée. Palestine [Statutes of the Agricultural Society of the Judean Colonies, Palestine]. Jerusalem: Hashkafa Press, "Year 1834 Since the Destruction [of the Second Temple]" [1904].
4 pp., 14 cm. Good condition. New paper cover.
Not in OCLC. Bibliographically unlisted.
3. Statutes of the Union of Judean Colonies for the Year 5674. Jaffa: A. Ittin Press, 5674 [1914].
8 pp., 13.5 cm. Good condition. Trimmed margins. Inked stamp. Bound in a new paper binding, with the original cover.
Not in OCLC.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
Handwritten "contract," signed by Meir Dizengoff, head of the "Tel Aviv [City] Council" and first mayor of the Municipality of Tel Aviv. On official stationery, with the header "Tel Aviv." Tel Aviv, January 23, 1917.
Contract between Zvi Hirsch son of David Izraelitan and the Tel Aviv City Council, according to which Izraelitan (sometimes spelled "Israelitan") "will be renting his place of residence on the second floor" (no address given) for a period of nine months, "until ‘Muhram' of [Hebrew Year] 5678" ("Muhram," the first month of the Muslim calendar, served under Ottoman rule as the designated time of year for moving from one place of residence to the next, and as the appropriate expiration time for rental contracts).
[1] f., 27.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Few stains, minor creases and tears. Punch holes, staple holes, and one additional small hole.
Contract between Zvi Hirsch son of David Izraelitan and the Tel Aviv City Council, according to which Izraelitan (sometimes spelled "Israelitan") "will be renting his place of residence on the second floor" (no address given) for a period of nine months, "until ‘Muhram' of [Hebrew Year] 5678" ("Muhram," the first month of the Muslim calendar, served under Ottoman rule as the designated time of year for moving from one place of residence to the next, and as the appropriate expiration time for rental contracts).
[1] f., 27.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Few stains, minor creases and tears. Punch holes, staple holes, and one additional small hole.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $150
Sold for: $813
Including buyer's premium
Letter handwritten and signed by Meir Dizengoff, head of the "Tel Aviv [City] Council" and head of the "Emigration Council," addressed to Haim Margalit Kalvarisky. Petah Tikvah, April 14, 1917.
This letter appears to have been hastily and urgently written. It was delivered eight days after the designated expulsion date for the residents of Tel Aviv, namely Passover Eve, April 6, 1917 – at a time when Dizengoff was staying in Petah Tikvah – and while, as appointed head of the "Emigration Council" of the residents of Tel Aviv, he was searching for solutions for the thousands of exiles expelled from Tel Aviv. Among other things, he ensured that volunteers from the Northern and Galilean colonies would arrive with their carts to pick up the exiled Tel Avivians.
This letter attests to Dizengoff's dedication to the tasks laid out by the Emigration Council and his intention "to stay till the last moment" in the Coastal Region: "Busy and very troubled [as I am] with the issues of emigration, I hereby come to you with a request: I must stay till the last moment, [and] I do not know when [that moment] will arrive. Please prepare for me a room or two with a kitchen in R.P. [Rosh Pinah] or in Safed so that I may settle there with my wife when the time comes. I need not elaborate and add how immensely grateful we shall be to you if you do your best to take us into your settlements and prepare for us a place of refuge."
The letter is addressed to the agronomist Haim Margalit Kalvarisky, who was the representative of the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA), responsible for Jewish settlement in the Galilee.
Half sheet, 21X13.5 cm. Good condition. Punch holes. Fold lines.
This letter appears to have been hastily and urgently written. It was delivered eight days after the designated expulsion date for the residents of Tel Aviv, namely Passover Eve, April 6, 1917 – at a time when Dizengoff was staying in Petah Tikvah – and while, as appointed head of the "Emigration Council" of the residents of Tel Aviv, he was searching for solutions for the thousands of exiles expelled from Tel Aviv. Among other things, he ensured that volunteers from the Northern and Galilean colonies would arrive with their carts to pick up the exiled Tel Avivians.
This letter attests to Dizengoff's dedication to the tasks laid out by the Emigration Council and his intention "to stay till the last moment" in the Coastal Region: "Busy and very troubled [as I am] with the issues of emigration, I hereby come to you with a request: I must stay till the last moment, [and] I do not know when [that moment] will arrive. Please prepare for me a room or two with a kitchen in R.P. [Rosh Pinah] or in Safed so that I may settle there with my wife when the time comes. I need not elaborate and add how immensely grateful we shall be to you if you do your best to take us into your settlements and prepare for us a place of refuge."
The letter is addressed to the agronomist Haim Margalit Kalvarisky, who was the representative of the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA), responsible for Jewish settlement in the Galilee.
Half sheet, 21X13.5 cm. Good condition. Punch holes. Fold lines.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
Four items relating to Baruch Agadati and the Purim carnival ball of Tel Aviv, 1932:
1. Real Photo postcard with photograph of Agadati, and his handwritten signature: "B. Agadati, Tel Aviv, December 12, 1929."
2. Real Photo postcard with photograph of Agadati.
3-4. Two tickets to "Nishfei Agadati" [Agadati Carnival Balls], hosted by Ha-Ohel, for the Purim holiday of 1932. One ticket to the first carnival ball (without the stub), and the other to the second carnival ball on the following day (includes stub).
Size varies. Overall good condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
1. Real Photo postcard with photograph of Agadati, and his handwritten signature: "B. Agadati, Tel Aviv, December 12, 1929."
2. Real Photo postcard with photograph of Agadati.
3-4. Two tickets to "Nishfei Agadati" [Agadati Carnival Balls], hosted by Ha-Ohel, for the Purim holiday of 1932. One ticket to the first carnival ball (without the stub), and the other to the second carnival ball on the following day (includes stub).
Size varies. Overall good condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $238
Including buyer's premium
Kol Yerushalayim ["All Jerusalem"], Guidebook for 1921[-1923], Practical Handbook, Information Book, Address Book, with Supplementary Map, compiled and written by A. Oskotsky [Avraham Hertz ben Zalman Oskotsky]. Jerusalem: A. Oskotsky, 1921. First Edition. Hebrew.
Comprehensive guidebook, early and possibly the first of its kind, including a great deal of practical information regarding Jewish and non-Jewish institutions, professionals and tradesmen, residential addresses, and more, in Jerusalem and other cities throughout the country. A folding map of "Jerusalem and its Immediate Vicinity" "after the Schick-Benzinger Map" (1919-20) is appended at the end of the book.
120 pp., [1] map. 27.5 cm. Map 54.4X45.5 cm in size. Good condition. Minor blemishes to binding.
Comprehensive guidebook, early and possibly the first of its kind, including a great deal of practical information regarding Jewish and non-Jewish institutions, professionals and tradesmen, residential addresses, and more, in Jerusalem and other cities throughout the country. A folding map of "Jerusalem and its Immediate Vicinity" "after the Schick-Benzinger Map" (1919-20) is appended at the end of the book.
120 pp., [1] map. 27.5 cm. Map 54.4X45.5 cm in size. Good condition. Minor blemishes to binding.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $100
Sold for: $275
Including buyer's premium
Guide to Palestine by Zev Vilnay, with the assistance of Dr. Alfred Bonne. Jerusalem: Steimatzky, 1935.
The guide includes dozens of maps, diagrams, and photographs. Inscribed to "Mr. Z. Jabotinsky" – Ze'ev Jabotinsky – by Yechezkel Steimatzky, founder of the eponymous publishing house, on the front flyleaf. The inscription is dated February 2, 1935, with the place given as "Jerusalem." Yechezkel Steimatzky, founder of the Steimatzky bookstore chain and publishing house, first met Ze'ev Jabotinsky when he was working for a German publisher named Ullstein. In those years, Jabotinsky was deeply involved in the task of compiling the world's first Hebrew-language atlas (the "Jabotinsky Atlas," published in London, 1925). For this purpose, he availed himself of Steimatzky's wide-ranging knowledge in the fields of printing and publishing. Ten years later, when Steimatzky produced a Hebrew guide to Palestine, published by the press he himself had established, he presented Jabotinsky with the current copy.
Eleven plates are missing at the end of the book: Five maps, three legends, a train schedule, and two bus schedules.
111, 346, [4] pp., approx. 16.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes. Binding and flyleaves partly detached. Abrasions and wear to binding.
The guide includes dozens of maps, diagrams, and photographs. Inscribed to "Mr. Z. Jabotinsky" – Ze'ev Jabotinsky – by Yechezkel Steimatzky, founder of the eponymous publishing house, on the front flyleaf. The inscription is dated February 2, 1935, with the place given as "Jerusalem." Yechezkel Steimatzky, founder of the Steimatzky bookstore chain and publishing house, first met Ze'ev Jabotinsky when he was working for a German publisher named Ullstein. In those years, Jabotinsky was deeply involved in the task of compiling the world's first Hebrew-language atlas (the "Jabotinsky Atlas," published in London, 1925). For this purpose, he availed himself of Steimatzky's wide-ranging knowledge in the fields of printing and publishing. Ten years later, when Steimatzky produced a Hebrew guide to Palestine, published by the press he himself had established, he presented Jabotinsky with the current copy.
Eleven plates are missing at the end of the book: Five maps, three legends, a train schedule, and two bus schedules.
111, 346, [4] pp., approx. 16.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes. Binding and flyleaves partly detached. Abrasions and wear to binding.
Category
Settlement in Palestine, Mandatory Palestine and the State of Israel
Catalogue