Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
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Displaying 37 - 48 of 490
Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture
December 22, 2020
Opening: $150
Unsold
Four bills of quantities (booklets printed on specially designated forms specifying work procedures, materials, and costs), prepared by the British Mandatory authorities as part of the process of expanding the pumping stations on the water line to Jerusalem. February-March 1946. English.
The water line bringing water from Rosh Ha'Ayin to Jerusalem was the product of one of the most ambitious engineering projects of the British Mandate period. In the course of the project, the springs of Rosh Ha'Ayin were diverted toward collection pools, and from there the water was forced up the mountainside to Jerusalem using advanced pumping technology. The new water line was perhaps the most important factor in solving Jerusalem's age-old water shortage. It functioned until Israel's War of Independence, whereupon, in the course of the fighting, it was cut off by the Jordanian Arab Legion.
The present four bills of quantities were drafted as part of the preparations for the expansion of the four pumping stations along the route of the water line: Rosh Ha'Ayin (Ras al-Ein), Latrun, Sha'ar HaGai (Bab al-Wad), and Saris (the former Arab village, replaced today by the Israeli village of Sho'eva, whose name was inspired by the pumping station).
The bills of quantities were either typewritten or mimeographed, and the cost figures were written in by hand. In the bill of quantities for the Latrun station, details were also given for an additional, adjacent project, namely the construction of housing units for soldiers.
Two of the bills of quantities are bound with the official booklet covers of the British Mandate Governmemt, with both printed and handwritten titles.
Pagination varies (total roughly 120 pp.), approx. 33 cm. Overall good condition. Stains. Tears to edges of some leaves. Minor blemishes. Bill of quantities for the Latrun station in good-fair condition, with open tears to edges of some leaves (not affecting text).
The water line bringing water from Rosh Ha'Ayin to Jerusalem was the product of one of the most ambitious engineering projects of the British Mandate period. In the course of the project, the springs of Rosh Ha'Ayin were diverted toward collection pools, and from there the water was forced up the mountainside to Jerusalem using advanced pumping technology. The new water line was perhaps the most important factor in solving Jerusalem's age-old water shortage. It functioned until Israel's War of Independence, whereupon, in the course of the fighting, it was cut off by the Jordanian Arab Legion.
The present four bills of quantities were drafted as part of the preparations for the expansion of the four pumping stations along the route of the water line: Rosh Ha'Ayin (Ras al-Ein), Latrun, Sha'ar HaGai (Bab al-Wad), and Saris (the former Arab village, replaced today by the Israeli village of Sho'eva, whose name was inspired by the pumping station).
The bills of quantities were either typewritten or mimeographed, and the cost figures were written in by hand. In the bill of quantities for the Latrun station, details were also given for an additional, adjacent project, namely the construction of housing units for soldiers.
Two of the bills of quantities are bound with the official booklet covers of the British Mandate Governmemt, with both printed and handwritten titles.
Pagination varies (total roughly 120 pp.), approx. 33 cm. Overall good condition. Stains. Tears to edges of some leaves. Minor blemishes. Bill of quantities for the Latrun station in good-fair condition, with open tears to edges of some leaves (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
Unsold
Bill of Quantities for Materials to be Used and Works to be Performed in the Extensions and Alterations to Terminal Building at Lydda Airport. Jerusalem: Government of Palestine, Public Works Department, September 1947.
A volume with 22 bills of quantities listing and summarizing the renovation and extension works of the Lydda Airport, the quantity of materials required and their cost. Photocopy reproduction of typescript. Some handwritten additions.
In 1935, the mandatory Government started building an international airport in Palestine to be used as a stopover for flights between Britain and its colonies in Asia and even Australia. By 1947, the existing building was insufficient for the large number of passengers going through it and a plan was made to extend it. The renovation works were supposed to take place over eight months – from October 1947 to May 1948; however, there is reason to believe that due to the events of the time and the outbreak of the 1948 War, the renovation never happened.
83, [1] ff., 32.5 cm. Good condition. Some stains, creases and tears. Blemishes, stains and tears to paper cover. Traces of wax seal to cover.
A volume with 22 bills of quantities listing and summarizing the renovation and extension works of the Lydda Airport, the quantity of materials required and their cost. Photocopy reproduction of typescript. Some handwritten additions.
In 1935, the mandatory Government started building an international airport in Palestine to be used as a stopover for flights between Britain and its colonies in Asia and even Australia. By 1947, the existing building was insufficient for the large number of passengers going through it and a plan was made to extend it. The renovation works were supposed to take place over eight months – from October 1947 to May 1948; however, there is reason to believe that due to the events of the time and the outbreak of the 1948 War, the renovation never happened.
83, [1] ff., 32.5 cm. Good condition. Some stains, creases and tears. Blemishes, stains and tears to paper cover. Traces of wax seal to cover.
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
Child and Youth Welfare, issues 1-10 and an annual report. Jerusalem: The Child and Youth Welfare Organization, Jewish National Council, 1942-1943.
The Child and Youth Welfare Organization was established by the initiative of Henrietta Szold in 1941, to facilitate for the Jewish National Council "the duties involved in caring for the Jewish child and youth in Palestine" (from the statute of the organization). Alongside its extensive activity – assisting in the establishment of educational institutions, gathering statistical information about the children of the Yishuv, promoting legislation pertaining to children, and more, the organization published a journal with a variety of articles, statistical data and educational curricula.
The present volume contains the first ten issues of the journal (mimeographed): issues 1-10 (in nine booklets, one of them double) and a report about the activity of the organization in its first year. The articles include: "Methods of Youth Care in Palestine", "Children in Court", "Delinquency and Illiteracy", "Birth-rate in Palestine", "Girls at Work", "Vocational Training in Palestine" and more.
Bound with the booklet "The Child and Youth Welfare Organization by the Jewish National Council, the Goal, Statute and Trusteeship Document" (Jerusalem, 1942).
Number of pages varies, 20 cm. Good condition. Bound with the original covers (additional English titles). Blemishes and minor stains. Notations to several covers. Hard binding with gilt lettering to spine, blemished and slightly worn.
The Child and Youth Welfare Organization was established by the initiative of Henrietta Szold in 1941, to facilitate for the Jewish National Council "the duties involved in caring for the Jewish child and youth in Palestine" (from the statute of the organization). Alongside its extensive activity – assisting in the establishment of educational institutions, gathering statistical information about the children of the Yishuv, promoting legislation pertaining to children, and more, the organization published a journal with a variety of articles, statistical data and educational curricula.
The present volume contains the first ten issues of the journal (mimeographed): issues 1-10 (in nine booklets, one of them double) and a report about the activity of the organization in its first year. The articles include: "Methods of Youth Care in Palestine", "Children in Court", "Delinquency and Illiteracy", "Birth-rate in Palestine", "Girls at Work", "Vocational Training in Palestine" and more.
Bound with the booklet "The Child and Youth Welfare Organization by the Jewish National Council, the Goal, Statute and Trusteeship Document" (Jerusalem, 1942).
Number of pages varies, 20 cm. Good condition. Bound with the original covers (additional English titles). Blemishes and minor stains. Notations to several covers. Hard binding with gilt lettering to spine, blemished and slightly worn.
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: $163
Including buyer's premium
Dapim LaYeled [Children's Pages], a magazine for children published by the Youth Aliyah Office in the Diaspora, edited by Dr. Israel Margalith. A publication of the Youth and Child Aliyah Department of the Jewish Agency, Paris, from Kislev 5710 till Tishrei 5713 [1949-1952]. Issue Nos. 14-15, 18-19, 20, 22-23, 27-29, 33-35, 38-39, 43-44. Hebrew and some French.
17 issues of a magazine for Jewish children in the Diaspora, published monthly. The issues contain articles on the subject of the State of Israel, the history of the Jewish people, and current information regarding Israel. With photographs; illustrations by Avigdor Arikha (in three issues), Bella Brisel, Sioma Baram, and "Y. Gipstein" (probably Yaacov Agam).
Judging by the names of the individuals who solved the crossword puzzles and riddles, the circulation of the monthly was quite broad; it apparently had readers in Morocco, Tunisia, Belgium, Norway, Strasbourg, and other places.
Issue No. 19 appears in two copies.
Number of pages varies. Approx. 32 cm. Condition varies. Overall good condition. Some issues with creases, fold lines, or stains.
17 issues of a magazine for Jewish children in the Diaspora, published monthly. The issues contain articles on the subject of the State of Israel, the history of the Jewish people, and current information regarding Israel. With photographs; illustrations by Avigdor Arikha (in three issues), Bella Brisel, Sioma Baram, and "Y. Gipstein" (probably Yaacov Agam).
Judging by the names of the individuals who solved the crossword puzzles and riddles, the circulation of the monthly was quite broad; it apparently had readers in Morocco, Tunisia, Belgium, Norway, Strasbourg, and other places.
Issue No. 19 appears in two copies.
Number of pages varies. Approx. 32 cm. Condition varies. Overall good condition. Some issues with creases, fold lines, or stains.
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
Unsold
A postcard and two letters sent to and by illegal immigrants deported to the island of Mauritius (the so-called "Mauritius Exiles"). 1945. German.
1. Postcard sent from Mauritius to Vienna in 1945. Contains a brief, hand-written notice from a detainee by the name of Arnold Neumann: "Soon traveling from here to the Land of Israel." The front of the postcard bears the inked stamp of the British censor, the inked stamp of the Military Post, two inked stamps with the words "Return to Sender," and a sticker from the Aliyah Office of the Jewish Agency with the word "urgent." (Apparently, the postcard was sent to Vienna and marked "Return to Sender," but seeing as the sender was already en route to Palestine, it was forwarded to the Jewish Agency in Palestine, which in turn handed it back to Neumann.)
2-3. Two letters sent in 1945 to a detainee in Mauritius named Alice Oesterreicher from her husband, Jan, a soldier in the armed forces of the United States. (presumably a soldier in the unit of Czechoslovak expatriates known as the 1st Czechoslovak Independent Armoured Brigade Group, originally established by the British army in the course of the war; eventually, some 140 members of the unit were attached to the US 3rd Army under the command of General George S. Patton.) The letters are in their original envelopes which bear the postage stamps and postmarks of the US army along with the inked stamps of the British censor.
The "Mauritius Exiles" were originally passengers on board the SS Atlantic, a ship carrying illegal Jewish immigrants to Palestine. The ship was intercepted by British forces, and its passengers were deported to the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. The passengers had embarked from Bratislava in September 1940 and sailed by riverboat to the Romanian city of Tulcea, where they boarded the SS Atlantic. The ship made stopovers in Istanbul and Crete. At one point, the crew refused to take the vessel any further, whereupon the passengers took over the ship by force. Once the supply of coal had been exhausted, the passengers started using wooden furniture to burn as firewood, but as soon as this source of fuel was also exhausted, the vessel was brought to a standstill and discovered by the British fleet. The illegal immigrants were deported to Mauritius, where they remained for five years, and only managed to reach Palestine after WWII had ended, in August 1945.
Size varies. Good condition.
1. Postcard sent from Mauritius to Vienna in 1945. Contains a brief, hand-written notice from a detainee by the name of Arnold Neumann: "Soon traveling from here to the Land of Israel." The front of the postcard bears the inked stamp of the British censor, the inked stamp of the Military Post, two inked stamps with the words "Return to Sender," and a sticker from the Aliyah Office of the Jewish Agency with the word "urgent." (Apparently, the postcard was sent to Vienna and marked "Return to Sender," but seeing as the sender was already en route to Palestine, it was forwarded to the Jewish Agency in Palestine, which in turn handed it back to Neumann.)
2-3. Two letters sent in 1945 to a detainee in Mauritius named Alice Oesterreicher from her husband, Jan, a soldier in the armed forces of the United States. (presumably a soldier in the unit of Czechoslovak expatriates known as the 1st Czechoslovak Independent Armoured Brigade Group, originally established by the British army in the course of the war; eventually, some 140 members of the unit were attached to the US 3rd Army under the command of General George S. Patton.) The letters are in their original envelopes which bear the postage stamps and postmarks of the US army along with the inked stamps of the British censor.
The "Mauritius Exiles" were originally passengers on board the SS Atlantic, a ship carrying illegal Jewish immigrants to Palestine. The ship was intercepted by British forces, and its passengers were deported to the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. The passengers had embarked from Bratislava in September 1940 and sailed by riverboat to the Romanian city of Tulcea, where they boarded the SS Atlantic. The ship made stopovers in Istanbul and Crete. At one point, the crew refused to take the vessel any further, whereupon the passengers took over the ship by force. Once the supply of coal had been exhausted, the passengers started using wooden furniture to burn as firewood, but as soon as this source of fuel was also exhausted, the vessel was brought to a standstill and discovered by the British fleet. The illegal immigrants were deported to Mauritius, where they remained for five years, and only managed to reach Palestine after WWII had ended, in August 1945.
Size varies. Good condition.
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
Six photographs of the Betar maritime academy ship, TS Sarah A. Tunis, 1937 (two of the photographs may have been taken in other Mediterranean Sea ports).
1-4. Four photographs of the ship's steward, Nathan Cartagi, in the company of the ship's Captain Yirmiyahu Halperin, the ship's physician Yosef Haberstreit, during the visit of the Tunisian general Mustafa Safar Sheikh Al-Madinah, and with his dog – Jim.
5-6. Two photographs of sailors on the deck of the ship – one sailor repairing a sail and the other looking out to sea from the mast. Both stamped on verso with the official stamp of the TS Sarah A, in French.
TS Sarah A was the training ship of Betar maritime academy in Civitavecchia (Italy). In 1937, it sailed on a showcase cruise along the Mediterranean and Palestine Coast, receiving an enthusiastic reception at each and every port. Due to the concerns of the Italian authorities about an Arab revolt, the ship sailed under the French flag (therefore the official stamps are in French, indicating Marseille as the home port).
Three photographs are captioned on verso by hand (Russian). One photograph is hand-signed by Nathan Cartagi.
Four 8X13 cm photographs; two 9.5X15 cm photographs. Good overall condition. Stains and minor blemishes, mainly on verso. Additional stamps on verso.
See: The Revival of Hebrew Seamanship (Hebrew) by Yirmiyahu Halperin, ("Hadar", 1961).
1-4. Four photographs of the ship's steward, Nathan Cartagi, in the company of the ship's Captain Yirmiyahu Halperin, the ship's physician Yosef Haberstreit, during the visit of the Tunisian general Mustafa Safar Sheikh Al-Madinah, and with his dog – Jim.
5-6. Two photographs of sailors on the deck of the ship – one sailor repairing a sail and the other looking out to sea from the mast. Both stamped on verso with the official stamp of the TS Sarah A, in French.
TS Sarah A was the training ship of Betar maritime academy in Civitavecchia (Italy). In 1937, it sailed on a showcase cruise along the Mediterranean and Palestine Coast, receiving an enthusiastic reception at each and every port. Due to the concerns of the Italian authorities about an Arab revolt, the ship sailed under the French flag (therefore the official stamps are in French, indicating Marseille as the home port).
Three photographs are captioned on verso by hand (Russian). One photograph is hand-signed by Nathan Cartagi.
Four 8X13 cm photographs; two 9.5X15 cm photographs. Good overall condition. Stains and minor blemishes, mainly on verso. Additional stamps on verso.
See: The Revival of Hebrew Seamanship (Hebrew) by Yirmiyahu Halperin, ("Hadar", 1961).
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
1. "Shana Tova" greeting card sent from the Latrun detention camp, "Emek Ayalon", [September 1946]. The sender is Amichai Orlinsky, who served in the Palmach and in January 1948 was killed during the battle for the Qastal. The card is printed on both sides and folded in half. 10 cm. Good condition.
2. A small card, with a black-and-white illustration of a father hugging his daughter and the Hebrew inscription "Kenya, New Year's eve, 1948" (slightly blurred). Notation on verso: "To Ze'eva, love and longing, from father" (Hebrew). 6X8.5 cm. Good condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
2. A small card, with a black-and-white illustration of a father hugging his daughter and the Hebrew inscription "Kenya, New Year's eve, 1948" (slightly blurred). Notation on verso: "To Ze'eva, love and longing, from father" (Hebrew). 6X8.5 cm. 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: $120
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Three paper items from the period of the State of Israel's War of Independence. Haifa, Tel Aviv [and Jerusalem?], 1948.
1. Issue No. 9 of the manual "Letter to Members of the Network" (apparently a manual for members of the anti-British intelligence network operated by the Haganah underground organization in Jerusalem). Printed on May 11, 1948, four days prior to the State of Israel's Declaration of Independence. Three parts: "The British Position"; "On the Situation Among the Arabs"; and "The Dissidents." In the part relating to the Arabs, the following is written: "Agitated preparations toward May 15… Feverish shuttling between Arab capitals, working to allay mutual suspicions and apprehensions among leaders, toward establishment of a unified front of Arab armies that must, according to the plan, invade the country and take control of it." 3 pp. (mimeographed typescript), 33 cm.
2. Transit permit issued by the Haifa staff of the Haganah to the engineer "N. Tabarechnik" for the "entire Arab sector of the city" for the purpose of "checking government buildings." August 31, 1948. 15 cm.
3. Group photograph by Reuven Gross: Leaders of Jewish Neighborhoods of Jaffa and Haganah commanders of the Southern Tel Aviv Front. Marked with the inked stamp of the photographer and captioned in handwriting in the margins: "Gathering in Honor of the Staff and Commanders of the Southern Front Sponsored by the Council of the Hebrew Neighborhoods." Approx. 29.5X23 cm.
Good overall condition. Stains. Minor blemishes.
1. Issue No. 9 of the manual "Letter to Members of the Network" (apparently a manual for members of the anti-British intelligence network operated by the Haganah underground organization in Jerusalem). Printed on May 11, 1948, four days prior to the State of Israel's Declaration of Independence. Three parts: "The British Position"; "On the Situation Among the Arabs"; and "The Dissidents." In the part relating to the Arabs, the following is written: "Agitated preparations toward May 15… Feverish shuttling between Arab capitals, working to allay mutual suspicions and apprehensions among leaders, toward establishment of a unified front of Arab armies that must, according to the plan, invade the country and take control of it." 3 pp. (mimeographed typescript), 33 cm.
2. Transit permit issued by the Haifa staff of the Haganah to the engineer "N. Tabarechnik" for the "entire Arab sector of the city" for the purpose of "checking government buildings." August 31, 1948. 15 cm.
3. Group photograph by Reuven Gross: Leaders of Jewish Neighborhoods of Jaffa and Haganah commanders of the Southern Tel Aviv Front. Marked with the inked stamp of the photographer and captioned in handwriting in the margins: "Gathering in Honor of the Staff and Commanders of the Southern Front Sponsored by the Council of the Hebrew Neighborhoods." Approx. 29.5X23 cm.
Good overall condition. Stains. Minor blemishes.
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: $120
Sold for: $163
Including buyer's premium
Davar LiYeladim [Davar for Children], published weekly by Davar Ltd., the official newspaper of the Histadrut Labour Federation, Tel Aviv. Volume 11, Issues 1-53, 1947-48.
A volume of issues of the newspaper "Davar LiYeladim,". The issues feature many articles about the Israeli War of Independence, the Palmach underground organization, illegal immigration, and other momentous happenings and current events from that period. In particular, issue no. 35, dated May 20, 1948, is dedicated to the establishment of the State of Israel, and subsequent issues address events such as the swearing-in of the first President, the issuing of the state's first postage stamps, and other developments connected to the birth of the state.
Including many illustrations by Nahum Gutman, and photographs.
Volume: 27.5 cm. End of issue no. 15 missing. Condition varies. Most issues in good condition. Tears, stains, and notations to some issues. Original binding, worn and stained.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
A volume of issues of the newspaper "Davar LiYeladim,". The issues feature many articles about the Israeli War of Independence, the Palmach underground organization, illegal immigration, and other momentous happenings and current events from that period. In particular, issue no. 35, dated May 20, 1948, is dedicated to the establishment of the State of Israel, and subsequent issues address events such as the swearing-in of the first President, the issuing of the state's first postage stamps, and other developments connected to the birth of the state.
Including many illustrations by Nahum Gutman, and photographs.
Volume: 27.5 cm. End of issue no. 15 missing. Condition varies. Most issues in good condition. Tears, stains, and notations to some issues. Original binding, worn and stained.
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
Unsold
Special edition of the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth (numbered as issue 3287) announcing the results of the UN vote regarding the Partition Plan. Tel-Aviv, 29.11.1947.
The headline states "Jewish State", followed by items listing the vote of each of the participating countries, a short review of the course of the vote and a review of the diplomatic activity in the nine months preceding the vote.
A second edition of the issue was printed on the same day, without the issue number, with several changes: the headline was changed into "Hebrew State", the item listing the vote of each of the participating countries was not printed and the article reviewing the course of the vote was reedited and reprinted, focusing on the Arab objection to the vote (see Kedem catalog, online auction no. 21, item 84).
This version of the edition is uncommon.
1 f. (one printed page), 50X34.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines, Stains. Tears to edges and fold lines (small; one long tear).
The headline states "Jewish State", followed by items listing the vote of each of the participating countries, a short review of the course of the vote and a review of the diplomatic activity in the nine months preceding the vote.
A second edition of the issue was printed on the same day, without the issue number, with several changes: the headline was changed into "Hebrew State", the item listing the vote of each of the participating countries was not printed and the article reviewing the course of the vote was reedited and reprinted, focusing on the Arab objection to the vote (see Kedem catalog, online auction no. 21, item 84).
This version of the edition is uncommon.
1 f. (one printed page), 50X34.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines, Stains. Tears to edges and fold lines (small; one long tear).
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
The Palestine Gazette Published by Authority. Official newspaper of the Mandatory Government. Jerusalem, January 1 to April 25, 1948. Issue Nos. 1638-61, 1663, 1665.
A volume of issues of the official newspaper of the British Mandatory Government of Palestine. These issues were used for posting edicts and ordinances, municipal laws, government-sponsored notices, approved trademarks, and information regarding transportation (trains in particular), sanitation, mail, and other subjects.
Some of the issues take the form of single-page flyers with no more than a handful of notices; most of the issues come with an appended supplement.
No. of pp. varies from one issue to the next; Size varies, volume: 30 cm. Condition varies. Most issues in good condition. Stains, tears, inked stamps, and dampstains to edges of some issues. Blemishes to edges of binding.
A volume of issues of the official newspaper of the British Mandatory Government of Palestine. These issues were used for posting edicts and ordinances, municipal laws, government-sponsored notices, approved trademarks, and information regarding transportation (trains in particular), sanitation, mail, and other subjects.
Some of the issues take the form of single-page flyers with no more than a handful of notices; most of the issues come with an appended supplement.
No. of pp. varies from one issue to the next; Size varies, volume: 30 cm. Condition varies. Most issues in good condition. Stains, tears, inked stamps, and dampstains to edges of some issues. Blemishes to edges of 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
Unsold
"Yom HaMedinah" [State Day], a joint (one-time) issue of all Hebrew newspapers, published on the day of the Israeli Declaration of Independence. [Tel Aviv], May 14, 1948, "The last Day under Foreign Rule".
The headline announces: "The People Declare the State of Israel". The Declaration of Independence is printed on the first page, alongside photographs of Herzl, Weizmann, Ben-Gurion and others, and a group photograph of the members of the Provisional Government during their first session.
[1] f. (2 pp), 58 cm. Fair-poor condition. Fold lines. Closed and open tears to edges and fold lines, mostly mended with acid-free tape. The corners are cut. Mounted at upper edge to thick paper.
The headline announces: "The People Declare the State of Israel". The Declaration of Independence is printed on the first page, alongside photographs of Herzl, Weizmann, Ben-Gurion and others, and a group photograph of the members of the Provisional Government during their first session.
[1] f. (2 pp), 58 cm. Fair-poor condition. Fold lines. Closed and open tears to edges and fold lines, mostly mended with acid-free tape. The corners are cut. Mounted at upper edge to thick paper.
Category
Grammar Books, Theology, Bibles, Travelogues, Prints and Maps
Catalogue