- Auction 055 Online Auction: Judaica, Chassidut and Kabbalah – Jerusalem Printings – Letters – Jewish Ceremonial Art (501) Apply Auction 055 Online Auction: Judaica, Chassidut and Kabbalah – Jerusalem Printings – Letters – Jewish Ceremonial Art filter
- Auction 045 Online Auction - Judaica (472) Apply Auction 045 Online Auction - Judaica filter
- Online Auction 39 - Judaica (493) Apply Online Auction 39 - Judaica filter
- Online Auction 029 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects (500) Apply Online Auction 029 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects filter
- Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture (490) Apply Online Auction 026 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture filter
- Online Auction 025 – Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects (500) Apply Online Auction 025 – Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects filter
- Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture (511) Apply Online Auction 021 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture filter
- Online Auction 020 – Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects (500) Apply Online Auction 020 – Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects filter
- Online Auction 016 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture (499) Apply Online Auction 016 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture filter
- Online Auction 014 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture (537) Apply Online Auction 014 – Jewish and Israeli History, Art and Culture filter
- Online Auction 013 – Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects (591) Apply Online Auction 013 – Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects filter
- Auction 57 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art (477) Apply Auction 57 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art filter
- Online Auction 012 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (496) Apply Online Auction 012 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Online auction 011 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects (507) Apply Online auction 011 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects filter
- Online Auction 010 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (489) Apply Online Auction 010 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Online Auction 09 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (539) Apply Online Auction 09 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Online Auction 08 - Passover Haggadot & Sifrei Kodesh (465) Apply Online Auction 08 - Passover Haggadot & Sifrei Kodesh filter
- Online Auction 07 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art (499) Apply Online Auction 07 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art filter
- Online Auction 06 - Jewish Art and Artists (518) Apply Online Auction 06 - Jewish Art and Artists filter
- Online Auction 05 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (534) Apply Online Auction 05 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Online Auction 04 - History of the Jewish People in Eretz Israel and in the Diaspora (510) Apply Online Auction 04 - History of the Jewish People in Eretz Israel and in the Diaspora filter
- Online Auction 03 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects (505) Apply Online Auction 03 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Letters, Objects filter
- Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art (475) Apply Auction 54 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art filter
- Auction 50 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (595) Apply Auction 50 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (492) Apply Auction 47 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 45 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (612) Apply Auction 45 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 44 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (471) Apply Auction 44 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art (491) Apply Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art filter
- Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections (703) Apply Auction 34 - The Arnie Druck Collections filter
- Auction 33 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (532) Apply Auction 33 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 31 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (568) Apply Auction 31 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 30 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (471) Apply Auction 30 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 27 - Books, Manuscripts and Rabbinical Letters (533) Apply Auction 27 - Books, Manuscripts and Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 26 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (534) Apply Auction 26 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 22 - Books, Manuscripts and Rabbinical Letters (516) Apply Auction 22 - Books, Manuscripts and Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 21 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (570) Apply Auction 21 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 18 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (612) Apply Auction 18 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 16 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (521) Apply Auction 16 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 15 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (639) Apply Auction 15 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (636) Apply Auction 14 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 13 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (666) Apply Auction 13 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 12 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (590) Apply Auction 12 - Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 11 - Israeli History and Culture (619) Apply Auction 11 - Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 5 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (552) Apply Auction 5 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 3 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (507) Apply Auction 3 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 10 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (587) Apply Auction 10 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 9 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (1003) Apply Auction 9 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 8 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters (586) Apply Auction 8 - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters filter
- Auction 7 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture (562) Apply Auction 7 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture filter
- Auction 6 - Books, Manuscripts and Rabbinical Letters (544) Apply Auction 6 - Books, Manuscripts and Rabbinical Letters filter
Displaying 24721 - 24732 of 58939
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $700
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
A letter handwritten by the writer Naguib Mahfouz, signed in Arabic and English. Sent from Cairo to Israel. December 11, 1988. Arabic.
The letter, written one day after Mahfouz was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, expresses his age-old aspiration for peace in Israel and his hope that Israelis and Palestinians will be able to live together in Israel as partners.
The writer Naguib Mahfouz (نجيب محفوظ,i 1911-2006), born in Cairo, is considered one of the leading contemporary Arab writers. He published more than 30 novels, hundreds of short stories and dozens of screenplays in his lifetime. His most famous work, "The Cairo Trilogy", was published during 1981-1987, winning him the 1988 Nobel Prize for Literature. Throughout his life, Mahfouz was known for his liberal and democratic opinions and was one of the prominent supporters of the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty. His opinions earned him many enemies in the Arab world, in Egypt and abroad, and for many years his books were banned in Syria, Iraq and other countries. In 1994, a Muslim extremist tried to assassinate Mahfouz, but only succeeded in wounding him. Mahfouz died in 2006 at the age of 94.
[1] leaf, 32.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Enclosed is the original envelope in which the letter was sent.
The letter, written one day after Mahfouz was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, expresses his age-old aspiration for peace in Israel and his hope that Israelis and Palestinians will be able to live together in Israel as partners.
The writer Naguib Mahfouz (نجيب محفوظ,i 1911-2006), born in Cairo, is considered one of the leading contemporary Arab writers. He published more than 30 novels, hundreds of short stories and dozens of screenplays in his lifetime. His most famous work, "The Cairo Trilogy", was published during 1981-1987, winning him the 1988 Nobel Prize for Literature. Throughout his life, Mahfouz was known for his liberal and democratic opinions and was one of the prominent supporters of the Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty. His opinions earned him many enemies in the Arab world, in Egypt and abroad, and for many years his books were banned in Syria, Iraq and other countries. In 1994, a Muslim extremist tried to assassinate Mahfouz, but only succeeded in wounding him. Mahfouz died in 2006 at the age of 94.
[1] leaf, 32.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Enclosed is the original envelope in which the letter was sent.
Category
Manuscripts, Letters, Signatures and Dedications
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $800
Sold for: $1,500
Including buyer's premium
Approx. a hundred autographs of composers, conductors, musicians and opera singers from around the world; most of them on programmes of concerts and classical music performances held in Israel since the 1950s and onward.
The collection contains autographs of the conductors Leonard Bernstein, Georg Solti, Zubin Mehta, Paul Paray, Daniel Barenboim, Paweł Klecki, Carlo Maria Giulini; the composers Igor Stravinsky, Gary Bertini, Aaron Copland; the violinists Yehudi Menuhin, Itzhak Perlman, Isaac Stern, Nathan Milstein, David Oistrakh and Alexander Schneider; the pianists Glenn Gould, Arthur Rubenstein, Eugene Istomin, Rudolf Serkin and Clifford Curzon; the opera singers Maureen Forrester, Victoria de los Ángeles, Shirley Verrett, Richard Tucker and Plácido Domingo; the cellists Leonard Rose, Jacqueline du Pré, Mstislav Rostropovich and John Ogdon; and others. Most of them are signed on programmes or advertising leaflets of concerts and classical music performances in Israel. Several of the musicians are signed on more than one item.
The collection also contains a portrait photograph of the Italian conductor Carlo Maria Giulini, with a signed and dated autograph inscription (1.3.1959).
Approx. a hundred autographs on approx. 50 items. Size and condition vary. Good overall condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
The collection contains autographs of the conductors Leonard Bernstein, Georg Solti, Zubin Mehta, Paul Paray, Daniel Barenboim, Paweł Klecki, Carlo Maria Giulini; the composers Igor Stravinsky, Gary Bertini, Aaron Copland; the violinists Yehudi Menuhin, Itzhak Perlman, Isaac Stern, Nathan Milstein, David Oistrakh and Alexander Schneider; the pianists Glenn Gould, Arthur Rubenstein, Eugene Istomin, Rudolf Serkin and Clifford Curzon; the opera singers Maureen Forrester, Victoria de los Ángeles, Shirley Verrett, Richard Tucker and Plácido Domingo; the cellists Leonard Rose, Jacqueline du Pré, Mstislav Rostropovich and John Ogdon; and others. Most of them are signed on programmes or advertising leaflets of concerts and classical music performances in Israel. Several of the musicians are signed on more than one item.
The collection also contains a portrait photograph of the Italian conductor Carlo Maria Giulini, with a signed and dated autograph inscription (1.3.1959).
Approx. a hundred autographs on approx. 50 items. Size and condition vary. Good overall condition.
Provenance: The Rimon Family Collection.
Category
Manuscripts, Letters, Signatures and Dedications
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $1,200
Unsold
The Hebrew Bible; from the edition of Everardo van der Hooght, the Book of Genesis and the Book of Exodus (until chapter 14, verse 16 – Parashat Beshalach). New York: Whiting & Watson, 1815. Hebrew, with an advertisement of the publishers and a note of the editors (in English), and a Latin preface by Everardo van der Hooght. Parts 1 and 2 (no further parts were printed).
A volume comprising the Book of Genesis and a part of the Book of Exodus, with vowelization and cantillation notes. Originally, this volume was supposed to be published as part of a complete bible in sixteen volumes; eventually, however, the other parts of the series were not printed. The main reason for the discontinuation of the printing was the simultaneous publishing of a complete bible by Thomas Dobson (the first Hebrew Bible printed in America), which preceded this edition by only a few months, and rendered it superfluous.
The present book is the first Hebrew bible printed in New York and the third Hebrew bible printed in America (preceded only by the edition of the bible published by Dobson and by the Book of Psalms).
[3] leaves, 41, 112 pp, 22.5 cm. Cardboard binding. Uneven edges. Uncut sheets in the Hebrew part. Good-fair condition. Stains (dark dampstains on the binding and first and last leaves). Damaged binding, with stains. Tears to spine. The back board is loose. The lower part of the spine is missing.
Goldman 5.
A volume comprising the Book of Genesis and a part of the Book of Exodus, with vowelization and cantillation notes. Originally, this volume was supposed to be published as part of a complete bible in sixteen volumes; eventually, however, the other parts of the series were not printed. The main reason for the discontinuation of the printing was the simultaneous publishing of a complete bible by Thomas Dobson (the first Hebrew Bible printed in America), which preceded this edition by only a few months, and rendered it superfluous.
The present book is the first Hebrew bible printed in New York and the third Hebrew bible printed in America (preceded only by the edition of the bible published by Dobson and by the Book of Psalms).
[3] leaves, 41, 112 pp, 22.5 cm. Cardboard binding. Uneven edges. Uncut sheets in the Hebrew part. Good-fair condition. Stains (dark dampstains on the binding and first and last leaves). Damaged binding, with stains. Tears to spine. The back board is loose. The lower part of the spine is missing.
Goldman 5.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $500
Unsold
Selections of a Father for the Use of his Children, in Prose and Verse, by Isaac Gomez. New York: Southwick and Pelsue, 1820. English. First edition.
Isaac Gomez Jr. (1768-1831), a Jewish writer and merchant, was a descendant of one of the first Jewish families who immigrated to America (his grandfather's father, Lewis Moses Gomez, arrived at New York in 1703). Although in his lifetime he was considered one of the prominent figures of the Jewish community, Gomez is remembered mainly for his contribution to American children's literature – the book before us, an anthology of selections from the greatest writers: Aristotle, Plato, Shakespeare, Milton, Alexander Pope and many others. One of the enthusiastic fans of the book was second USA President John Adams, who expressed his fondness of the book in a letter from 1820: "Your Selections of a Father for the Use of his Children, are worthy to be presented by every father, to every child – and deserve a place in every family, there is not an impure or mean thought in the whole Book… to me it shall be a manual on my table – in which I can constantly find almost any of the most beautiful morsels".
This book is considered the first children's book by a Jewish-American author. See: The Way Jews Lived: Five Hundred Years of Printed Words and Images, by Constance Harris (USA, 2009), p. 273.
A printed piece of paper with an approbation by Phillip Milledoler is mounted on page 3 (a blank page).
VIII, [9]-408 pp, approx. 21.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and blemishes. Small tears along edges. Handwritten notation on top of the title page (English, from 1853). Torn spine (some of it missing). The binding (front and back) and one of the endpapers are detached. Strips of tape on the inside binding.
Singerman 322.
Isaac Gomez Jr. (1768-1831), a Jewish writer and merchant, was a descendant of one of the first Jewish families who immigrated to America (his grandfather's father, Lewis Moses Gomez, arrived at New York in 1703). Although in his lifetime he was considered one of the prominent figures of the Jewish community, Gomez is remembered mainly for his contribution to American children's literature – the book before us, an anthology of selections from the greatest writers: Aristotle, Plato, Shakespeare, Milton, Alexander Pope and many others. One of the enthusiastic fans of the book was second USA President John Adams, who expressed his fondness of the book in a letter from 1820: "Your Selections of a Father for the Use of his Children, are worthy to be presented by every father, to every child – and deserve a place in every family, there is not an impure or mean thought in the whole Book… to me it shall be a manual on my table – in which I can constantly find almost any of the most beautiful morsels".
This book is considered the first children's book by a Jewish-American author. See: The Way Jews Lived: Five Hundred Years of Printed Words and Images, by Constance Harris (USA, 2009), p. 273.
A printed piece of paper with an approbation by Phillip Milledoler is mounted on page 3 (a blank page).
VIII, [9]-408 pp, approx. 21.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and blemishes. Small tears along edges. Handwritten notation on top of the title page (English, from 1853). Torn spine (some of it missing). The binding (front and back) and one of the endpapers are detached. Strips of tape on the inside binding.
Singerman 322.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $1,250
Including buyer's premium
Description of a View of the City of Jerusalem and the Surrounding Country Now Exhibiting at the Panorama, Broadway […], Painted by Robert Burford from Drawings Taken in 1834 by F. Catherwood. New York, [1838]. English.
A booklet that was sold to accompany a panorama of Jerusalem exhibited in New York during the years 1838-1842, containing a schematic print of the panorama (a folded plate) on which 71 local sights and figures are marked. The booklet describes the marked sights and figures in detail.
Frederick Catherwood (1799-1854), an English architect, artist and explorer, travelled around the Middle East, Europe and South America, documenting his travels in drawings and paintings; he was the first Western scholar to measure and sketch the Dome of the Rock. In 1835, Catherwood exhibited, together with Robert Burford, an English panorama painter, a panorama of Jerusalem at Leicester Square in London. In 1838 the two brought the panorama to New York, where it was exhibited in a rotunda building designed and built for this purpose on Broadway and was a great success. Additional panoramas were exhibited at the same place - Thebes in Egypt, Baalbek, Lima in Peru, the Niagara Falls and more. The panoramas, which were exhibited in a rotunda and often even rotated on their axis while described by a narrator, and which brought their viewers a promise of a reliable representation of distant sites and exotic figures, were one of the heralds of future cinema and a popular entertainment in the 19th century. The panorama of Jerusalem was one of the most popular panoramas exhibited in New York and attracted a large audience, until the rotunda with all that was in it was burnt in 1842. What remained of the panorama was only the print that appears in this booklet.
[1] folded plate (print), 12 pp, 22.5 cm. Print: 29.5X40.5 cm. Possibly missing cover. Good condition. Stains. Small tears along the edges of the leaves, including one open tear, not affecting text. Small tears along edges and fold lines of the print, reinforced with tape. The leaves are detached.
Not in NLI.
A booklet that was sold to accompany a panorama of Jerusalem exhibited in New York during the years 1838-1842, containing a schematic print of the panorama (a folded plate) on which 71 local sights and figures are marked. The booklet describes the marked sights and figures in detail.
Frederick Catherwood (1799-1854), an English architect, artist and explorer, travelled around the Middle East, Europe and South America, documenting his travels in drawings and paintings; he was the first Western scholar to measure and sketch the Dome of the Rock. In 1835, Catherwood exhibited, together with Robert Burford, an English panorama painter, a panorama of Jerusalem at Leicester Square in London. In 1838 the two brought the panorama to New York, where it was exhibited in a rotunda building designed and built for this purpose on Broadway and was a great success. Additional panoramas were exhibited at the same place - Thebes in Egypt, Baalbek, Lima in Peru, the Niagara Falls and more. The panoramas, which were exhibited in a rotunda and often even rotated on their axis while described by a narrator, and which brought their viewers a promise of a reliable representation of distant sites and exotic figures, were one of the heralds of future cinema and a popular entertainment in the 19th century. The panorama of Jerusalem was one of the most popular panoramas exhibited in New York and attracted a large audience, until the rotunda with all that was in it was burnt in 1842. What remained of the panorama was only the print that appears in this booklet.
[1] folded plate (print), 12 pp, 22.5 cm. Print: 29.5X40.5 cm. Possibly missing cover. Good condition. Stains. Small tears along the edges of the leaves, including one open tear, not affecting text. Small tears along edges and fold lines of the print, reinforced with tape. The leaves are detached.
Not in NLI.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
The Claims of the Jews to an Equality of Rights, Illustrated in a Series of Letters to the Editor of the Philadelphia Gazette, by Isaac Leeser. Philadelphia: printed by C. Sherman & co., 5601 [1841]. English.
A compilation of six letters sent by Isaac Leeser to the editor of the Philadelphia Gazette, starting December 1839. The letters deal mostly with defending the Jewish religion and claiming equality of rights to the Jews. Alongside the letters, the book contains passages from the article "State and Prospects of the Jews", an article against Judaism that was published in issue no. 125 of The London Quarterly Review. This article as well as other publications in the press motivated Leeser to write the series of letters to the Philadelphia Gazette.
Isaac leeser (1806-1868) a Jewish-American leader, scholar, literary editor and translator. Leeser was born in Germany, emigrated in his youth to the USA and settled in Philadelphia. He was active in establishing Jewish institutions and in inculcating Jewish religion and history. He was a cantor at the "Mikveh Yisrael" community and one of its leaders. Leeser translated religious books into English and authored many essays and sermons.
99 pp, 22.5 cm. Good condition. Stains (mostly on the first and last leaves). Minor blemishes. Elegant new binding, with a leather spine (new endpapers).
A compilation of six letters sent by Isaac Leeser to the editor of the Philadelphia Gazette, starting December 1839. The letters deal mostly with defending the Jewish religion and claiming equality of rights to the Jews. Alongside the letters, the book contains passages from the article "State and Prospects of the Jews", an article against Judaism that was published in issue no. 125 of The London Quarterly Review. This article as well as other publications in the press motivated Leeser to write the series of letters to the Philadelphia Gazette.
Isaac leeser (1806-1868) a Jewish-American leader, scholar, literary editor and translator. Leeser was born in Germany, emigrated in his youth to the USA and settled in Philadelphia. He was active in establishing Jewish institutions and in inculcating Jewish religion and history. He was a cantor at the "Mikveh Yisrael" community and one of its leaders. Leeser translated religious books into English and authored many essays and sermons.
99 pp, 22.5 cm. Good condition. Stains (mostly on the first and last leaves). Minor blemishes. Elegant new binding, with a leather spine (new endpapers).
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Shema Israel / The Spirit of Judaism, by Grace Aguilar edited by Isaac Leeser. Philadelphia: C. Sherman & Co., 5602 (1842). English.
A work in defense of Judaism, by the Jewish-British writer Grace Aguilar. The book was edited by Isaac Leeser and printed in Philadelphia, with introduction and comments by Leeser, in which he expresses his reservations regarding Aguilar's thoughts. The book was well received by Jews and by Christians alike and was used in several synagogues and even in Protestant churches.
Singerman 767.
On the front endpaper is an autograph inscription from 1842 by Jewish merchant Jacob Ezekiel (1812-1899), a prominent figure in the Jewish community of Richmond, Virginia: "This small volume is most respectfully presented, by his friend Jacob Ezekiel, Richmond. Va. United State of America, Sunday, May 1st 1842". Beneath the inscription is a note handwritten in Hebrew: "...Jacob son of Ezekiel, Gabbai [?]…".
Jacob Ezekiel was born in the city of Philadelphia in 1812, two years after his parents immigrated from Amsterdam to America. When he was 13, he was apprenticed to a bookbinder and in 1833 moved to the city of Baltimore to carry on the bookbinding business. From Baltimore he moved to Richmond, Virginia, where he ran a dry goods business. Shortly after his arrival in Richmond, he was elected secretary of the "Beth Shalom" synagogue, a position he held for about thirty years. In 1835 he married Catherine Myers Castro, who was also an immigrant from the Jewish community of Amsterdam, and over the years, the couple had fourteen children.
During the time he lived in Richmond, Jacob Ezekiel was involved in the affairs of the Jewish community of the town and in social and public activity for American Jews. He succeeded in bringing about the repeal of an order by the city council of Richmond according to which heavy fines were imposed on those violating the Christian Sabbath (later, due to his efforts, Jews were legally exempt from any penalty for violating the Christian Sabbath). Furthermore, in protest of anti-Semitic decisions reached in several Swiss cantons, he prevented the acceptance of a block of Swiss granite for the Washington Monument. In 1841, Ezekiel received a personal letter of apology from USA President John Tyler, after Tyler issued an official proclamation announcing the death of the previous president in which he referred to the citizens of the United States as a "Christian people".
In 1869, Jacob Ezekiel moved to Cincinnati, where he took part in founding the Union of American Hebrew Congregations and was a member of the board of directors of the Hebrew Union College. He took part in public activity for the American Jews until his death in 1899.
XII, 255 pp, approx. 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains (mainly on the endpapers). Creases. A long tear to upper part of one leaf, reinforced with tape. An open tear to the upper part of the same leaf (not affecting text). Several small tears along the edges. Stains, small tears and minor blemishes to inscription leaf (mounted to additional leaves, for restoration). New binding (with parts of the original binding). New endpapers alongside the original ones.
Literature: Jacob Ezekiel, in: Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society, no. 9, 1901, pp. 160-163.
A work in defense of Judaism, by the Jewish-British writer Grace Aguilar. The book was edited by Isaac Leeser and printed in Philadelphia, with introduction and comments by Leeser, in which he expresses his reservations regarding Aguilar's thoughts. The book was well received by Jews and by Christians alike and was used in several synagogues and even in Protestant churches.
Singerman 767.
On the front endpaper is an autograph inscription from 1842 by Jewish merchant Jacob Ezekiel (1812-1899), a prominent figure in the Jewish community of Richmond, Virginia: "This small volume is most respectfully presented, by his friend Jacob Ezekiel, Richmond. Va. United State of America, Sunday, May 1st 1842". Beneath the inscription is a note handwritten in Hebrew: "...Jacob son of Ezekiel, Gabbai [?]…".
Jacob Ezekiel was born in the city of Philadelphia in 1812, two years after his parents immigrated from Amsterdam to America. When he was 13, he was apprenticed to a bookbinder and in 1833 moved to the city of Baltimore to carry on the bookbinding business. From Baltimore he moved to Richmond, Virginia, where he ran a dry goods business. Shortly after his arrival in Richmond, he was elected secretary of the "Beth Shalom" synagogue, a position he held for about thirty years. In 1835 he married Catherine Myers Castro, who was also an immigrant from the Jewish community of Amsterdam, and over the years, the couple had fourteen children.
During the time he lived in Richmond, Jacob Ezekiel was involved in the affairs of the Jewish community of the town and in social and public activity for American Jews. He succeeded in bringing about the repeal of an order by the city council of Richmond according to which heavy fines were imposed on those violating the Christian Sabbath (later, due to his efforts, Jews were legally exempt from any penalty for violating the Christian Sabbath). Furthermore, in protest of anti-Semitic decisions reached in several Swiss cantons, he prevented the acceptance of a block of Swiss granite for the Washington Monument. In 1841, Ezekiel received a personal letter of apology from USA President John Tyler, after Tyler issued an official proclamation announcing the death of the previous president in which he referred to the citizens of the United States as a "Christian people".
In 1869, Jacob Ezekiel moved to Cincinnati, where he took part in founding the Union of American Hebrew Congregations and was a member of the board of directors of the Hebrew Union College. He took part in public activity for the American Jews until his death in 1899.
XII, 255 pp, approx. 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains (mainly on the endpapers). Creases. A long tear to upper part of one leaf, reinforced with tape. An open tear to the upper part of the same leaf (not affecting text). Several small tears along the edges. Stains, small tears and minor blemishes to inscription leaf (mounted to additional leaves, for restoration). New binding (with parts of the original binding). New endpapers alongside the original ones.
Literature: Jacob Ezekiel, in: Publications of the American Jewish Historical Society, no. 9, 1901, pp. 160-163.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $700
Unsold
Lied zum fünfundzwanzigjährigen Dienst-Jubiläum des Herrn Isidor Fränkel, Cantor der Gemeinde Rodef Schalom [Poem in honor of twenty-five years of service of Mr. Isidor Frankel, cantor of the Rodef Shalom community]. Single leaf. Printer not indicated. [Philadelphia], 1874. German.
A poem in honor of twenty-five years of service of Isidor Frankel as cantor of the Rodef Shalom community in Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA). The text is set in a stylized border.
The synagogue of the "Rodef Shalom" community was established in Philadelphia in 1795 and it is the oldest Ashkenazic-reform synagogue in the USA.
[1] leaf, 14.5X23.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Fold lines and creases. Stains. Small tears and holes (most of them along edges and fold lines). Tape for reinforcement on verso.
A poem in honor of twenty-five years of service of Isidor Frankel as cantor of the Rodef Shalom community in Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA). The text is set in a stylized border.
The synagogue of the "Rodef Shalom" community was established in Philadelphia in 1795 and it is the oldest Ashkenazic-reform synagogue in the USA.
[1] leaf, 14.5X23.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Fold lines and creases. Stains. Small tears and holes (most of them along edges and fold lines). Tape for reinforcement on verso.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $1,200
Unsold
A marriage certificate recording the marriage of David Ullman and Cecelia Hollstein in accordance with Jewish law and the state laws; handwritten and signed by Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise. Cincinnati (Ohio, USA), October 21, 1872. English.
Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise (1819-1900), born in Moravia, the Czech Republic, was a pioneer of the Reform Judaism Movement in the USA and one of its leaders. Wise was ordained as a rabbi in Prague and served as a rabbi in the city of Radnice in the Czech Republic before immigrating to the USA in 1846. In the USA, he was appointed rabbi of the "Beit El" synagogue in Albany, New York, and very soon he started introducing reforms and innovations to his community. Wise was involved in several disputes due to his opinions. His travails finally ended when he reached Cincinnati, Ohio, where he was appointed the rabbi of the "Bnei Yeshurun" community in 1854, a position he held for 46 years, until his death. Wise was an active, energetic figure in the American reform community and founded the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (the umbrella organization of the reform communities in the USA) and the Hebrew Union College. An incident which became known as "The Trefa Banquet", because of the non-kosher food served during the graduation party of the first class of the Hebrew Union College, and in which Wise's name was involved as the person who refused to condemn this breach of Jewish law, became symbolic of the divide within American Reform Judaism, which lead to the birth of Conservative Judaism.
David Ullman (1842-1905), born in Germany, was one of the first Jews in his city of Peoria, Illinois. He was a liquor wholesaler and served as the vice president of the "Anshei Emeth" community in his town.
[1] leaf, 20.5X32 cm. Good-fair condition. Fold lines. Stains. Tears and open tears along edges and fold lines. Ink corrosion.
Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise (1819-1900), born in Moravia, the Czech Republic, was a pioneer of the Reform Judaism Movement in the USA and one of its leaders. Wise was ordained as a rabbi in Prague and served as a rabbi in the city of Radnice in the Czech Republic before immigrating to the USA in 1846. In the USA, he was appointed rabbi of the "Beit El" synagogue in Albany, New York, and very soon he started introducing reforms and innovations to his community. Wise was involved in several disputes due to his opinions. His travails finally ended when he reached Cincinnati, Ohio, where he was appointed the rabbi of the "Bnei Yeshurun" community in 1854, a position he held for 46 years, until his death. Wise was an active, energetic figure in the American reform community and founded the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (the umbrella organization of the reform communities in the USA) and the Hebrew Union College. An incident which became known as "The Trefa Banquet", because of the non-kosher food served during the graduation party of the first class of the Hebrew Union College, and in which Wise's name was involved as the person who refused to condemn this breach of Jewish law, became symbolic of the divide within American Reform Judaism, which lead to the birth of Conservative Judaism.
David Ullman (1842-1905), born in Germany, was one of the first Jews in his city of Peoria, Illinois. He was a liquor wholesaler and served as the vice president of the "Anshei Emeth" community in his town.
[1] leaf, 20.5X32 cm. Good-fair condition. Fold lines. Stains. Tears and open tears along edges and fold lines. Ink corrosion.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $400
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
"You Saved Them In 1917, Will You Let Them Starve Now?", a poster issued by The American Jewish Relief Committee for Sufferers from the War (part of the JDC). [New York, 1918]. English.
A broadside calling to help Jews in need after World War I. On its upper part, beneath the caption "Look", appears a reproduction of the painting "Exile" by Samuel Hirszenberg. Following, printed beneath the caption "Read" is a telegram sent by Robert Lansing, USA Secretary of State, to the JDC, with a call to raise funds for the Jews of Poland and Lithuania who suffer from hunger and privation. On the lower part of the poster, printed beneath the caption "Act" is an illustration of a cheque in the name of Arthur Lehman, the treasurer of The American Jewish Relief Committee and a call to send donations by mail.
This is one of a series of posters printed in 1918 by The American Jewish Relief Committee for Sufferers from the War. The other posters of the series, also calling to assist the Jews of Europe, were designed by Cozzy (Julius) Gottsdanker (this poster is not signed, but was presumably designed by Gottsdanker as well).
Approx. 48.5X25.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Creases and minor blemishes. Linen-backed for display and preservation.
A broadside calling to help Jews in need after World War I. On its upper part, beneath the caption "Look", appears a reproduction of the painting "Exile" by Samuel Hirszenberg. Following, printed beneath the caption "Read" is a telegram sent by Robert Lansing, USA Secretary of State, to the JDC, with a call to raise funds for the Jews of Poland and Lithuania who suffer from hunger and privation. On the lower part of the poster, printed beneath the caption "Act" is an illustration of a cheque in the name of Arthur Lehman, the treasurer of The American Jewish Relief Committee and a call to send donations by mail.
This is one of a series of posters printed in 1918 by The American Jewish Relief Committee for Sufferers from the War. The other posters of the series, also calling to assist the Jews of Europe, were designed by Cozzy (Julius) Gottsdanker (this poster is not signed, but was presumably designed by Gottsdanker as well).
Approx. 48.5X25.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Creases and minor blemishes. Linen-backed for display and preservation.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $400
Unsold
A printed cloth banner with the text of the prayer "HaNoten Teshu'ah L'Melachim" (He Who Gives Salvation to Kings) in honor of USA President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and his vice president. [USA, 1941-1945]. Hebrew and English.
Printed on the banner, in Hebrew and in English, is the prayer "He Who Gives Salvation to Kings" ("A Prayer for the Government"), naming President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the USA President since 1933 until his death in 1945, shortly before the end of World War II. Above the text appear the USA flag and the Zionist flag, crossed.
The American flag is printed on the margins of the banner. A large red letter "V" appears across the text, with the corresponding Morse code above - common in publications during World War II, symbolizing the hope for victory.
22.5X34.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Stains. Slight peeling of color. Some unraveling at the edges. The cloth is attached at the top edge to velvet paper.
Enclosed: A pin from Roosevelt's third presidential campaign, with the legend "Roosevelt Labor's Choice". [1940].
Printed on the banner, in Hebrew and in English, is the prayer "He Who Gives Salvation to Kings" ("A Prayer for the Government"), naming President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the USA President since 1933 until his death in 1945, shortly before the end of World War II. Above the text appear the USA flag and the Zionist flag, crossed.
The American flag is printed on the margins of the banner. A large red letter "V" appears across the text, with the corresponding Morse code above - common in publications during World War II, symbolizing the hope for victory.
22.5X34.5 cm. Good condition. Fold lines. Stains. Slight peeling of color. Some unraveling at the edges. The cloth is attached at the top edge to velvet paper.
Enclosed: A pin from Roosevelt's third presidential campaign, with the legend "Roosevelt Labor's Choice". [1940].
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue
Lot 200 "Anglia Judaica", a Book about the History of the Jews of England – Oxford, 1738 – Engraving
Auction 68 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture
September 19, 2019
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Anglia Judaica, or the History and Antiquities of the Jews in England, by D'blossiers Tovey. "Printed at the Theatre, and are to be sold by James Fletcher", Oxford, 1738. First Edition. English.
A comprehensive history, the first of its kind, of the Jews of England, by the historian and Anglican clergyman D'blossiers Tovey (1692-1745). The book reviews the Jewish community of England from its onset in 1066 until the expulsion of the Jews in the 13th century. It also contains an interesting documentation of the negotiation between Menasseh ben Israel and Oliver Cromwell after which the Deportation Order was cancelled and the community renewed (in one of the chapters D'blossiers Tovey writes that the hope Cromwell had raised among the Jews was so great that some thought that he might be the Messiah. See p. 275).
The book contains an engraved plate depicting the grave of the child Saint Hugh of Lincoln, which according to a blood libel widely believed in England was murdered by Jews.
[8], 319 pp. + [1] engraved plate, 24 cm. Good condition. Stains. Library stamps on several leaves. Sticker and writing on verso of title page. Half-leather later binding.
A comprehensive history, the first of its kind, of the Jews of England, by the historian and Anglican clergyman D'blossiers Tovey (1692-1745). The book reviews the Jewish community of England from its onset in 1066 until the expulsion of the Jews in the 13th century. It also contains an interesting documentation of the negotiation between Menasseh ben Israel and Oliver Cromwell after which the Deportation Order was cancelled and the community renewed (in one of the chapters D'blossiers Tovey writes that the hope Cromwell had raised among the Jews was so great that some thought that he might be the Messiah. See p. 275).
The book contains an engraved plate depicting the grave of the child Saint Hugh of Lincoln, which according to a blood libel widely believed in England was murdered by Jews.
[8], 319 pp. + [1] engraved plate, 24 cm. Good condition. Stains. Library stamps on several leaves. Sticker and writing on verso of title page. Half-leather later binding.
Category
Anglo-Judaica and American Judaica
Catalogue