Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
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Displaying 61 - 72 of 253
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $500
Unsold
"Torah crowns" – Pair of Torah finials. Mountain Jews (Caucasus Region – Azerbaijan? Dagestan?), [19th century].
Silver, cast and engraved.
Torah finials ("crowns"), with spherical body surmounted by cylindrical segment in turn surmounted by additional spherical ornament. A band encompasses the circumference of the body, dividing the sphere into upper and lower hemispheres. Suspended from this band are chains with bells. Chains with metal disks that act like bells are suspended from the cylindrical segment surmounting the body. Long tapering shafts, with engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscriptions: "Sanctified to the Almighty, from Mordechai son of Menashe Taharani."
As was the case with the Jews of Afghanistan, among the Mountain Jews of the Caucasus Region, Torah finials were known in Hebrew as "Keter Torah" ("Torah Crown"). The shape of Torah finials known to us from these countries was influenced by the design of Persian finials; up until the Russian conquest of the eastern Caucasus in 19th century, the Mountain Jews were, in effect, like the Jews of Bukhara, part of the cultural sphere of Persian Jewry. Moreover, the geographic proximity of Iran to the Caucasus Region readily enabled population exchanges, and mutual influence on material culture. Thus, for instance, we know of a pair of Torah finials of the Georgian type bearing a dedicatory inscription of the Sephardic Persian-Jewish community living in the city of Baku, capital of Azerbaijan.
Height: 20.5-21 cm. Minor fractures. Old soldering repairs.
Reference: Mountain Jews: Customs and Daily Life in the Caucasus, pp. 51-57.
Silver, cast and engraved.
Torah finials ("crowns"), with spherical body surmounted by cylindrical segment in turn surmounted by additional spherical ornament. A band encompasses the circumference of the body, dividing the sphere into upper and lower hemispheres. Suspended from this band are chains with bells. Chains with metal disks that act like bells are suspended from the cylindrical segment surmounting the body. Long tapering shafts, with engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscriptions: "Sanctified to the Almighty, from Mordechai son of Menashe Taharani."
As was the case with the Jews of Afghanistan, among the Mountain Jews of the Caucasus Region, Torah finials were known in Hebrew as "Keter Torah" ("Torah Crown"). The shape of Torah finials known to us from these countries was influenced by the design of Persian finials; up until the Russian conquest of the eastern Caucasus in 19th century, the Mountain Jews were, in effect, like the Jews of Bukhara, part of the cultural sphere of Persian Jewry. Moreover, the geographic proximity of Iran to the Caucasus Region readily enabled population exchanges, and mutual influence on material culture. Thus, for instance, we know of a pair of Torah finials of the Georgian type bearing a dedicatory inscription of the Sephardic Persian-Jewish community living in the city of Baku, capital of Azerbaijan.
Height: 20.5-21 cm. Minor fractures. Old soldering repairs.
Reference: Mountain Jews: Customs and Daily Life in the Caucasus, pp. 51-57.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $1,500
Unsold
"Torah crowns" – Pair of Torah finials. Afghanistan, 5694 [1934].
Silver, cut, cast, and engraved.
Each of these "Torah crowns" is surmounted by a large, flat Star-of-David ornament decorated in vegetal patterns. The center of each Star of David forms a hexagonal frame which encloses, on one side of each finial, illustrations featuring domed buildings above and below a central horizontal band bearing the Hebrew inscription "Keter Torah" ("Torah Crown"), and, on the other side, the Hebrew dedicatory inscription "On the third day of the week, the month of Tevet 5694 [1934], Shimeon son of Ya'akov, may he rest in Eden, passed away" alongside illustrations depicting the Western Wall. At the base of each Star of David is a crescent-shaped ornament over a dome, with chains bearing pendant bells suspended from its rims. Long, hollow cylindrical shafts.
In Afghanistan, the Torah case would be flat-topped. Projecting upward from the top would be six rods, to support three pairs of Torah finials: two of these rods – which would serve as the upper handles of the rollers – would support flat "Torah crown" finials of the present type, while the other rods would support regular, sphere-shaped finials.
Height: 34.5 cm. Good condition.
Reference: Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home, p. 23, items nos. 23-24.
Silver, cut, cast, and engraved.
Each of these "Torah crowns" is surmounted by a large, flat Star-of-David ornament decorated in vegetal patterns. The center of each Star of David forms a hexagonal frame which encloses, on one side of each finial, illustrations featuring domed buildings above and below a central horizontal band bearing the Hebrew inscription "Keter Torah" ("Torah Crown"), and, on the other side, the Hebrew dedicatory inscription "On the third day of the week, the month of Tevet 5694 [1934], Shimeon son of Ya'akov, may he rest in Eden, passed away" alongside illustrations depicting the Western Wall. At the base of each Star of David is a crescent-shaped ornament over a dome, with chains bearing pendant bells suspended from its rims. Long, hollow cylindrical shafts.
In Afghanistan, the Torah case would be flat-topped. Projecting upward from the top would be six rods, to support three pairs of Torah finials: two of these rods – which would serve as the upper handles of the rollers – would support flat "Torah crown" finials of the present type, while the other rods would support regular, sphere-shaped finials.
Height: 34.5 cm. Good condition.
Reference: Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home, p. 23, items nos. 23-24.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $400
Unsold
Small drinking bowl ("jam-tas"). Afghanistan, 5694 [1934].
Silver, cast and engraved.
Small bowl, which would have been used by Jews in Afghanistan for drinking arak on holidays and during celebrations. Richly adorned with decorations and inscriptions. At center, a large Star of David – framing the Hebrew word "Zion" – encircled by eight small framed images of fish, birds, animals, a table set with beverage vessels, and more. These illustrations in turn encircled by Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "May you be granted many pleasant years of life in the celebration of Jerusalem, may it be rebuilt and reestablished speedily in our time, It shall be health to thy navel, and marrow to thy bones, Hayyim son of Aharon…". Rim of bowl decorated with vegetal pattern interspersed with four small medallions, each with single Hebrew letter, which, together, give Hebrew year "5/6/9/4" (1934).
Diameter: 9 cm. Good condition.
Reference: Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home, item nos. 72-74.
Silver, cast and engraved.
Small bowl, which would have been used by Jews in Afghanistan for drinking arak on holidays and during celebrations. Richly adorned with decorations and inscriptions. At center, a large Star of David – framing the Hebrew word "Zion" – encircled by eight small framed images of fish, birds, animals, a table set with beverage vessels, and more. These illustrations in turn encircled by Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "May you be granted many pleasant years of life in the celebration of Jerusalem, may it be rebuilt and reestablished speedily in our time, It shall be health to thy navel, and marrow to thy bones, Hayyim son of Aharon…". Rim of bowl decorated with vegetal pattern interspersed with four small medallions, each with single Hebrew letter, which, together, give Hebrew year "5/6/9/4" (1934).
Diameter: 9 cm. Good condition.
Reference: Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home, item nos. 72-74.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $300
Unsold
Kiddush cup ("piyala ye-brakha"). Bukhara, Uzbekistan, [first half of 20th century].
Silver, shaped, repoussé, engraved, and punched.
Cup in form of small bowl, supported on round, elevated base, placed in center of matching saucer with elevated rim. Cup and saucer decorated with recurrent, matching vegetal and geometric patterns: flowers, leaves, droplets ("boteh" or paisley), arches, and figure-8's.
Similar cups were also used for Kiddush by Jews in Afghanistan.
Height of cup: 6 cm. Diameter of saucer: 13 cm.
Reference: Center for Jewish Art, item no. 12806.
Purchased from Jewish family in Bukhara, Uzbekistan.
Silver, shaped, repoussé, engraved, and punched.
Cup in form of small bowl, supported on round, elevated base, placed in center of matching saucer with elevated rim. Cup and saucer decorated with recurrent, matching vegetal and geometric patterns: flowers, leaves, droplets ("boteh" or paisley), arches, and figure-8's.
Similar cups were also used for Kiddush by Jews in Afghanistan.
Height of cup: 6 cm. Diameter of saucer: 13 cm.
Reference: Center for Jewish Art, item no. 12806.
Purchased from Jewish family in Bukhara, Uzbekistan.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $350
Unsold
"Kulmus" (reed pen) Torah pointer. Afghanistan, 5720 [1960].
Silver, cast and engraved.
Flat, stylized Torah pointer with three segments – upper, middle, and lower – each with engraved decorations on either side: three fish on the upper segment; in the middle segment, a bird flanked by gazelles, two pairs of fish to the right and left, and flowers (and on the reverse side, a large Star of David); and a large flower on the lower segment. Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "Moses commanded us a Torah, the inheritance of the congregation of Jacob, 8th of Sivan Year 5720 [1960] / This is the kulmus that was dedicated by Yosef Baba Jan son of Binyamin Gul in honor of our Holy Torah...".
The Gul family originated in the Gilan Region of Iran. From there they migrated to Qazvin, then to Mashhad, finally arriving in Herat, Afghanistan in roughly 1746. For more on this subject, see Abraham Mor, "The Jews of Afghanistan: Family Names and Origins" on the website of Tel Aviv's Beit Hatfutsot Museum of the Jewish Diaspora.
In Afghanistan, the Torah pointer was referred to as a "kulmus" (literally, quill pen or reed pen) because of its similarity in appearance to the type of reed used by a scribe. The present Torah pointer is documented in the catalogue "Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home".
Length: 33 cm.
Reference: Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home, item no. 30 (photographed).
Silver, cast and engraved.
Flat, stylized Torah pointer with three segments – upper, middle, and lower – each with engraved decorations on either side: three fish on the upper segment; in the middle segment, a bird flanked by gazelles, two pairs of fish to the right and left, and flowers (and on the reverse side, a large Star of David); and a large flower on the lower segment. Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "Moses commanded us a Torah, the inheritance of the congregation of Jacob, 8th of Sivan Year 5720 [1960] / This is the kulmus that was dedicated by Yosef Baba Jan son of Binyamin Gul in honor of our Holy Torah...".
The Gul family originated in the Gilan Region of Iran. From there they migrated to Qazvin, then to Mashhad, finally arriving in Herat, Afghanistan in roughly 1746. For more on this subject, see Abraham Mor, "The Jews of Afghanistan: Family Names and Origins" on the website of Tel Aviv's Beit Hatfutsot Museum of the Jewish Diaspora.
In Afghanistan, the Torah pointer was referred to as a "kulmus" (literally, quill pen or reed pen) because of its similarity in appearance to the type of reed used by a scribe. The present Torah pointer is documented in the catalogue "Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home".
Length: 33 cm.
Reference: Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home, item no. 30 (photographed).
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
"Kulmus" (reed pen) Torah pointer. Afghanistan, [20th century].
Silver, cast and engraved.
Flat, stylized Torah pointer with three segments – upper, middle, and lower – each with engraved decorations in vegetal patterns. Reverse side with engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "...Rahman Asher".
Length: 21 cm.
Silver, cast and engraved.
Flat, stylized Torah pointer with three segments – upper, middle, and lower – each with engraved decorations in vegetal patterns. Reverse side with engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "...Rahman Asher".
Length: 21 cm.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
Two "kulmus" (reed pen) Torah pointers. Afghanistan / Bukhara or Dagestan (Central Asia), [20th century].
Silver, cast and engraved; niello.
1. [Bukhara or Afghanistan]. Flat, plain Torah pointer, undecorated. Long, rectangular handle, gently tapering toward hand. Flat hand with extended fingers and long thumb. Length: 29 cm.
2. [Bukhara or Dagestan]. Rectangular handle, surmounted by spherical ornament. Lower segment and spherical ornament decorated in vegetal and geometric patterns, with highlights blackened with niello. Upper segment undecorated. Clenched hand with long, gently flexed index finger and with cuffed wrist. Length: 19 cm.
Silver, cast and engraved; niello.
1. [Bukhara or Afghanistan]. Flat, plain Torah pointer, undecorated. Long, rectangular handle, gently tapering toward hand. Flat hand with extended fingers and long thumb. Length: 29 cm.
2. [Bukhara or Dagestan]. Rectangular handle, surmounted by spherical ornament. Lower segment and spherical ornament decorated in vegetal and geometric patterns, with highlights blackened with niello. Upper segment undecorated. Clenched hand with long, gently flexed index finger and with cuffed wrist. Length: 19 cm.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
Heart-shaped dedicatory plaque ("tass"), for Torah ark curtain. Iraq, 5677 [1917].
Sheet silver, cut, repoussé, and stamped; gilt.
Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "This is the Torah ark curtain [dedicated to] the soul of / the... elderly woman / Habiba daughter of Rahel wife of... / Aharon Ya'akov Karmosh may he rest in Eden / may her soul be bound up in the bond of everlasting life, passed away Tuesday / eighth of the month of Tevet / Year 5677 [1917]."
Another dedicatory plaque – virtually identical in design and commemorating the same woman – can be found in the collection of the Wolfson Museum of Jewish Art, Hechal Shlomo, Jerusalem; see: Jewish Life in Art and Tradition, p. 176. See also item nos. 188, 192 in this catalog.
Length: 30 cm. Width: 28 cm. Good condition. Minor warping and fractures to edges.
Sheet silver, cut, repoussé, and stamped; gilt.
Hebrew dedicatory inscription: "This is the Torah ark curtain [dedicated to] the soul of / the... elderly woman / Habiba daughter of Rahel wife of... / Aharon Ya'akov Karmosh may he rest in Eden / may her soul be bound up in the bond of everlasting life, passed away Tuesday / eighth of the month of Tevet / Year 5677 [1917]."
Another dedicatory plaque – virtually identical in design and commemorating the same woman – can be found in the collection of the Wolfson Museum of Jewish Art, Hechal Shlomo, Jerusalem; see: Jewish Life in Art and Tradition, p. 176. See also item nos. 188, 192 in this catalog.
Length: 30 cm. Width: 28 cm. Good condition. Minor warping and fractures to edges.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
Torah reading plaque. Iraqi Kurdistan, (Amadiya [Amedi]?), [first decades of 20th century].
Silver, cut, soldered, and engraved.
Designed as Tablets of the Law, engraved with Ten Commandments surmounted with Stars of David. Above this, a three-petaled flower made from 18th-century Austro-Hungarian Maria Theresa Thaler silver coins. Engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscription on back: "Donated by Susana daughter of Kazali [of the] Hayyim Family".
Length: 15 cm. Width: 9.5 cm.
Reference: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 254-55.
Silver, cut, soldered, and engraved.
Designed as Tablets of the Law, engraved with Ten Commandments surmounted with Stars of David. Above this, a three-petaled flower made from 18th-century Austro-Hungarian Maria Theresa Thaler silver coins. Engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscription on back: "Donated by Susana daughter of Kazali [of the] Hayyim Family".
Length: 15 cm. Width: 9.5 cm.
Reference: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 254-55.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
Torah reading plaque. Iraqi Kurdistan, (Amadiya [Amedi]?), 5699 [1939].
Silver, cut, soldered, and engraved.
Designed as Tablets of the Law, engraved with Ten Commandments, and surmounted with ornaments in silver thread and granulation, with suspension hole. Engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscription on back: "This plaque is dedicated to the synagogue by Hananiyah son of Varda, 5699 [1939]...".
Length: 13 cm. Width: 9 cm.
Reference: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 254-55.
Silver, cut, soldered, and engraved.
Designed as Tablets of the Law, engraved with Ten Commandments, and surmounted with ornaments in silver thread and granulation, with suspension hole. Engraved Hebrew dedicatory inscription on back: "This plaque is dedicated to the synagogue by Hananiyah son of Varda, 5699 [1939]...".
Length: 13 cm. Width: 9 cm.
Reference: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 254-55.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $400
Unsold
Belt crafted by Jewish silversmith. Sulaymaniyah (Slemani), Iraqi Kurdistan, [late 19th or early 20th century].
Silver (parcel gilt), cast, repoussé, and engraved; amber; cotton fabric.
Belt made from thick, broad, green strip of cotton fabric with small silver ornaments in recurrent pattern sewn on. Buckle large and dome-shaped, with vegetal patterns and parcel gilt octagonal star, with suspended chain with decorative hook at end. Long chain with amber bead sewn on next to buckle. Closed either by means of silver belt loop sewn on between ornaments, or with adjacent cloth loop.
A belt like this would be strapped around the baby following the circumcision ceremony; according to other sources, in Iraqi Kurdistan it was worn as a women's belt (the placement of the belt loop in the present belt suggests it was strapped around the baby).
80X8.5 cm.
References: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 214-15; Arab and Islamic Silver, p. 24.
Silver (parcel gilt), cast, repoussé, and engraved; amber; cotton fabric.
Belt made from thick, broad, green strip of cotton fabric with small silver ornaments in recurrent pattern sewn on. Buckle large and dome-shaped, with vegetal patterns and parcel gilt octagonal star, with suspended chain with decorative hook at end. Long chain with amber bead sewn on next to buckle. Closed either by means of silver belt loop sewn on between ornaments, or with adjacent cloth loop.
A belt like this would be strapped around the baby following the circumcision ceremony; according to other sources, in Iraqi Kurdistan it was worn as a women's belt (the placement of the belt loop in the present belt suggests it was strapped around the baby).
80X8.5 cm.
References: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 214-15; Arab and Islamic Silver, p. 24.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
Auction 81 - The Wily Lindwer Collection
July 13, 2021
Opening: $200
Unsold
Large, elegant women's belt buckle, apparently crafted by Jewish silversmith. Iraqi Kurdistan (Sulaymaniyah?), [late 19th or early 20th century].
Silver, repoussé, stamped, engraved, and pierced.
Consisting of two slightly convex rectangular parts with symmetrical vegetal patterns and droplet-like ("boteh" or paisley) patterns. Tapering arched silver ornaments soldered onto left and right edges. Closed with long pin.
36X9.5 cm. Missing chain formerly connecting pin to buckle.
Reference: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 214-15.
Silver, repoussé, stamped, engraved, and pierced.
Consisting of two slightly convex rectangular parts with symmetrical vegetal patterns and droplet-like ("boteh" or paisley) patterns. Tapering arched silver ornaments soldered onto left and right edges. Closed with long pin.
36X9.5 cm. Missing chain formerly connecting pin to buckle.
Reference: Jews of Kurdistan: Lifestyle, Tradition, and Art, pp. 214-15.
Category
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Kurdistan / Mountain Jews and the Caucasus
Catalogue Value
