Auction 91 Part 1 Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
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1. "Mass'ei Yisrael…" ("wherein it is told of our brethren of the Children of Israel, dispersed to the lands of Asia and Africa…"), by J.J. Benjamin. Translated to Hebrew by David Gordon. Lyck (Elk, Poland): R. Zvi Hirsch Petzoll, 1859.
[1] f., [16], 134 pp., 20.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Inked library inked stamps. Tears, including open tears, mostly minor. Few repairs with adhesive tape. Title page mounted onto paper for reinforcement. Some handwritten notations. Fine. Later binding.
2. "Even Sapir…" ("Touring throughout the Land of Ham [Egypt], the Red Sea, Yemen, all of East India, the New Land of Australia…") by Jacob Saphir HaLevi. Part I. Lyck: M'kize Nirdamim, 1866. With: "Even Sapir, Part II… Eden, India Bombay, Bene Israel… Calcutta… Australia, Sydney, Melbourne, New Zealand…"), by Jacob Saphir. Mainz: Buchdruckerei vin J. Brill, 1874.
[10], 111 ff; [10], 237, [1] pp., 21.5 cm. Good condition. Stains. Minor blemishes and tears. Scorch marks to one leaf. Inked library stamps. Fine, later binding.
224 forms (printed on 56 leaves), from the register of the Jewish community of Thessaloniki, recreated after the great fire in 1917, with names, places of residence and photographs. Thessaloniki, 1924. Ladino.
56 printed leaves, each bearing four declaration forms: "We the undersigned declare that […] is a native of Thessaloniki". The forms are filled in by hand, bear portrait photographs of those registered, and are signed by witnesses, members of the local Jewish community.
In the early 20th century, the Jewish community of Thessaloniki was one of the largest and most thriving Jewish communities in the Balkan. The Jewish community constituted nearly half of the population of the city. It had dozens of synagogues, Jewish and Hebrew schools, publishing houses, newspapers and even a modern, well-equipped Jewish hospital.
In 1917, an accidental fire that burned for 32 hours destroyed thousands of houses in the city, leaving some 70,000 people homeless. Along with the local houses, synagogues, schools, banks and offices, the fire destroyed the archives of the Jewish community which held records of centuries-long Jewish presence in Thessaloniki. In order to obtain compensation, the victims of the fire were required to prove residency, and so the Jewish community had to build a new community register. The present forms, part of the new register, state that the persons listed were indeed residents of the city.
56 ff., 33 cm. Condition varies (good to good-fair condition). Creases and stains (mostly minor). Closed and open tears to edges (some mended with tape).
Handwritten and illuminated certificate of appreciation, presented to Philip Leach [Leachinski], upon the end of his tenure as president of the Nottingham Palestine Association. Nottingham, England, 1925. English.
The text is written in calligraphic script and decorated in the style of medieval illuminated manuscripts. Signed by several members of the Nottingham Palestine Association. Beneath the signatures – the Hebrew verse "for our people and the cities of our God" (2 Samuel 10:12). On top – the Hebrew word Zion within a Star of David.
Thick card, 35.5X45.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and blemishes.
Handbill urging British Jews to join the military. London: The Publicity Department, Central London Recruiting Depot, [ca. 1915]. Yiddish.
The handbill urges Jewish parents to encourage their children to join the British Army, reminding them that Britain did everything at its disposal to assist its Jews, and calling them to respond in kind. The prospected recruits are instructed to present themselves to the London recruiting depot, headed by Major Lionel de Rothschild.
The handbill is signed in print by chairman of the "Jewish War Services Committee", Edmund Sebag-Montefiore, and secretary of the committee, Samuel Stephany.
For additional information on the Jewish War Services Committee, see: Justin Cavernelis-Frost, 'There are three types of men': Lionel de Rothschild and the Jewish War Services Committee, 1915-1919 (Archive Review of the Year 2013-2014).
19X25.5 cm. Good condition. Minor marginal stains.
Lot 51 Collection of Printed Items – Aid Organization "Federation of Ukrainian Jews" – London, 1920s
Included: • "The Call of Ukraine", booklet with a summary of the annual conference of the organization, 1923 (enclosed are two postage stamps with the logo of the conference). • A letter of appreciation for a donation, typewritten on official stationery. • "The menorah, A Chanukah Journal", issued by the organization, with illustrations, a list of donors to the organization and a supplement for children (printed separately). 1923. • Illustrated form (not filled in) for a Hanukkah donation. • Two fund-raising handbills. • And more.
Two of the items are addressed to Rev. Isaac Livingstone, Minister of Golders Green Synagogue in London.
Enclosed: a handbill issued by the Russian Jewish Relief Fund.
Size and condition vary. Good-fair overall condition.
Folding program, printed on both sides. A color illustration of a man flying a blue-and-white flag is printed on front.
29.5X20.5 cm (when open). Good condition.
The Book of Bereshit and the first chapters of the Book of Shemot – from a bibliophile edition of the Five Books of the Torah, published by the Soncino-Gesellschaft, [Berlin, 1931].
In 1931-1933, the Soncino Gesellschaft der Freunde des Jüdischen Buches ("Soncino Society of Friends of the Jewish Book" in Germany, published a bibliophile edition of the Five Books of the Torah. The edition was printed in 850 copies; the type and initials were designed by Marcus Behmer.
The Book of Bereshit and chapters 1-3 of the Book of Shemot were printed first, followed by the rest of the books of the Torah (Soncino-Gesellschaft intended to go on to publish the rest of the books of the Bible, yet the drastic political changes in Germany brought the project to an abrupt end).
Enclosed is a prospectus (4 pages) in German, about the present edition (1931).
The Book of Bereshit is complete; Book of Shemot – chapter 1 to chapter 3, verse 3. With general title page for the Five Books of the Torah.
[36] ff., 40 cm. Good condition. Stains. Browning to first and last page. Blank card boards (stained), partially detached. Without spine.
Enclosed prospectus: [1] folded leaf (4 pages), 40 cm. Stains. Browning to first and last page. Minor blemishes.
Printed in a limited edition of 100 copies, on fine paper, for friends of the author. Decorative initial in red.
[1], 5-14, [1] pp., 24 cm. Good condition. Minor stains. Original wrappers. Minor blemishes to wrappers; tears to spine.
An anthology on the giving of the Torah. Copy no. 4 from a bibliophile edition of 100 copies, printed on high-quality paper.
Enclosed: a printed card reading "We hereby present you with S.Y. Agnon's latest book, Atem Re’item, in memory of our late father, who was still with us to read the galley proofs. The Schocken Family".
[3], 226, [3] pp., 30 cm. Good condition. Stains (mostly to edges). Original binding (stains to spine) and dust jacket (with stains and tears).
Three-volume edition of the Koren Bible, printed in a large format on high-quality paper.
Torah: [3] ff., 327 pp. Nevi'im: [2] ff., 589 pp., [1] f. Ketubim: [2] ff., 374 pp, [1] f. 34 cm. Good condition. A few stains. Minor closed and open tears to edges of some leaves. Nevi'im: slits to some pages. Pp. 413-423 bound twice.
Lot 137 The Birds' Head Haggadah – Facsimile Edition, Tarshish Publishing House – Jerusalem, 1965-67
A color facsimile edition, printed on heavy, high-quality paper, of the illuminated Birds' Head Haggadah manuscript (Germany, ca. 1300). Two volumes: facsimile volume (printed in 1965), and an introductory volume edited by Dr. Moshe Spitzer (printed in 1967; English).
The English colophon of the facsimile volume reads: "Printed in collotype by Kunstanstalt Max Jaffe in Vienna and published in 600 numbered copies as the first publication of the L. A. Mayer Library for Beth David Solomons by Tarshish Books Jerusalem, 1965." Copy no. 120.
The Birds' Head Haggadah is the earliest illuminated German Haggadah known to have survived as a separate codex, independent of the prayer book. It is distinguished by its extraordinarily unique illustrations of human figures with birds' heads – a most peculiar innovation likely devised by the illustrator as a means of abiding by the biblical prohibition against rendering a graven image: "Thou shalt not make for thyself any graven image, nor any manner of likeness…" (Exodus 20:4). Most of the figures are depicted wearing the so-called "Jewish Hat" (German: "Judenhut, ") the conical head covering Jews in Germany were legally required to wear. The illustrations present various biblical scenes alongside depictions of holiday customs and envisionings of the Redemption.
Volume I: [48] ff., [1] colophon leaf. Volume II: 126 pp., [1] f., [31] plates (numbered 129-159), 28 cm. Top edges gilt. Both volumes with vellum spine, gilt. In original matching card slipcases. Good condition. Minor blemishes to bindings and to slipcases. Minor stains, mostly to endpapers.
Text illuminated throughout; each page chromolithographed in gold, red, blue, green and black. Fine, gilt-decorated leather binding (presumably later); marbled endpapers. All edges gilt.
[16] ff., 19.5 cm. Good condition. Foxing, primarily to flyleaves. Cracks along spine
