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Frontispiece of Anshel of Kraków’s Merkeves ha-mishne (The Second Chariot), a Hebrew-Yiddish dictionary of biblical words. The earliest Yiddish book printed in Poland, it was published in 1534 in…
Contributor:
Anshel of Kraków, Szmuel, Aszer, and Eljakim Helicz
Places:
Kraków, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Kraków, Poland)
Date:
1534
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This is the frontispiece and first page of the Constantinople Polyglot Bible, the first of two multilingual editions of the Pentateuch printed by Eliezer Soncino in Constantinople. It contained the…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (Istanbul, Turkey)
Date:
1546
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A prayer (Ha-nerot halalu anu madlikin (“These lights we burn”), usually recited after the blessings for lighting the Hanukkah candles, is inscribed on the back panel of this Hanukkah lamp from…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Holy Roman Empire (Germany)
Date:
1574
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This bilingual Yiddish-English cover of a program for a variety show at Irving Music Hall on New York City’s Lower East Side advertises “high class Jewish vaudeville” and bills itself as “the finest…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1905
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This full-page advertisement for a benefit lunch, to be held that day, December 14, 1898, at the Thalia Theater in New York City, with the famed Yiddish actress Bertha Kalich (ca. 1872–1939), includes…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1898
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Shmuel Schulman’s micrograph is a tribute to Ḥoveve Zion, members of a nineteenth-century Zionist movement that sent pioneers to Palestine to develop settlements funded by Baron Edmond James de…
Contributor:
Shmuel Schulman
Places:
Safed, Ottoman Palestine (Safed, Israel)
Date:
Early 20th Century
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Cornell Capa took this picture of boys learning Torah or the Hebrew alphabet at a time when Hasidic survivors of the Holocaust were just beginning to rebuild their communities. Brooklyn, New York was…
Contributor:
Cornell Capa
Places:
Brooklyn, United States of America
Date:
1955
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This page illustrating the blowing of the shofar on Rosh Hashanah is from a Yiddish book of customs from Italy. By the sixteenth century, Yiddish-speaking Ashkenazic Jews were the largest groups of…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Date:
1500
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This cast and gilded bronze amulet from Italy includes a pair of dolphins as a design element. It is inscribed in Hebrew: “May no evil grieve you.”
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Date:
16th Century
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This is the frontispiece of a 1661 edition of Synagoga Judaica, a study of the customs and culture of German Jewry by Christian Hebraist, and polemical critic of Judaism, Johannes Buxtorf the Elder…
Contributor:
Johannes Buxtorf
Places:
Basel, Switzerland
Date:
1661