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This Torah mantle, from about 1655, is embroidered with silk and gilt-silver thread and is richly decorated with curling, interlocking patterns. The crown dates from the middle of the nineteenth…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Venice, Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
ca. 1655
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This sumptuous velvet and gilt-metal-thread embroidered Torah ark curtain most likely began its life as the wedding gown of a well-to-do Jewish woman of the Ottoman Empire. It was unstitched and…
Places:
İzmir, Ottoman Empire (İzmir, Turkey)
Date:
Early 20th Century
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The kapporet is a short valance hung over the curtain of the Torah ark that first began to appear in Eastern Europe in the late seventeenth century. The griffins and crowns that appear on this kappore…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Zawichost, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Zawichost, Poland)
Date:
1700
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This splendid Torah ark curtain, made in Kriegshaber, Germany, is the work of the embroiderer Elkana Schatz Naumberg of Fürth, whose name appears in an inscription in the central bottom section. It is…
Contributor:
Elkana Schatz Naumberg
Places:
Kriegshaber, Holy Roman Empire (Kriegshaber, Germany)
Date:
1724
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According to the Hebrew inscription, this silk velvet, gilt silver-thread embroidery and silk brocade Torah wrapper was donated in 1727 or 1728 to the Scola Castigliana (a synagogue founded by Jews of…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Rome, Papal States (Rome, Italy)
Date:
1728
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This very early Torah ark curtain from Pesaro was embroidered by Rachel Olivetti and donated to the synagogue in honor of her marriage to Judah Montefiore. The Hebrew text is a poem celebrating and…
Contributor:
Rachel Olivetti of Pesaro
Places:
Pesaro, Duchy of Urbino (Pesaro, Italy)
Date:
1620