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This Haggadah from Prague, printed by Gershom and Grunim Katz with illustrations that are thought to be by Ḥayyim ben David Shaḥor, is one of the earliest Haggadahs ever printed. It was the first…
Contributor:
Gershom Katz, Ḥayyim Schwarz
Places:
Prague, Holy Roman Empire (Prague, Czech Republic)
Date:
1526
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This is a Spanish edition of David Nieto’s Mateh Dan (The Tribe of Dan). David Nieto’s best-known work constitutes a defense of the oral law and rabbinic tradition, addressed to former New Christians…
Contributor:
David Nieto
Places:
London, Great Britain (London, United Kingdom)
Date:
1714
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The supposed author of Josippon (an account of Jewish history from the Garden of Eden to the destruction of the Second Temple) was Josephus Flavius, though it is now generally believed that the book…
Contributor:
Sebastian Münster
Places:
Basel, Switzerland
Date:
1541
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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
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The Jewish couple in Frankfurt am Main depicted here are wearing distinctive clothing that would have clearly identified them as Jews: the man’s collar, hat, and cloak, and the woman’s ruff and winged…
Contributor:
Caspar Luyken
Places:
Nuremberg, Holy Roman Empire (Nuremberg, Germany)
Date:
1703
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Printing, which Jews adopted immediately after its invention, helped to unify far-flung communities. Where previously Jewish learning had been transmitted through the individual copying of manuscripts…
Contributor:
Daniel Bomberg
Places:
Venice, Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1520/3
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During his life, Samuel Abbas amassed an impressive library that included 1,136 books in different languages—Latin (more than four hundred works), Hebrew, Spanish, French, Dutch, German, and…
Contributor:
Samuel Abbas
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1693
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This is an image of the title page of the first printing of Yom Tov Lipmann Mühlhausen’s Sefer ha-nitsaḥon (The Book of Victory). The book was first published in Altdorf in 1644 by the priest Theodore…
Contributor:
Yom Tov Lipmann Mühlhausen, Theodore Hackspan
Places:
Altdorf bei Nürnberg, Holy Roman Empire (Altdorf bei Nürnberg, Germany)
Date:
Late 14th to early 15th Century
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This page comes from the first of six volumes of Guilielmus Surenhuys’s translation of the Mishnah into Latin, printed in Amsterdam. At center is a depiction of Moses and Aaron standing beside a…
Contributor:
Willem Surenhuys
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1698
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In 1705, the Nuremberg artist, Johannes Alexander Böner, published a slim volume about Fürth, Germany, containing several copper-engravings dealing with the life of Jews in the city. This print…
Contributor:
Johannes Alexander Böner
Places:
Fürth, Holy Roman Empire (Fürth, Germany)
Date:
1705