Showing Results 1 - 9 of 9
Public Access
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A page from Libro de embezer las linguas Ingleza y Yudish (Book for Learning English and Yiddish), a guidebook for Ladino-speaking immigrants in Yiddish and English with Ladino transliteration and…
Contributor:
Moise Gadol
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1916
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Cover page of G. Bocz’s Yiddish-language biology textbook, Geviksn: Baarbet Avrom Golomb (Plants: Reworked by Avrom Golomb).
Contributor:
Avrom Golomb
Places:
Warsaw, Russian Empire (Warsaw, Poland)
Date:
1919
Subjects:
Public Access
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The art of chiromancy (palmistry), which divines a person’s nature and often his or her future by examining the palm and fingers (and sometimes forehead), dates back to the ancient Near East and…
Contributor:
Moses ben Elijah Gallena
Places:
Crete, Venice (Crete, Greece)
Date:
1715
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Title page of the first known printed version of the Ku-bukh (Cow Book), a sixteenth-century collection of Yiddish fables, published in Verona, Italy in 1595. The later compendium of Yiddish stories…
Places:
Verona, Venice (Verona, Italy)
Date:
1595
Subjects:
Public Access
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Advertisement for an October 20, 1918, Yiddish production of Komishe nakht, a French comedy by José Sanz Pérez, adapted into Yiddish by M. Oyerbakh.
Contributor:
Salon Casa Suiza
Places:
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Date:
1912
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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The actor, comedian, and playwright Donat (David) Herrnfeld grew up in the small town of Raab (Győr) in Hungary; his family later moved to Vienna. Donat and his siblings performed and toured early on…
Contributor:
Photographer Unknown
Places:
Germany, Germany
Date:
Early 20th Century
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Der fraynd (The Friend) was the first Yiddish daily in the Russian Empire. Founded by Shaul Ginzburg in St. Petersburg in 1903, Der fraynd was for several years the only Yiddish daily permitted in the…
Contributor:
Shaul Ginsburg
Date:
1903
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Illustration of a baseball diamond in a short primer on the game of baseball published in the summer of 1909 in the Yiddish-daily Forverts (Forward). Some of the words in the picture are…
Date:
1909
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Sheet music for “At the Yiddish Wedding Jubilee,” a song popularized by Sophie Tucker (ca. 1884–1966). Born Sophia Kalish in Tulchyn (today in Ukraine), Sophie Tucker immigrated to the United States…
Contributor:
Jack Glogau, Joe McCarthy, Al Piantadosi
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1914