Showing Results 21 - 30 of 410
Public Access
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Traditionally, until increased access to doctors and hospitals was available after World War I, many East European Jews relied on folk medicine, which included amulets and magical cures. Books, like…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Date:
ca. 1600
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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These illustrated pages are from a manuscript copy of Sefer goralot (Book of Lots), a treatise on geomancy, which was a method of divination popular in the medieval world. The text was attributed…
Contributor:
Abraham Ibn Ezra
Places:
Córdoba, Spanish Empire (Córdoba, Spain)
Date:
18th Century
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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This two-page spread from Elijah ben Moses Loanz’s Toledot Adam (The Generations of Adam) includes examples of some of the kabbalistic amulets and formulae for which he was famous.
Contributor:
Elijah Loanz
Places:
Wilhermsdorf, Holy Roman Empire (Wilhermsdorf, Germany)
Date:
1734
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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This map showing tombs in the land of Israel was drawn in Italy by a Jewish scribe and is an example of a “pilgrimage scroll.” Pilgrimage scrolls, also known as itineraries, included visual and…
Contributor:
Unknown
Date:
16th Century
Subjects:
Public Access
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This maḥzor (holiday prayer book), containing the Jewish prayers according to the Italian rite, was written by the scribe Eliezer ben Abraham of Pisa, for Yema, the widow of Moses of Modena (referred…
Contributor:
Eliezer ben Abraham of Pisa
Places:
Modena, Duchy of Modena and Reggio (Modena, Italy)
Date:
1531
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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A month after the birth of future Emperor Joseph II (March 13, 1741), the Jews of Prague held a festive procession in honor of the happy event. The procession, which was planned and led by the…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Prague, Holy Roman Empire (Prague, Czechoslovakia)
Date:
1741
Categories:
Public Access
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This ketubah (marriage contract) from Padua, Italy, marks the marriage of Samuel ben Gerson ha-Kohen me-ha-ḥazanim (“of the cantors,” or Cantarini) and Colomba bat David Aziz. The groom was a…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Padua, Venice (Padua, Italy)
Date:
1732
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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The Bechhofen Synagogue (built in 1685) is believed to have been the largest wooden synagogue in Germany. The interior of the synagogue was painted with lavish decorations in 1732 and 1733, in typical…
Contributor:
Eliezer Zusman of Brody
Places:
Bechhofen, Holy Roman Empire (Bechhofen, Germany)
Date:
1684
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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These silver Torah finials with bells adorned a Torah scroll at the consecration ceremony of the Mill Street Synagogue of Congregation Shearith Israel, which opened in New York in 1730 and was located…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
New York City, Great Britain (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1730
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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Moses ben Abraham Pescarol’s illuminated scroll of Esther, completed in Ferrara, constitutes one of the oldest and most unusual examples of illustrated manuscripts of this biblical book, which is…
Contributor:
Moses Pescarol
Places:
Ferrara, Papal States (Ferrara, Italy)
Date:
1616