Showing Results 1 - 10 of 68
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This map of the Temple in Jerusalem made in Safed by a Jewish scribe comes from an example of a “pilgrimage scroll,” also known as an “itinerary,” because they included instructions for visiting holy…
Contributor:
Uri of Biella
Places:
Safed, Ottoman Empire (Safed, Israel)
Date:
1564
Subjects:
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Public Access
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This diploma of Doctor of Medicine was awarded to Emanuel Colli by the University of Padua, Italy. Designed as a small, illuminated book, its four leaves are decorated with floral borders, and include…
Contributor:
Ioannes Aloysius Foppa de Rota
Places:
Padua, Venice (Padua, Italy)
Date:
1692
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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In the back of a manuscript collection of astronomical texts, which includes one of Abraham Ibn Ezra’s works on the use of the astrolabe (a tool for astronomical calculations), is a set of crude but…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Date:
ca. 1629
Subjects:
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This ketubah (marriage contract) from Damascus, signed on the 21st of Shevat 5466, or February 5, 1706, features a text set within an arch, and flanked on both sides and above with green and orange…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Damascus, Ottoman Empire (Damascus, Syria)
Date:
1706
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While ketubot (marriage contracts) are usually written in Aramaic, Karaite ketubot are written in Hebrew. They are often pentagonal in shape, most often with a pointed bottom. This example has a…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Chufut-Kale, Russian Empire (Hora Chufutkale, Ukraine)
Date:
1719
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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On this illustrated page from a prayer book, written in an Ashkenazic hand, the scribe Simeon ben Naphtali has added, to the prayers said at a wedding, an image of the prophet Elijah (on the left)…
Contributor:
Simeon ben Naphtali
Places:
Marckolsheim, France
Date:
1662
Subjects:
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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
Categories:
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Ḥay ibn Yaqẓān, composed by the Muslim philosopher Abū Bakr ibn Tufayl al-Qaysi (1110–1185), relates the story of Ḥay ibn Yaqẓān, literally “Alive, son of Awake,” as he grows up alone on a deserted…
Contributor:
Solomon Norzi
Places:
Date:
1527
Subjects:
Public Access
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In the Sephardic tradition, a “marriage contract” (ketubah), a symbolic betrothal of God and Israel, is read before the Torah reading on the first day of the holiday of Shavuot, which celebrates the…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Kingdom of Italy (Italy)
Date:
17th–18th Century
Subjects:
Categories:
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Jews first settled in Kaifeng, the capital of Henan province in central China, before 1127. According to scholars, they had come from India or Persia, spoke Persian, and worked as cotton dyers and…
Contributor:
Jean Domenge
Places:
Kaifeng, Qing Dynasty (Kaifeng, China)
Date:
1722