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The Spirit was launched in 1940 as a special supplement for newspapers, designed to help them compete with the crime and superhero comic magazines, which were then wildly popular. It ran as a…
Contributor:
Will Eisner
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1940
Subjects:
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This calligraphic print appears in Ben Shahn’s book Alphabet of Creation, based on a tale about how God created the world through the letters of the Hebrew alphabet taken from the Zohar, a thirteenth…
Contributor:
Ben Shahn
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1957
Categories:
Public Access
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Following his retirement, Hijman Binger created a daily prayer book, drawing its texts from well-known sources and illustrating the manuscript with the help of his children. Completed in 1820, the…
Contributor:
Hijman (Ḥayim ben Mordecai), Marcus, and Anthonie Binger
Places:
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Date:
1820
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Public Access
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In 1827, Tsar Nicholas I issued a statute that effectively made Russian Jews liable to military service, as part of a policy that sought to transform the Jewish population into integrated subjects who…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Shkudy, Russian Empire (Skuodas, Lithuania)
Date:
1864–1867
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The cover of Far folk un heymland features a red flag and Yiddish writing in which the letter qof has been stylized to resemble a hammer and sickle. The book was published when World War II was still…
Contributor:
A. Geftera
Places:
Date:
1943
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After surviving the war, Miklós Adler returned to his hometown of Debrecen and created sixteen woodcuts, signing them Ben Binyamin (“son of Benjamin”) in honor of his father. In this woodcut…
Contributor:
Miklós Adler
Places:
Terezin, Czechoslovakia (Terezin, Czech Republic)
Date:
1945
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David Oppenheim (1664–1736) was the chief rabbi of Prague. Born in Worms, he was the son of a communal leader and nephew of Samuel Oppenheim (1630–1703), financier and war contractor to Habsburg…
Contributor:
Samuel ben Moses
Places:
Dessau, Holy Roman Empire (Dessau, Germany)
Date:
1714
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Built by the non-Jewish architect Michael Kemmeter, the Alte Synagoge (Synagogue) was the first edifice in Berlin built specifically to serve this function. Originally known as the Heidereutergasse…
Contributor:
Michael Kemmeter, Anna Maria Werner, A.B. Goblin, Friedrich August Calau
Places:
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia (Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1714
Categories:
Public Access
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This woodcut from Libellus de Judaica confessione siue sabbato afflictionis (A Pamphlet Concerning the Jewish Faith or the Sabbath of Affliction), the second treatise of a zealous Christian convert…
Contributor:
Johannes Pfefferkorn
Places:
Cologne, Holy Roman Empire (Cologne, Germany)
Date:
1508
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These depictions of Jewish women from Adrianople (present day Edirne, Turkey) is from a travelogue by French geographer Nicolas Nicolay, who is believed to have done his own illustrations. Considered…
Contributor:
Nicolas de Nicolay
Places:
Venice, Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1585