Showing Results 101 - 110 of 257
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This page of selichot (penitential prayers) is from a Dutch translation of penitential Prayers and Psalms made for Sarah de la Farra in Amsterdam.
Contributor:
David de Aron Uziel Cardoso
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1714
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Public Access
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This elaborately decorated title page is from a book of Psalms created by the scribe Nathan ben Samson in Gross Meseritsch, Moravia (today Velké Meziříčí, Czech Republic). On the left is Aaron in his…
Contributor:
Nathan ben Samson of Meseritsch
Places:
Gross Meseritsch, Holy Roman Empire (Velké Meziříčí, Czech Republic)
Date:
1728
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Public Access
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The masterpiece of eighteenth-century Ladino literature is the encyclopedic commentary on the Bible, Me‘am lo‘ez (From a People of Foreign Tongue), by Jacob Huli, the first volume of which was…
Contributor:
Jacob Huli
Places:
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (Istanbul, Turkey)
Date:
1730
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Public Access
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Portrait of Solomon Ayllon, Chief Rabbi of the Sephardic Congregations in London and Amsterdam from 1700 to 1728. This portrait was printed at the time of his death to commemorate him.
Contributor:
Jacobus Houbraken
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1728
Categories:
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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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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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Sifre ‘evronot—manuals for calculating the Jewish calendar, including leap years and holidays—were a popular genre of Ashkenazic illustrated manuscripts in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries…
Contributor:
Asher bar Samuel ha-Kohen, Leyb ben Samuel Oppenheim
Places:
Frankfurt am Main, Holy Roman Empire (Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Date:
1624
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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