Showing Results 1 - 7 of 7
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The master silversmith Rötger Herfurth was particularly well known for his Hanukkah lamps, most of which have backplates and rampant lions, a style he popularized and which came to be known as the…
Contributor:
Rötger Herfurth
Places:
Frankfurt am Main, Holy Roman Empire (Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Date:
ca. 1769–1776
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Although few examples of the work of embroiderer Jacob Koppel Gans remain, he is best known for this Torah ark curtain and valance, dating to 1772 or 1773, made of velvet and embroidered with metallic…
Contributor:
Jacob Koppel Gans
Places:
Holy Roman Empire (Bavaria, Germany)
Date:
1772–1773
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The purpose of the Torah crown is visually to augment the status of the Torah scroll, emphasizing its importance and centrality to Jewish life. These magnificent silver ornaments are placed over the…
Contributor:
Wilhelmus Angenendt
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1809
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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This rare example of an eighteenth-century American snuff box made of gold may have been made by its goldsmith Myer Myers in honor of the opening of a new Masonic lodge in New York. The cover of the…
Contributor:
Myer Myers
Places:
New York, British America and the British West Indies (New York City, United States of America)
Date:
1770
Categories:
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This postage stamp with an image of King Leopold I of Belgium was the first stamp issued on the European continent.
Contributor:
Jacques Wiener
Places:
Brussels, Belgium
Date:
1849
Subjects:
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This Torah shield contains a rare example of a personal inscription by the silversmith, stating: “This is the work of my hands in which I take pride, Ze’ev ben Abraham [?], silversmith from Piotrków…
Contributor:
Ze’ev ben Abraham [?]
Places:
Piotrków, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Piotrków Trybunalski, Poland)
Date:
1766
Subjects:
Categories:
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Torah finials are a pair of ornaments used to decorate the upper ends of the rollers on which the Torah scroll is wound. The Hebrew term rimonim, which means “pomegranates,” references the…
Contributor:
Myer Myers
Places:
Philadelphia, British America and the British West Indies (Philadelphia, United States of America)
Date:
1776