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This was the first printed map of the land of Israel in Hebrew. It was based on an earlier map by a Christian, Kruik van Adrichem, but Jacob Tsaddik removed the illustrations of the life of Jesus that…
Contributor:
Jacob ben Abraham Tsaddik
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1621
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This bronze physician’s mortar from Verona, Italy, is decorated with a seven-branched candelabrum, flanked by the Hebrew letters mem and resh, likely the initials for the Hebrew term for “physician’s…
Contributor:
Servius de Levis
Places:
Verona, Venice (Verona, Italy)
Date:
16th Century
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This astrolabe, an astronomical instrument, from the sixteenth century is inscribed in Hebrew characters.
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Date:
ca. 1550
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The physician and surgeon Issachar Baer Teller received his medical training by studying and practicing with other physicians in Prague. He completed his studies under the guidance of Joseph Solomon…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Prague, Holy Roman Empire (Prague, Czech Republic)
Date:
1637
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Commissioned to document people in their workplaces by a magazine, Edelstein was inspired to launch a project of photographing workers all over the world. Part of his series focused on shopkeepers…
Contributor:
Seymour Edelstein
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1988
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This detailed bilingual Hebrew-Yiddish register kept by Roza, a Jewish midwife in the Jewish community of the Dutch city of Groningen in the years from 1794 to 1832, provides basic information about…
Contributor:
Roza
Places:
Groningen, Dutch Republic (Groningen, Netherlands)
Date:
1794
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This is the title page and the first page of Pitron ḥalomot (Dream Interpretation), a work incorrectly attributed to Hayya ben Sherira Ga’on. The book was published by Gershom ben Eliezer Soncino (d…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Cairo, Ottoman Empire (Cairo, Egypt)
Date:
1557
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Printing, which Jews adopted immediately after its invention, helped to unify far-flung communities. Where previously Jewish learning had been transmitted through the individual copying of manuscripts…
Contributor:
Daniel Bomberg
Places:
Venice, Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1520/3
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This book was printed in Belvedere, outside Constantinople, by Reina Nasi, the daughter of Gracia Nasi, and widow of Joseph. She was the first Jewish woman to establish her own press.
Contributor:
Doña Reina Mendes
Places:
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (Istanbul, Turkey)
Date:
ca. 1593–1595
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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