Showing Results 1 - 10 of 24
Public Access
Image
This eighteenth-century map of Venice includes the ghetto within which the city’s Jews were required to live from 1516 until Napoleon’s conquest of the Republic of Venice in 1797. The Venice ghetto…
Contributor:
Lodovico Furlanetto
Places:
Venice, Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
ca. 1729
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
Image
Born to converso parents and baptized as Manoel Dias Soeiro, Menasseh Ben Israel moved as a boy with his family to Amsterdam, where they reverted openly to Judaism. In 1626, he established the first…
Contributor:
Shalom Italia
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1640–1649
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
From May through August 1541, the forces of the Ottoman Empire laid siege to the city of Buda (present day Budapest, Hungary) and captured it, ushering in 150 years of Ottoman rule. This illustration…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Buda, Holy Roman Empire (Buda, Hungary)
Date:
1541
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
In 1705, the Nuremberg artist, Johannes Alexander Böner, published a slim volume about Fürth, Germany, containing several copper-engravings dealing with the life of Jews in the city. This print…
Contributor:
Johannes Alexander Böner
Places:
Fürth, Holy Roman Empire (Fürth, Germany)
Date:
1705
Subjects:
Public Access
Image
This flyer calls for the Jewish community to pay a ransom to rescue Jewish captives from the 1686 siege of Buda, which resulted in the capture of the Hungarian city from the Ottoman Empire by armies…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Buda, Ottoman Empire (Buda, Hungary)
Date:
1686
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
Image
The twelve-volume “Bermann Talmud'' was financed by the Court Jew Behrend Lehmann (Issachar Bermann Segal), printed in Frankfurt an der Oder, Germany, by Michael Gottschalk, and published by John…
Contributor:
Behrend Lehmann
Places:
Date:
1697–99
Subjects:
Restricted
Image
During his life, Samuel Abbas amassed an impressive library that included 1,136 books in different languages—Latin (more than four hundred works), Hebrew, Spanish, French, Dutch, German, and…
Contributor:
Samuel Abbas
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1693
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
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
Restricted
Image
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
Subjects:
Restricted
Image
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