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The manuscript is believed to be the earliest extant Reform Jewish liturgical composition. An early example of the work of Giacomo Meyerbeer, “Hallelujah” was probably prepared for use at a service at…
Contributor:
Giacomo Meyerbeer
Places:
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia (Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1847
Categories:
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In this table, giving the notation for chanting the Torah, the musical notes indicate the melody of each cantillation mark, while the Hebrew words below them indicate the name and shape of the mark.
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Holy Roman Empire (Germany)
Date:
ca. 1611
Subjects:
Categories:
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This glimpse into an eighteenth-century German Jewish marriage ceremony offers an opportunity to consider how gender roles have changed for this vital ritual.
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Frankfurt, Holy Roman Empire (Frankfurt (Oder), Germany)
Date:
1748
Subjects:
Categories:
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
Subjects:
Categories:
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This setting for Psalm 92 is one example of the innovative music composed by Louis Lewandowski, Samuel Naumbourg, and Salomon Sulzer (1804–1890) for the synagogues of the new Reform movement. Their…
Contributor:
Louis Lewandowski
Places:
Berlin, Germany
Date:
1876
Categories:
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Designed in the German neoclassical style, the Wörlitz synagogue was modeled on Rome’s Temple of Vesta, featuring a circular building with a conical roof. It was commissioned by Prince Leopold…
Contributor:
Friedrich Wilhelm von Erdmannsdorff
Places:
Wörlitz, Holy Roman Empire (Wörlitz, Germany)
Date:
1789–1790