Showing Results 1 - 9 of 9
Public Access
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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, Republic of Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1522/3–1524
Subjects:
Restricted
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This Haggadah, decorated in the Ashkenazic tradition, was copied in northern Italy. As is traditional for Ashkenazic Haggadahs, illustrations appear in the margins and frame the text. At the top left…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Date:
1502
Subjects:
Public Access
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This maḥzor (holiday prayer book), containing the Jewish prayers according to the Italian rite, was written by the scribe Eliezer ben Abraham of Pisa, for Yema, the widow of Moses of Modena (referred…
Contributor:
Eliezer ben Abraham of Pisa
Places:
Modena, Duchy of Modena and Reggio (Modena, Italy)
Date:
1531
Subjects:
Public Access
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Moses ben Abraham Pescarol’s illuminated scroll of Esther, completed in Ferrara, constitutes one of the oldest and most unusual examples of illustrated manuscripts of this biblical book, which is…
Contributor:
Moses Pescarol
Places:
Ferrara, Papal States (Ferrara, Italy)
Date:
1616
Subjects:
Restricted
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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, Republic of Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1520/3
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
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Kabbalist Elijah Menaḥem ben Abba Mari Ḥalfan constructed this diagram, now stained and torn, with the assistance of his tutor Abraham Sarfati. It depicts the sefirotic system and includes Ḥalfan’s…
Contributor:
Elijah Menaḥem Ḥalfan
Places:
Venice, Republic of Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1533
Subjects:
Public Access
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Like Torah scrolls, the scroll of the biblical book of Esther, read ritually in the synagogue on the holiday of Purim, must be completely unadorned. However, in the sixteenth century, for reasons…
Contributor:
Andrea Marelli
Places:
Rome, Papal States (Rome, Italy)
Date:
1573
Subjects:
Restricted
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This manuscript page of Deuteronomy 1:1–7 is from a translation of the Hebrew Bible into Yiddish, from Italy. It is decorated with two storks and an ornate chapter heading with the opening word of the…
Contributor:
Unknown
Places:
Date:
16th Century
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
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This is the frontispiece to the first volume of Blasio Ugolino’s Thesaurus Antiquitatum Sacrarum, a thirty-four-volume collection of Latin treatises on Jewish customs, laws, institutions, and sacred…
Contributor:
Blasio Ugolino, Giovanni Cattini
Places:
Venice, Republic of Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1744