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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
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David Oppenheim (1664–1736) was the chief rabbi of Prague. Born in Worms, he was the son of a communal leader and nephew of Samuel Oppenheim (1630–1703), financier and war contractor to Habsburg…
Contributor:
Samuel ben Moses
Places:
Dessau, Holy Roman Empire (Dessau, Germany)
Date:
1714
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This map showing the Naḥmanides Synagogue in Jerusalem, named after the medieval rabbi, was made in Italy by a Jewish scribe and is an example of a “pilgrimage scroll.” Pilgrimage scrolls were known…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Date:
16th Century
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This woodcut from Libellus de Judaica confessione siue sabbato afflictionis (A Pamphlet Concerning the Jewish Faith or the Sabbath of Affliction), the second treatise of a zealous Christian convert…
Contributor:
Johannes Pfefferkorn
Places:
Cologne, Holy Roman Empire (Cologne, Germany)
Date:
1508
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These depictions of Jewish women from Adrianople (present day Edirne, Turkey) is from a travelogue by French geographer Nicolas Nicolay, who is believed to have done his own illustrations. Considered…
Contributor:
Nicolas de Nicolay
Places:
Venice, Venice (Venice, Italy)
Date:
1585
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Johann Christoph Georg Bodenschatz’s Kirchliche Verfassung der heutigen Juden, sonderlich derer in Deutschland (Religious Constitution of Today’s Jews, Especially Those in Germany), published in…
Contributor:
Johann Christoph Georg Bodenschatz, Georg Paul Nusbiegel
Places:
Frankfurt am Main, Holy Roman Empire (Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Date:
1748/9
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This image depicts the interior of the synagogue that served the Beth Israel congregation in Amsterdam. Before 1639, there were three Sephardic congregations in Amsterdam: Beth Jacob (founded possibly…
Contributor:
Jan Veenhuyzen
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1647
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Originating from the Iberian Peninsula, the de Pinto family were wealthy merchant bankers who lived in Amsterdam from the seventeenth century on. In Spain, members of the family had converted to…
Contributor:
Abraham Rademaker
Places:
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Date:
1730/1
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This page from a Haggadah produced in Amsterdam is an example of the work of Joseph Ben David Leipnik, a prominent eighteenth-century scribe and artist known particularly for his illustrated Haggadahs…
Contributor:
Joseph Leipnik
Places:
Holy Roman Empire (Altona, Germany)
Date:
1737
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This illustration is from Franciscan monk Eugène Roger’s La terre saincte (The Holy Land), a comprehensive study of the Land of Israel which includes dozens of etchings depicting Jewish, Muslim, Druze…
Contributor:
Eugène Roger
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1646