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195x120mm. XII+207 pages. Hardcover. Gilt lettering on cover. Cover worn at edges and corners. Rebound.Pen inscription on first whitepage. Pencil inscriptions on few pages. Some pages edges slightly stained. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
xiv + 299pp., 24cm., 6th ed., softcover, 3 stamps (of which a small one at lower edges), G, R70312
Un volume broché de format in 8° de 500 pp. environ. Trace d'étiquette sur la couverture sinon bel état. Voir photo.
23x16.5cm. XI+348 pages. Hardcover. Cover rubbed and slightly curved. Cover corners and edges bumped and worn. Spine partly detached. Ex-library copy with usual marks. First whitepage torn. Few pages slightly age-stained. Pages yellowing. Else in good condition.
VOLUME TWO ONLY. IN YIDDISH. 285x230mm. XXXII+588 pages (pagination: 32 + 509-1096). Hardcover. Gilt spine. Spine and cover very slightly worn at edges. Cover slightly stained. Spine slightly loose. Pages slightly yellowing. Else is in good condition.
21x14cm. 90 pages. Softcover. In good condition.
Berlin: Georg Reimer, 1904. Cloth; 8vo. Xx, 223 pages. In German. SUBJECT (S) Jewish sermons, German. Sermons, German -- Jewish authors. OCLC lists three copies worldwide (Stanford, Princeton, Jewish University Library) . The twenty-page introduction is followed by a second title page identical to the first, and then the main text of the book. Proof copy with (author's? Editor's? ) editing marks throughout; later Bruno Kisch's copy; inside front cover bears his bookplate. Rebound, preserving original marbled boards. Pages very brown; a little chipping to some edges, and some edgewear to boards. Good condition. (LB-1)
RARE grammar of the Sumerian language written by the renowned Assyriologist Friedrich Delitzsch, professor of Assyriology in Leipzig, Berlin and Breslau universities. Among scholars and students of Sumerian language this book is known as an outstanding work. 230x165mm. XXV+158 pages. Blue cloth hardcover with gilt lettering on spine. Cover corners slightly worn. Spine edges slightly bumped. Spine has several tiny white paint stains. Previous owner's pen signature on whitepage upper corner. Inner cover slightly age-stained. Binding slightly visible between pages 144-145. Pages yellowing. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare grammar book is in good condition.
Contains plates in black and white. 21.5x13.5 cm. 68 pages. Softcover. Spine slightly chafed. Binding slightly visible on several pages. Else in good condition.
285x185 mm. X+409 pages. Hardcover. In good condition.
As New English Paperback. Pbo. Mint. Roy. 8vo. (23 x 15 cm). In Turkish. 472 p. Ills. Memoirs of Kamhi was the president of The Quincentennial Foundation established in 1989 for celebrating the quincentennial anniversary of the arrival of the Sephardi Jews to the Ottoman lands. Gördüklerim yasadiklarim.
IN HEBREW. Contains plates in black and white. 24.5X18 cm. 584+23+19 pages. Hardcover in dust jacket and cardboard box. In good condition.
IN HEBREW. 23x16 cm. 731 pages. Hardcover. Cover slightly rubbed. Spine edges and cover corners slightly bumped. Else in good condition.
(FT) 12mo. 310 pages. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) : Fiction. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Ex library. Pages tanned, Water stains in corners, good condition. (HebLit-4-1)
8vo. 172, 32, 16 pages. In Hebrew. Volume 2 only. SUBJECT (S) : Palestine. OCLC lists no copies worldwide. Ex library with usual markings, covers are very worn, pages darkened, some pages are chipped or loose, hinges are splitting, fair condition. (MX-7-9)
IN HEBREW. RARE comprehensive index of Biblical and early 20th century Palestine regions and settlements. Each location is given by its contemporary Arab name, its ancient Hebrew (Biblical or Talmudic) name when one is available, and in its modern Hebrew name, providing it was colonized at the time. For each location, short geographical and historical information is also provided, along with references to the appropriate ancient sources. Appended to this book are a list of Biblical sites whose location in modern Palestine was not yet determined, and a list of Roman and Greek names (in Latin letters) for sites, which differ considerably from the Hebrew and Arabic names. The wealth of information contained within this book was gathered and compiled by Eliahu Sappir (1869-1911), one of the prominent figures of the first Aliyah, an educator and a geographer. 235x180mm. XXIV+163 pages. Quarter-cloth black rebound Hardcover. Cover and spine worn and stained. Cover corners and edges bumped and peeling. Spine edges and hinges bumped, tattered and glued. Sticker residue on spine front hinge. Front whitepage torn-out/missing. Rear whitepage and last page upper corner wrinkled. Rear whitepage slightly age-stained. Title page slightly age-stained and partly missing - left bottom corner torn-out. Previous owner's name written in ink on title page upper edge/corner. Pages III-VI left bottom corner missing - NO damage to text. Pages VII-VIII left bottom corner missing with slight damage to text. Page XVII/XVIII coming loose from binding. Binding slightly visible between some pages. Page 1/2 fore edge torn. Several pages have tattered edge - NO damage to text. Pages browning. [SUMMARY]: This extremely rare book, an invaluable research aid for anyone interested in the ancient and modern history of the Holy Land, has sustained some damage, but is overall in good reading condition.
IN HEBREW. RARE comprehensive index of Biblical and early 20th century Palestine regions and settlements. Each location is given by its contemporary Arab name, its ancient Hebrew (Biblical or Talmudic) name when one is available, and in its modern Hebrew name, providing it was colonized at the time. For each location, short geographical and historical information is also provided, along with references to the appropriate ancient sources. Appended to this book are a list of Biblical sites whose location in modern Palestine was not yet determined, and a list of Roman and Greek names (in Latin letters) for sites, which differ considerably from the Hebrew and Arabic names. The wealth of information contained within this book was gathered and compiled by Eliahu Sappir (1869-1911), one of the prominent figures of the first Aliyah, an educator and a geographer. 250x180mm. XXIV+163 pages. Hardcover with gilt lettering. Cover and spine worn and stained. Cover corners and spine edges bumped and peeling. Cover edges peeling. Spine hinges partly cracked. Inner cover, text block edges and some pages age-stained. Pages browning. [SUMMARY]: Save for the aforementioned wear, this invaluable research aid for anyone interested in the ancient and modern history of the Holy Land, is in good condition.
(FT) 8vo. 191 pages. Illustrated. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) : Education - Palestine; Schools - Palestine. OCLC lists 25 copies worldwide. Scharfstein (1884-1972) was a Hebrew educator both in Galicia and the United States, where he moved in 1914. In 1916, he began teaching at the Teachers Institute of the Jewish Theological Seminary, eventually becoming professor of Jewish education, and serving there until 1960. "A prodigious contributor to the Hebrew press, his column in the American Hebrew weekly Hadoar dealt with political and, especially with literary events. From 1907 Scharfstein also published educational texts embracing Hebrew literature, Jewish education, Bible, and Hebrew language. " (Silberschlag, EJ) Ex library. Boards chipped and stained, back hinge starting, good condition. (HebLit-4-13)
New York: Ogen Publishing House of Histadruth Ivrith of America, 1957. Cloth; 4to. X, 562 pages. In Hebrew, with title page and table of contents in English on verso (Title in English "Hebrew Education and culture in Europe Between the Two World Wars. ") Text on verso of title page; "This book is the second in the series of 'Morasha' aiming to perpetuate the heritage of Jewish culture in the shattered communities of Europe. " Illustrated with photographs and tables. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Education -- Europe. Jews -- Intellectual life. Jewish religious education -- Europe. OCLC lists 25 copies worldwide. Backstrip has jagged tear extending more than halfway down; edges worn and cover generally scuffed. There is a stain on the lower edge of the book which extends 1/2" up most pages, not affecting text. Interior of book is very clean. Fair condition. (LB-1)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 21 cm. In Hebrew. Title translates to The Awakener. Includes April (33 pages) , May (33 pages) , June (33 pages) July-August (73 pages) , September (36 pages) , October (37 pages) , November (36 pages) , Issue from 1907 (39 pages) . Not to be confused with the Tel Aviv reprint of the first year. Early Hebrew periodical which features many of the periods most well-known Hebrew writers. This periodical featured commentary on current affairs and literature, and greatly influenced the young Jews of the highly-influential Second Aliyah. (EJ, 2008) . The editor, Y. H. Brenner is considered a pioneer in modern Hebrew literature. Brenner (1881-1921) was initially from Russia, but escaped to London after deserting the Russian army during the Russo-Japanese war. It was in London that Brenner became instrumental in the Hebrew literature movement and Zionism. This culminated in his emigration to Palestine where he rose to prominence before his murder in the 1921 Jaffa riots. (Wikipedia, 2018) . SUBJECTS: Hebrew literature, Modern -- Periodicals. OCLC lists 15 copies worldwide (OCLC: 45947005) . Ex-library with no markings. Most issues are unbound with significant edge wear. Some loss of text in November issue, but others are Good. Overall Good- Condition. (YID-30-27)
(FT) Hardcover, 38 pages, 12mo. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) : Psychology. Translation of Habit, its importance in education; an essay in pedagogical psychology. OCLC lists 2 copies online (Harvard, Penn) . Library stamp on front and back page cover. Yellowing to pages. Slight bumping to cover corner. Good condition. (Rab-48-2)
(FT) Hardcover, 8vo, xv, 145 pages, portrait. In Hebrew. SUBJECT(S) : Satire, Hebrew. Sacrifice -- Judaism. Purity, Ritual -- Judaism. Erter, Isaac. Other Titles: Dr. Isaak Erter's gesammelte Schriften. Erter (1791-1851) was a Hebrew satirist of the Haskalah. Born in Koniuszek near Przemysl, Erter, during the earlier part of his life, lived in various places including Lvov, where he, together with a group of young maskilim, was excommunicated in 1816 by Rabbi Jacob Ornstein; Budapest, where he studied medicine; and Brody, then an important commercial and cultural center for Galician Jewry, where he settled in 1831 and remained for the rest of his life. In addition to his literary work, Erter was also active communally among Haskalah circles, showing special interest in the plans for a reform of contemporary Jewish society. Toward the end of his life, he collaborated with his friend Y. H. Schorr in the early stages of the founding of He-Halutz, a Hebrew periodical dedicated to the study of Judaica in the spirit of religious reform, and distinguished by a boldly critical treatment of problems relating to Jewish tradition. Erter's only book, Ha-Zofeh le-Veit Yisrael, consists of five satires, all of which had been published separately with the addition of some personal correspondence relevant to his literary career. Noteworthy among the satires are the following: Hasidut ve-Hokhmah, Tashlikh, and Gilgul Nefesh. Written in the form of epistles, several of the satires seem to have been modeled on the work of Lucian, the second-century Greek satirist, whose writings were very popular in European Rationalist literature and which Erter came to know in Wieland's German translation. Lucian's satiric and ironic treatment of Greek mythology and of ignorant and boorish antiquity during its decline was adapted by Erter in his fight against the traditionalist Jewish society of his day. The recurring character a type of "persona satirae" "the watchman of the House of Israel, " has its source in the prophet-castigator of Ezekiel 3: 17; by virtue of the authority of the biblical figure, Erter's watchman reviews the reality of Jewish society in Galicia and Poland in the first half of the 19th century. In this narrative, written in an autobiographical manner, the "observer" gathers evidence and confronts the reader with confessions of figures belonging to an imaginary, fanciful world, confessions made in a dream state or after death. Having endowed them with a keen rhetoric ability, Erter enables these figures to explain their character and experience by ironic exaggeration, coupled with the idealistic pathos characteristic of the Haskalah movement (Werses in EJ, 2007) . OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Ex-library with bookplate. Hinge repair. Stained pages. Notes on some pages. Chipping to edges of first few pages. Bumped corners and chipped edges of cover and spine. Otherwise, good condition. (Rab-40-28)
IN HEBREW AND ENGLISH. 17X23.5 cm. 428+xix. Softcover. Cover edge's are slightly folded. Spine slightly faded and chafed, the bottom slightly wrinkled. Pen writing on first white page. Else in good condition.
12mo. 342 pages. In Hebrew. OCLC lists 1 copy worldwide (Univ of Manitoba) . SERIES: Sifriyat "Dvir La`am. " Hazaz (1898-1973) was a Russian Hebrew writer. As a young man, he worked for the newspaper Ha-Am during the Russian Revolution, and escapes pogroms of 1920 by fleeing to the Crimean Mountains before moving to the recently-dismembered Ottoman lands and then to Western Europe. In 1931, he moved to Jerusalem. Hazaz had first been published in 1918, while still in Russia; his early stories were well received. In both his early writing and that done later in Germany and Israel, he conveys the anxiety felt by Jews during the early 20th century, between the Diaspora and the establishment of the state of Israel. For his contributions to Hebrew literature, Hazaz was awarded the Israel Prize twice, first in 1953 and again in 1971. After his death, the Hebrew Literary Center's building in Jerusalem was named after him. (EJ, 2007) Shalom Spiegel's copy with his bookplate. Has dust jacket. Very good condition. (HebLit-4-25)