1 811 résultats
Original Cloth. 8vo. 90 Leaves. 25 cm. In Hebrew. Sha'agat Aryeh, published for survivors and refugees in Europe; with prefatory printed dedication from Rabbi Nathan Baruch of Vaad Hatzala. Following the end of the Second World War, the Vaad's activities, centered in Germany and France, consisted of distributing funds and shipments of food and religious books to Displaced Persons camps in Germany and newly established yeshivot. It provided spiritual rehabilitation to remnants of Jewish communities destroyed during the Holocaust. Publication of Aryeh Leib ben Asher Gunzberg (Gintsburg) (1695-1785) responsa titled Shaagat Aryeh (The Roar of the Lion; first published 1755) . The work brought him lasting recognition and has been republished at least 40 times since; it is still considered to be an essential text of rabbinic learning. Shaagat Aryeh rejected the use of pilpul he had once indulged in and insisted on a direct approach of the Talmudic text with no special attention given to the contributions of the sixteentheighteenth-century authors. - YIVO Encyclopedia. Subjects: Responsa - 1600-1800. Responsa. 1600 1800. Vaad Hatzala. OCLC lists 8 copies. Boards loose, worn edges; pages lightly aged; otherwise clean and fresh. Good + condition. (HOLO2-117-54)
Hardcover, 270 pages, illustrated, 4to, 28 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Hungary -- Biography. Jewish youth -- Hungary -- Biography. Zionism -- Hungary -- History -- 20th century. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jewish resistance -- Hungary. Jews, Hungarian -- Israel -- Biography. Holocaust survivors -- Israel -- Biography. Ondergrondse organisaties. Joden. Zionisten. Hongarije. Note(s) : "Copyright (c) The Society for the Research of the History of the Zionist Yorth Movement in Hungary. "-Title page verso. Includes bibliography (p. 261-264) and index. Wear to corners and binding. Otherwise, good condition. (Holo2-16-23)
Hardcover, 270 pages, illustrated, 4to, 28 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Hungary -- Biography. Jewish youth -- Hungary -- Biography. Zionism -- Hungary -- History -- 20th century. World War, 1939-1945 -- Jewish resistance -- Hungary. Jews, Hungarian -- Israel -- Biography. Holocaust survivors -- Israel -- Biography. Ondergrondse organisaties. Joden. Zionisten. Hongarije. Note(s) : "Copyright (c) The Society for the Research of the History of the Zionist Yorth Movement in Hungary. "-Title page verso. Includes bibliography (p. 261-264) and index. Very good condition. (Holo2-16-23A)
Softbound. 8vo. XI, 68 pages. 23 cm. First edition. Polish and English on opposite pages. Contains over a hundred black and white illustrations and plates. Poems of the Holocaust, from the diary of Luba Krugman Gurdus, translation & illustrations by the author, with an introduction by Martin Gilbert. Luba Krugman Gurdus is an artist and novelist, well known for her illustrated memoir The Death Train, which concerns her life in the Warsaw Ghetto; she immigrated to the United States after surviving the war. Her stark illustrations of the camps are on permanent exhibit at the Holocaust Memorial center of Florida. Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Poland -- Poetry. With handwritten dedication of the author inscribed on title page. Light wear to covers and edges. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-88-14A)
Softbound. 8vo XVIII, 487, [2] pages. 25 cm. Translated from the Hebrew by Ina Friedman; original title transliterated is Yehude V? Arshah, 1939-1943. Every aspect of life in Warsaw, the foundation of Judenrat and its functioning, the open and secret activities of Jews in the ghetto, are described in this monograph. It also contains a serious discussion of the role of German policy and the relationship of Polish society to the Jew. All this serves as a basis for a thorough analysis of the political organizations responsible for the preparation and carrying out of the Warsaw revolt. Subjects: Jews - Persecutions - Poland - Warsaw. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Poland - Warsaw. Shoah - Pologne. Varsovie (Pologne) - Ghetto (1940-1943) . Geschichte 1939-1943. Warsaw (Poland) -- History - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, 1943. Warsaw (Poland) - Ethnic relations. Light shelf wear, otherwise fine. Near fine condition. (HOLO2-92-38)
Original Publisher's Cloth. 4to. Probably the most important single reference on the Holocaust. A must for every scholar and collector. SUBJECT(S): Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Encyclopedias. Judíos -- Discriminación racial. Holocauste, 1939-1945 -- Dictionnaires anglais. Holocaust. Joden. Juifs -- Extermination (1939-1945) -- Encyclopédies. Identifier: Jews; Genocide; History. Includes bibliographical references and index. Lacks dustjackets and slipcase. Otherwise, Very good condition. (HOLO2-34-73a) xx
Hardbound. 8vo. 248 pages. 25 cm. First English edition. Translation of: Shoah u-mashma`utah. Translated from the Hebrew by Priscilla Fishman. A textbook style approach to the events of the Holocaust beginning with the major events occuring in Europe between the two world wars. Profusely illustrated with over 100 illustrations and four maps. Examines the difference between traditional anti-Semitism and racial anti-Semitism. Professor Gutman is Academic Advisor to Yad Vashem and Deputy Chairman of the International Auschwitz Council. Born in Warsaw in 1923, he belonged to the Jewish underground in the Warsaw Ghetto and the Jewish Fighting Organization (ZOB) during the uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto. From 5 May 1943 until 5 May 1945, he was a prisoner in Majdanek, Auschwitz, and Mathausen concentration camps. From 1945 1971, he was an active member of the Sheerit Hapletah, and was one of the founders of the Aviv Kibbutz in Italy. He moved to Mandate Palestine following the war and was a member of Kibbutz Lehavot Habashan. He was one of the founders of the Anielewicz Remembrance Center, Moreshet. Gutman testified at the Eichman trial in Jerusalem. Upon receiving his MA and PhD degrees from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he later held the Max and Rita Haber Chair in Modern Jewish History. He currently is member of the Yad Vashem Academic Committee and the Executive Committee of the International Institute for Holocaust Research, and is member of the Academic Research Committee of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. His numerous publications include: The Jews of Poland Between Two World Wars; Unequal Victims: Poles and Jews During World War Two; The Jews of Warsaw, 1939-1943; Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising: Anatomy of the Auschwitz Death Camp; and Nazi Europe and the Final Solution. He is recipient of the Salonika Prize for Literature, the Yitzhak Sadeh Prize for Military Studies, and the Polish Unification Prize. Gutman received honorary doctorates from Warsaw University in 1995 and from Brandeis University in 2009. (Yad Vashem) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Holocaust. Judenvernichtung. Light shelf wear to covers, otherwise fine. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-100-35)
trad. di Marco Sartori e Massimo Bocchiola n. 50 bross. edit. ill., liev tracce d'uso in cop.
Hole punched in period folder. 4to. 23 pages. 27 cm. First edition. DP-era statement from the American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation league presented by Lester Gutterman recommending the lifting of immigration quotas, reform of laws regarding naturalization and a condemnation of the McCarran Act. The Presidential Commission on Immigration and Naturalization followed closely after Trumans veto of the Internal Security Act, a controversial piece of legislation requiring government registration of Communist organizations and limitations to immigration (also known as the McCarran Act) was overridden by Congress in 1950. Subjects: Jews Immigration. Presidential commission. American Jewish Committee. Anti-Defamation League. McCarran Act. No copies listed on OCLC. Light age toning. Small library stamp on title page verso. Library call numbers on folder cover. Very good + condition. (HOLO2-109-14)
1st edition. Original Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 96 pages. In German. Title translates as Documents on Jewish History during the Nazi Period. Part 2: Book of Honor for the People of Israel. Includes poetry and articles, but mostly transcripts of testimonials given in Tel Aviv in 1944 by various Jewish leaders about what they witnessed, with particular emphasis on life in the camps. Moving and important early testimony. Light wear, Very Good Condition. SUBJECT (S) : Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Sources. Concentration camp inmates -- Interviews. Concentration camp inmates. OCLC lists 26 copies worldwide; however many of these appear to be only Part I, not Part II, which we offer here. Tear to bottom half of title page. Cover wrappers are tattered and loose. Otherwise fine condition. (HOLO2-127-5)
Original Cover Wrapper. [iv], 45 pages ; 24 cm. In German. Title translates into English as, Anti-Semitism. Theodor Haase (1834 - 1909) was a Austro-Hungarian evangelical clergyman and theologian from Silesia and a leading activist of the German Progressive Party He was a member of the Silesian National Parliament, a member of the Austrian Council of State, the Moravian-Silesian Region superintendent of the Lutheran Church, and a member of the House of Lords in the Austrian Council of State He wrote many books and was highly critical of anti-Semitism (Wikipedia, 2016) . OCLC lists about 18 copies worldwide. Cover is torn and taped. Several pages are torn at the corner with no text effected. Paper is browning. A few pages are unopened. Overall Good condition. (HOLO2-130-49)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 320 pages. 22 cm. First American edition. Hans Habe was one of the most important publicists in West Germany after World War II. During his life he wrote more than twenty books, some of them translated into English, and around ten thousand newspaper articles. Christopher and his Father; A novel of the Conflict of Generations in Germany Today concerns the relationship between Veit Harlan, the director of the anti-Semitic film Jud Suess during the Nazi period, and his son Thomas Harlan. Subjects: Fathers and sons - Germany - Fiction. Atonement - Fiction. German fiction - 20th century - Translations into English. Germany - History - 20th century - Fiction. With very good dustjacket. Near fine condition. (HOLO2-95-6)
Publishers cloth. 8vo. 319 pages. 22 cm. First American edition. Originally published as Die Mission; Vienna, Desch, 1965. Translated from the German by Michael Bullock. Janos Békessy, better known under his pen name Hans Habe (12 February 1911, Budapest 29 September 1977, Locarno) was an Hungarian-Austrian writer and newspaper publisher. From 1941, he held U. S. Citizenship. In 1930 Bekessy began to work as a reporter for the Wiener Sonn- und Montagspost (Vienna Sunday and Monday Post) . In the following year he became Editor of the Österreichische Abendzeitung (Austrian Evening News) , one of the youngest newspaper editors ever, at age 20. At this time he married his first wife, Margit Bloch. Early in 1934 he moved to the Wiener Morgen (Vienna Morning News) . From 1935 to 1939 he was a Foreign Correspondent for the Prager Tagblatt (Prague Daily News) , stationed mostly at Geneva, covering the League of Nations. In this capacity he was present at the Evian Conference in 1938, where he met again otolaryngologist Heinrich Neumann von Héthárs who had performed an operation upon Habe 13 years before, and was a friend of his family. Habe described the course of the Conference in his novel The Mission (1965) ; dedicated to the memory of Heinrich Neumann. The focal point of the novel is the infamous offer made by the German government, and transmitted to the Conference by Neumann von Héthárs, to sell the Austrian Jews to foreign countries at a price of $250 per capita, and the Conference delegates' refusal to accept. At this time Habe was married to his second wife, Erika Levy, the heiress of the Tungsram light bulb company. Subjects: Physicians - Fiction. Jews - Persecutions - Europe - Fiction. Jewish refugees - Europe - Fiction. Evian Conference (1938) - Fiction. Jewish fiction. Very good condition in good jacket. An attractive copy (HOLO2-97-17)
Original Wrappers. 8vo.15 pages. 22 cm. A year-end report to the National Council by Samuel L. Haber with a foreword by Jack D. Weiler. Much on aid to post-war refugees. This annual report of the Joint Distribution Committee details the communities and need for assistance and relief work in Israel, Western and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Australia. It notes the changes in Jewish communities in various countries since the end of the second world war and points out concrete instances of anti-semitism in various locations. Subjects: American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee - History. Jews - Charities. OCLC lists three copies (YIVO, Brandeis, HUC) . Covers lightly soiled, internally fresh and clean. Good condition. (HOLO2-96-16)
Paper Wraps. 8vo. 31 pages. Holocaust-era imprint. Monthly periodical by the Labor Zionist Youth organization. Contents of this issue include, The Month: Still No Decision, Shalom Wurm; Seder Diary, Ben Simcha; Boundaries of Exile, Ben Halpern; Palestine Letter: Crisis in the Party, S. Aharoni; A Day in Yagur, Willliam Siegel; Labor in Search of Policy, Samuel M. Ehrenhalt. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- United States -- Periodicals. Labor Zionism -- United States -- Periodicals. Jewish youth -- United States -- Periodicals. OCLC lists no copies. Cover has some stains, fraying at binding. Pages darkened and crease through corner of some pages, but all text is clear. Good condition. (HOLO2-41-17)
Grasset, 2011, ENVOI autographe de l'auteur, 296 pp., broché, bon état.
1st edition. Original photographic Yellow paper wrappers, 12mo, 47 pages. Includes illustrations (portrait, facsimiles) . 21 cm. In the original Flemish. Ehri (2014) writes that This is an eyewitness account by a Jewish survivor who escaped from a deportation train after departure from this transit camp.....The Belgian army barracks named Dossin de Saint-Georges, built in the town of Malines in 1756, were transformed into a Sammellager (Assembly Camp) on July 25, 1942. The first Jews who had received call-up orders arrived two days later, and the first train to Auschwitz left on August 4. This building was chosen for two reasons. It was right next to a railroad and Malines is located between Brussels and Antwerp, where 90% of the Jews in Belgium lived. After the roundups started, the Jews were taken by trucks to the inner square inside the barracks where armed SS were awaiting them. After being registered and stripped of their identity papers and last personal possessions, the prisoners had to wear a card around their neck with their number for the next deportation train. There were various categories of prisoners, the biggest of which were those marked for direct deportation. The barracks could house 1, 000 persons, but at times more than 1, 700 were crammed into them, with about 100 people on bunk beds in dormitories only about 21 to 7 meters wide. Later, they had to sleep on straw bags on the floor. The guard duty on the perimeter was done by Flemish SS members, supervised by German Security Police. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium. Personal narratives, Belgian. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Verzet. OCLC lists 5 copies. Scarce and Important. Very Good+ Condition. A Beautiful copy. (Holo2-126-1) xx
1st Edition. Original photographic Yellow paper wrappers, 12mo, 47 pages. Includes illustrations (portrait, facsimiles) . 21 cm. In the original Flemish. Inscribed by Hakker in 1945 on the first page. Ehri (2014) writes that This is an eyewitness account by a Jewish survivor who escaped from a deportation train after departure from this transit camp.....The Belgian army barracks named Dossin de Saint-Georges, built in the town of Malines in 1756, were transformed into a Sammellager (Assembly Camp) on July 25, 1942. The first Jews who had received call-up orders arrived two days later, and the first train to Auschwitz left on August 4. This building was chosen for two reasons. It was right next to a railroad and Malines is located between Brussels and Antwerp, where 90% of the Jews in Belgium lived. After the roundups started, the Jews were taken by trucks to the inner square inside the barracks where armed SS were awaiting them. After being registered and stripped of their identity papers and last personal possessions, the prisoners had to wear a card around their neck with their number for the next deportation train. There were various categories of prisoners, the biggest of which were those marked for direct deportation. The barracks could house 1, 000 persons, but at times more than 1, 700 were crammed into them, with about 100 people on bunk beds in dormitories only about 21 to 7 meters wide. Later, they had to sleep on straw bags on the floor. The guard duty on the perimeter was done by Flemish SS members, supervised by German Security Police. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium. Personal narratives, Belgian. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Verzet. OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide. Scarce and Important. Small smudge on page 15 with 1 word effected. Overall Very Good Condition. (Holo2-126-1a)
1st Edition. Original photographic Yellow paper wrappers, 12mo, 47 pages. Includes illustrations (portrait, facsimiles) . 21 cm. In the original Flemish. Inscribed by Hakker in 1945 on the first page. Also issued in French translation as La lutte heroique du maquis; leur vie, leurs souffrances, leur travail; and in English as "The mysterious Dossin Barracks in Mechlin: the deportation camp pf the Jews. " Ehri (2014) writes that This is an eyewitness account by a Jewish survivor who escaped from a deportation train after departure from this transit camp.....The Belgian army barracks named Dossin de Saint-Georges, built in the town of Malines in 1756, were transformed into a Sammellager (Assembly Camp) on July 25, 1942. The first Jews who had received call-up orders arrived two days later, and the first train to Auschwitz left on August 4. This building was chosen for two reasons. It was right next to a railroad and Malines is located between Brussels and Antwerp, where 90% of the Jews in Belgium lived. After the roundups started, the Jews were taken by trucks to the inner square inside the barracks where armed SS were awaiting them. After being registered and stripped of their identity papers and last personal possessions, the prisoners had to wear a card around their neck with their number for the next deportation train. There were various categories of prisoners, the biggest of which were those marked for direct deportation. The barracks could house 1, 000 persons, but at times more than 1, 700 were crammed into them, with about 100 people on bunk beds in dormitories only about 21 to 7 meters wide. Later, they had to sleep on straw bags on the floor. The guard duty on the perimeter was done by Flemish SS members, supervised by German Security Police. SUBJECT(S) : World War, 1939-1945 -- Underground movements -- Belgium. Personal narratives, Belgian. Tweede Wereldoorlog. Verzet. OCLC lists 8 copies worldwide, with only 4 of them in the US (Hoover, San Jose State, LOC, Wichita State). Scarce and Important.Some wear and stains to cover, worming to one margin (no text affected), Overall Good+ Condition. (Holo2-126-1B)
(FT) Softcover, 8vo, 184 pages, 21 cm. In Judeo-German. DP imprint for survivors living in Germany. SUBJECT(S) : Descriptor: Jewish law. Judaism -- Customs and practices. Vocalized text. OCLC lists 5 copies worldwide. Original cover page torn. Yellowing of pages. Rebound in later wrappers.. (Heb-31-16)
1st edition, original cloth, 8vo. 518 + 96 pages. In Hebrew and Yiddish with an English section. Eight years have gone by since we first began preparations for this book on the Jewish community of Rozhan, until at long last it can be published now. It was a great effort made by a number of people devoted to the weighty and difficult task to erect a fitting memorial to our community. It is what other communities of Israel have done and no doubt it is the right thing to do for the people of the book. Rozhan was no different from other Jewish townships in Poland that are no more, but to us, who were born and grew up there, she has something unique. It is not only the landscape, the topographic situation on the high bank of the River Narew. It was also the Jews, who had been living at the place for generations, rebuilding it stubbornly and assiduously many times. In fact after each of the many wars that swept over the region, that lies on the road from Russia to Warsaw. Those were homely Jews of all social strata, orthodox and freethinkers, Zionists and anti-Zionists. Above all we have at heart the Jewish youth of Rozhan that took upon itself the task to redeem the world and the nation - and only few of them have reached the final haven of rest here in Israel, while others, of the few who did survive, have found shelter in the West and built their homes there. It is the intention of this book to keep our past alive and to preserve the shining memory of those who lived and were active there, to show that they were not anonymous and to describe their striving and struggling to maintain a definitely Jewish, religious, social and political existence. This book wants to tell future generations how the Jews of Rozhan created Jewish life in the midst of a hostile environment, how they built for themselves the framework of a society and filled it with deep-rooted national values, how they created their own institutions, that were able impose their authority - after democratically arrived at decisions with no governmental powers behind them. The book also wants to keep alive the old Jewish spirit maintained by our people everywhere, the rule Jews stand by each other that found its expression in individual help as well as in organized assistance such as various mutual funds. The book is also meant as a memorial to the tragedy of our people. Jews of Rozhan had to run for their lives during the very first days of the war, and one after the other they fell as victims on the bloodstained roads of Poland. Some survived after having passed through the hell of exile in the vastness of Russia and Siberia and back; only a few were lucky enough to reach Israel and to build new homes here. The book contains about 600 pages and it reflects a collective effort. It was not easy to obtain the material, as there are next to no writers among our people. So we had to apply to as many of our townsfolk as possible in order to make them talk or write - those who did write were a minority and most contributions were given orally and had to be taken down. We endeavoured to get in touch with as many as possible and to give a rounded out picture of the town, its history, people and folklore, but we feel that in spite of all our efforts we could not note everything worth remembering. All we can say is that we have done our best to present a many-sided picture of everything that was human and Jewish and good. (from English preface) SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Poland -- Ro´z? An -- History. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) . Ethnic relations.
1st edition, original paper wrappers, 8vo, 243 pages. In Swedish, Translated from the never previously published German manuscript by Nils Holmberg. Title translates to Beyond All Mankind. A description of the Jews treatment at the German concentration camps by Betty Happ who survived by being legally rescued via the famous Swedish Red Cross caravan for travel to Sweden. This work is cited by Zergailis in his well known, The Holocaust in Latvia 1941-1944. SUBJECT (S) : Koncentrationsläger -- Tyskland -- Andra världskriget. OCLC: 186555327, OCLC lists 6 copies worldwide. Previous owners name on front end page. Light wear on spine, wrappers held on with tape inside cover, covers are laminated. Otherwise Very Good Condition. Rare and important. (HOLO2-139-6)
Publishers Cloth. 4to. 765 pages. 29 cm. Illustrated. First edition. Contains extensive photographs and maps in both color and black and white. The Holocaust Chronicle, written and fact-checked by top scholars, recounts the long, complex, anguishing story of the most terrible crime of the 20th century. A massive, oversized hardcover of more than 750 pages, The Holocaust Chronicle: A History in Words and Pictures is an excitingly unique, not for-profit endeavor that is a personal project of the publisher, Louis Weber, C. E. O. Of Chicago-based Publications International, Ltd. As a book publisher, I am in a unique position to create this ambitious project, Weber says. The son of Polish Jews who settled in America in the 1920s, Weber conceived The Holocaust Chronicle in order to give something back to the Jewish community, and to bring the truth of the Holocaust to as many people as possible. The mission of The Holocaust Chronicle is to report the facts, clearly and free of bias or agenda. Featured are more than 2000 photographs selected after intensive research in the collections of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D. C. And Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, as well as other archives and private collections located around the world. Many of these images are in full color and most are published in book form for the first time. The photographs chronicle the Holocaust in starkly visual terms, capturing victims and perpetrators alike, as well as Allied leaders and the multitude of peripheral figures. Caption-text is detailed, and rich with facts and human interest. The books 3000-item timeline of Holocaust-related events is unprecedented in its scope and ambition. Spanning the years 1000 B. C. To 1999 A. D. , the timeline pinpoints deportations, atrocities, and important developments in the Nazis Final Solution, as well as individual acts of cruelty, compassion, and heroic Jewish resistance. Illustrated chapter-opener essays place the most important years of the Holocaust and its immediate aftermath, 1933-1946, into sharp perspective. Nearly 300 sidebars detail significant people, places, issues, and events. More than 30 full-color, specially commissioned maps show the reader where events took place. The sentiments and hatreds that gave rise to the Holocaust were not confined to the 12 years of Adolf Hitlers Thousand-Year Reich. The books illustrated prologue surveys the antisemitism that was expressed over many centuries in Europe as bloody pogroms, exclusionary laws, and other persecution. The illustrated epilogue documents the long, painful healing process that has lasted for generations and may never be completed. (Publishers description) Subjects: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Chronology. Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) -- Pictorial works. World War, 1939-1945 -- Chronology. World War, 1939-1945 -- Pictorial works. Holocaust. Previous owners label on front endpage. Light shelf wear to dust jacket, very good + condition. (HOLO2-107-18)
Softbound. 8vo. 146 pages. 23 cm. First edition. This work augments the documentary film of the same title, winner of the 1997 Academy Award for Documentary. This work traces intimate stories of courage in the harrowing years between the end of World War II and the formation of the state of Israel, through the use of photographs and personal testimonies from survivors of the Holocaust. Especially of note are the testimonies of survivors who were children when they left the camps. Subjects: Holocaust survivors - Interviews. Jewish refugees. Jews - History 1945. Light shelf wear to covers. Near fine condition. (HOLO2-92-4)
Paper Wrappers with later boards. 12mo. XVI, 278, [3] pages. 1st edition. In German. Title translates to English as, Micha: Newly Translated and Explained. Accompanied with 5 Digressions. Hartmann (1774-1838) was a German author focusing primarily on the Old Testament and of Oriental languages. (EJ) OCLC lists 19 copies worldwide. Rebound in later, stiff boards. Brief notes from previous owner on inside of covers. Internal pages are lightly soiled with some foxing but all text is clear. Good+ condition. (HOLO2-60-5)