Auction 79 Part 1 Jewish History: Documents, Photographs, Books, Fashion and Silver Jewelry, Furniture and Lamps
By The Bidder
Sep 23, 2021
9 Leibowitsz street, Gedera, Israel

Gallery address: 9 Leibowitsz street, Gedera.


All the devices and clocks in this auction are sold as they are, there is no gurantee for order condition.


Purchasing jewelry and gems: The auction house provides a description of the diamonds and gems to the best of its understanding and based on the knowledge and experience of the auction house experts. However, the auction house does not undertake to accurately describe the items in terms of stone size, color, level of cleanliness, condition (including description of defects) and whether it has undergone treatment or painting and the buyer is responsible for inspecting the diamonds and gems before sale. For the avoidance of doubt, no option will be given to cancel the purchase of jewelry, diamonds and gems or return them after purchase, even if the description does not match the item.


In this auction like the previous auctions, unsold items are not offered for direct sale after auction ends! please bid and participate during the auction!

The sale commission is 20% + VAT on the commission only. in a week time from the auction.

A fee of 5% will be added to late payments.


The dollar exchange rate for this sale is: $=3.2 shekel.


New customers who have participated a few times in auctions will usually be approved with a limit on the amount you can offer at least initially. If you want to raise the amount or remove the limit, you are welcome to contact us by phone.


In this auction to Israeli clients, payment will be possible directly upon completion of the auction. You will receive the invoice for payment and then you can choose the requested shipping method.

Please note the different costs: courier delievery as well as the different registered shipping costs depending on the weight.

If you are unsure about the shipping cost (registered upon weight or special complicated/breakable items) please contact us before making the payment.

Buyers from abroad will receive an invoice within a business day from the end of the auction including the shipping cost for the items purchased and will be able to pay online by credit card.


We only use the Israeli Post services.

Buyes are welcome to pay include the shipping cost and we will send your parcel soon as payment complete.

Shippments can be choosen in one of forward options:

Registered shippping (Israel post) prices:

Up to 2 kilo at a cost of 20 NIS

2-5 Kilo cost 25 NIS.

5-10 kilo cost 32 NIS

10-20 kilo cost 40 NIS


Courier delivery of the Israeli post in the costs of 60 NIS regardless of weight up to 20 kg (only in Israel).


We try to get the deliveries out of the gallery within two business days at the latest. The delivery time of the items depends on the Israeli post and global post work. Each buyer who pays on delivery, will receive a detailed email with the tracking number and a link to the tracking on the mail site accordingly.


*** Please pay attention! there is no gurantee for damage/breakage to items in any type of mail (registered / couriers)! A customer who confirms the delivery of items, will take into account that the warranty will only be in the event of loss until the cost is covered by the postal services only ****


In cases of complecated items and fragile items, the auction house may take an additional cost to ensure the proper packaging of the items.


With certain items, large or particularly complex items, the buyer will have to coordinate collection from the Auction House.


About the vat, buyers from abroad can request to remove the vat with scan of their passport only! (Although it is advisable to avoid since the VAT paid on the invoice is on the commission and is not on the items themselves and therefore it is not legally eligible for remove).

More details
The auction has ended

LOT 5:

Antique photo of a Jew in uniform of D. Turnerschaft K XV, Prague, early 20th cen., PC size.
The German ...

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Start price:
$ 25
Buyer's Premium: 20% More details
VAT: 17% On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
tags:

Antique photo of a Jew in uniform of D. Turnerschaft K XV, Prague, early 20th cen., PC size.
The German Gymnastics Association (DT) was from 1868 to 1936 the umbrella organization of the civil [1] gymnastics clubs in Germany.
The gymnastics movement, which was based on the “gymnastics father” Friedrich Ludwig Jahn, never saw itself as just a sporting organization, but always had a political, bourgeois, and national component. In addition to the fraternities, the gymnastics associations (in many cases there was also a personal union) played a leading role in the bourgeois revolution of 1848. The first gymnasium was built by Jahn, who saw gymnastics primarily as "physical education", in 1811 on Berlin's Hasenheide. Soon after his model, gymnastics fields followed in other cities in Germany and, as a result, clubs that organized regular operations there, e.g. B. the oldest still existing sports club in the world, the Hamburg gymnastics club from 1816.
The German Gymnastics Association was founded in 1868 by Theodor Georgii and Ferdinand Goetz as an amalgamation of gymnastics clubs in Germany and also German gymnastics clubs in nearby countries (e.g. in Prague). Georgii became the first chairman and Goetz, a full-time doctor in Lindenau (Leipzig), became an honorary managing director. Ferdinand Goetz was chairman from 1895 until his death in 1915. Goetz was a strict opponent of all competition ideas, but was unable to assert himself in the DT in the long run. But he achieved that the performance evaluation in the gymnastics all-around competition was "capped". This promoted a broad range of services and the top performance in individual disciplines was counterproductive. While in the athletic decathlon the point scales for the individual disciplines are open upwards and thus help individual top performances to compensate for poor performances in other disciplines, the gymnastics all-around competition had upper scales (more than 10 points per discipline not possible), which means that poor performance is not compensated for was possible and the gymnastics ideal of personal performance range without peak performance was favored. [2]
In 1924 there was also a break between the German gymnastics association and the other top sports associations: At their imperial meeting, the DT decided on the "clean separation of gymnasts and athletes", which was justified by the fact that the other sports associations (especially the ball sports associations) did not also consider themselves political , but only understood as sport-specific associations. Politically, the DT was not understood as a party-political orientation, Turner belonged to all political parties on the right of the SPD (social democrats and communists were organized in workers' sports), nevertheless the DT can be understood at least in its breadth as a German national organization. With the “clean divorce”, all gymnastics clubs that belonged to the DT had to withdraw from the other sports associations. Many of the civic gymnastics clubs split up because footballers, handball players and track and field athletes in particular founded their own clubs.
The German gymnastics association gave itself under its new "leader" Edmund Neuendorff at the main committee meeting on 8/9. April 1933 in Stuttgart a National Socialist orientation. This included, inter alia. the application of the regulations of the National Socialist Act to restore the civil service (“Aryan Paragraph”), which excludes Jewish members of the gymnastics clubs. Here, "not only the speed, but also the radicalism with which the gymnasts proceeded" were looking for their equal. [3]
On the occasion of the German Fighting Games in Nuremberg on July 27, 1934, the reorganization of the entire gymnastics and sports system in the German Reich Association for Physical Exercise was announced; the area of gymnastics formed the "Fachamt I". The DT was thus effectively dissolved, the formal dissolution followed two years later by resolution of an extraordinary gymnastics day in Berlin on April 18, 1936 on September 30 of the same year.

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