Subasta 88 K2 Online Sale: Hebrew & Judaic Books and Manuscripts
17.3.20 (Su hora local)
EE.UU.
 Brooklyn Navy Yard Building 77 Suite 1108 Brooklyn, NY 11205
La subasta ha concluido

LOTE 136:

(ISRAEL, LAND OF).
Hatzalath Nephashoth VeKidush Hashem.
Printed text with personalized manuscript ...

Vendido por: $900
Precio estimado:
$ 1 000 - $1 500
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 25%
IVA: 8.875% Sólo en comisión
etiquetas:

(ISRAEL, LAND OF).
Hatzalath Nephashoth VeKidush Hashem.



Printed text with personalized manuscript entries. Personally addressed to Hananel de Milhaud of Avignon. Endorsed signatures of Constantinople’s Chief Rabbis: Abraham ben Judah Meyuhas and Solomon Alfandari.
Bifolium broadside. Slightly browned. Unbound. Folio.
Constantinople: c. 1763
Appeal to French Jewry on Behalf of the Jews of Hebron. In 1763, two of the sages of Hebron, R. Haim Rahamim Bajayo and R. Yitzhak Ze’evi were dispatched to France to raise funds on behalf of their heavily indebted community. They carried with them this appeal for aid that was issued on their behalf by the “Pekidim” (Committee on behalf of) Hebron, based in Constantinople. The appeal relates the desperate financial situation of the Jews of Hebron who had been forced to borrow from Turkish bankers the amount of twenty-five thousand pesos, at an exorbitant rate of interest. Fortunately, the Jewish community of Constantinople negotiated more generous terms, whereby the loan would not come due for a few years. Now the two Hebron emissaries took their problems to France, specifically, a member of the prominent Avignon-based family of Milhaud.
Appeal to French Jewry on Behalf of the Jews of Hebron. In 1763, two of the sages of Hebron, R. Haim Rahamim Bajayo and R. Yitzhak Ze’evi were dispatched to France to raise funds on behalf of their heavily indebted community. They carried with them this appeal for aid that was issued on their behalf by the “Pekidim” (Committee on behalf of) Hebron, based in Constantinople. The appeal relates the desperate financial situation of the Jews of Hebron who had been forced to borrow from Turkish bankers the amount of twenty-five thousand pesos, at an exorbitant rate of interest. Fortunately, the Jewish community of Constantinople negotiated more generous terms, whereby the loan would not come due for a few years. Now the two Hebron emissaries took their problems to France, specifically, a member of the prominent Avignon-based family of Milhaud.