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 138:

(ISRAEL, LAND OF).
Ansicht der am Berge Zion bereits bezogenen 12 Familien-Wohnungen, welche auf dem ...

Vendido por: $450
Precio estimado:
$ 400 - $600
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 25%
IVA: 8.875% Sólo en comisión
etiquetas:

(ISRAEL, LAND OF).
Ansicht der am Berge Zion bereits bezogenen 12 Familien-Wohnungen, welche auf dem Situationsplane skizzirt sind. [“View of 12 Family-Dwellings on Mount Zion.”]



German interspersed with Hebrew. Map executed by Michel Poschnirokoff. Formerly in the Leyzer Ran Collection.
pp. 8. Stained and solied. Original colored wrappers showing map of proposed construction, worn. 4to.
Halberstadt: H. Meyer for Das Central-Comite für Bau von Armen- und Pilgerwohnungen in Jerusalem (1864)
A prospectus for purchasing land on Jerusalem’s Mount Zion. The pamphlet conveys in most impassioned terms the supreme importance of the commandment of Yishuv Eretz Israel, settling the Land of Israel. The three members of the “Central Committee for Building Dwellings for the Poor and Pilgrims in Jerusalem” were J. Ettlinger, Chief Rabbi of Altona (Germany’s great halachist); Dr. I. [Azriel] Hildesheimer, Rabbi of Eisenstadt (a former pupil of R. Ettlinger) and Joseph Hirsch of Halberstadt (R. Hildesheimer’s brother-in-law). It seems that the impetus for this bold endeavor came from R. Azriel Hildesheimer, who took “special interest in the welfare of the Jews of Palestine. In 1860, when the Missionary Society of Palestine provided seventy free dwellings for homeless Jews, Hildesheimer built houses in Jerusalem for the free use of Jewish pilgrims and the poor.” (JE, Vol. VI p. 395).
A prospectus for purchasing land on Jerusalem’s Mount Zion. The pamphlet conveys in most impassioned terms the supreme importance of the commandment of Yishuv Eretz Israel, settling the Land of Israel. The three members of the “Central Committee for Building Dwellings for the Poor and Pilgrims in Jerusalem” were J. Ettlinger, Chief Rabbi of Altona (Germany’s great halachist); Dr. I. [Azriel] Hildesheimer, Rabbi of Eisenstadt (a former pupil of R. Ettlinger) and Joseph Hirsch of Halberstadt (R. Hildesheimer’s brother-in-law). It seems that the impetus for this bold endeavor came from R. Azriel Hildesheimer, who took “special interest in the welfare of the Jews of Palestine. In 1860, when the Missionary Society of Palestine provided seventy free dwellings for homeless Jews, Hildesheimer built houses in Jerusalem for the free use of Jewish pilgrims and the poor.” (JE, Vol. VI p. 395).