22:23:33


[Login]   
[Book List]  
 
Bidding Information
Lot #    10025
Auction End Date    4/19/2005 10:11:00 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Kodesh Hilulim;
Title (Hebrew)    קדש הלולים - תוספת קדושה
Author    [Only Ed.] R. Joseph Kohn-Zedek
City    Altona
Publisher    Gebrueder Bonn
Publication Date    1873
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition. 32; 48 pp., 173:113 mm., nice margins, light age staining. A very good copybound in contemporary boards, rubbed.
          
Detailed
Description
   Homily delivered in Cracow for the commemoration of anniversaries of R. Simeon bar Yohai and R. Moses Isserles.

R. Joseph Kohn-Zedek (1827–1903), Hebrew poet, writer, and publicist. Kohen-Zedek, who was born in Lvov, studied rabbinics with Solomon Kluger in Brody and S. J. Nathanson in Lvov. He first engaged - unsuccessfully - in business and then turned to literature and journalism. He published a number of collections of his patriotic poetry in honor of the Austro-Hungarian emperor - from whom he received a gold medal for art and science in 1851 - and an anthology of contemporary poetry dedicated to Moses Montefiore, Neveh Tehillah (1864). Kohen-Zedek edited a number of more or less short-lived Hebrew periodicals: Meged Yerahim (4 issues, 1855–59), Ozar Hokhmah (3 issues, 1859–65), Ha-Yehudi ha-Nizhi (4 issues, 1866), and Or Torah (4 issues, 1874). His weekly Ha-Mevasser, which included a literary supplement, Ha-Nesher, was the first Hebrew paper in Galicia (1861–66); some of the best Hebrew writers and scholars contributed to it. He himself wrote in a lively and original melizah style. Following a dispute with one of his associates which led to a denunciation, Kohen-Zedek had to leave Austria in 1868. He went first to Frankfort on the Main, and in 1875 to London, where he served as preacher to immigrant congregations. In London he wrote a number of mainly homiletic works, including Elef Alfin, a thousand-word eulogy on Chief Rabbi Nathan Adler, each word beginning with alef. Of some scholarly importance are his Sefat Emet (1879), a polemic against Michael Rodkinson; Divrei ha-Yamim le-Malkhei Zarefat (1859), an edition of Joseph ha-Kohen's chronicle with Kohen-Zedek's introduction; and Even Bohan (1865), an annotated edition of Kalonymus b. Kalonymus' satirical work. His Biographical Sketches of Eminent Jewish Families (1897) is in English. Kohen-Zedek maintained a lively correspondence with the leading rabbis and scholars of his time. He has been called "the last publicist of the Galician Haskalah

          
Paragraph 2    את זו דרש... אבי... מו"ה יוסף כהן צדק נ"י לכבוד הלולא של התנא רבי שמעון בן יוחאי והפוסק רבי משה איסרלש... בק"ק קראקא בבית תפלת "בני אמונה"... במלאת שלש מאות שנים ליום פקודת הרמ"א ז"ל. והוספתי עליו תוספת קדושה אנכי בנו ותלמידו דוד כהן צדק...

בשנת אשתחוה אל היכל קדשך ב'י'ר'א'ת'ך' עמ', עם שער מיוחד: תוספת קדושה...

          
Reference
Description
   CD-EPI 0140925; EJ
        
Associated Images
2 Images (Click thumbnail to view full size image):
  Order   Image   Caption
  1   Click to view full size  
  
  2   Click to view full size  
  
  
Listing Classification
Period
19th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Germany:    Checked
  
Subject
Homiletics:    Checked
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica