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Bidding Information
Lot #    14993
Auction End Date    7/18/2006 10:35:30 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Der Jüdische Spieler: eine Gelegenheitsschrift
Author    [Only Ed. - Limited Ed.] Heinrich Loewe
City    [Berlin]
Publisher    (Soncino-Gesellschaft vereinigten Freuden)
Publication Date    1930
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition. 9, [2] pp., mounted illus., 304:237 mm., wide margins, usual age staining. A very good copy bound in the original title wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   This title was issued in a limited edition of 300, and the present volume is #79. The cover has a drawing of a spinning dreidel, and the mounted illustration is of a bearded Jew holding cards in each of his hands. The text is in German, except for one two-line selection in Hebrew. The caption accompanying the illustration is in Judeo-German.

A volume on dice and cards in Jewish folklore by Heinrich Loewe, (1869-1951) one of the first Zionists in Germany, scholar in Jewish folklore, and librarian. Born in Wanzleben, Germany, into an assimilated family, Loewe was raised without a Jewish education and at the age of 13 began to study in a Protestant high school in Magdeburg. Afterward he studied at Berlin University and at the Hochschule fuer die Wissenschaft des Judentums in Berlin. Together with Shmarya Levin, Yosef Lurie, Nahman Syrkin, and Leo Motzkin he established the Zionist group known as the Russian Jewish Scientific Society and was the only one among this group who was born in Germany. In 1892 Loewe founded Jung Israel, the first Zionist group in Germany. He was also among the founders of the Vereinigung Juedischer Studierender, which gave rise in 1914 to the Kartell Juedischer Verbindungen, the roof organization for Zionist students in Germany. Loewe edited the Juedische Volkszeitung in Berlin from 1893 to 1894 and, from 1895 to 1896, the monthly Zion.

In 1895 Loewe visited Erez Israel for the first time and became known to Herzl even before the publication of Der Judenstaat. Two years later he returned to Erez Israel with the intention of settling there, but he returned to Europe in August 1897 as a delegate from Erez Israel to the First Zionist Congress. After the Congress he remained in Germany and established the Zionist Federation there. From 1899 Loewe worked as a librarian in the University of Berlin. He quickly rose in professional status until he was appointed professor in 1915. From 1902 to 1908 he was the first editor of Juedische Rundschau, the central organ of the German Zionists. In 1905 he gave impetus to Joseph Chasanowich's idea to establish a Jewish national library in Jerusalem by writing a memo to the Seventh Zionist Congress. His proposal was accepted unanimously. Throughout his career he worked for the library and was the moving spirit of the Verein der Freunde der Jerusalem-Bibliothek.

In 1933 Loewe settled in Palestine and assumed the post of librarian of the municipal library Sha'ar Zion in Tel Aviv. In 1948 he prepared a collection of his writings on Zionism formerly published in part under the pseudonym Heinrich Sachse as Anti-semitismus und Zionismus (1894) and Zionistenkongress und Zionismus eine Gefahr? (1897). He frequently published works in the field of Jewish folklore such as Die Sprachen der Juden (1911), Die Juden in der katholischen Legende (1912), Schelme und Narren mit juedischen Kappen (1920), and Reste vom alten juedischen Volkshumor (1922).

          
Reference
Description
   EJ
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Germany:    Checked
  
Subject
History:    Checked
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    German
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica