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Bidding Information
Lot #    18866
Auction End Date    10/9/2007 10:08:00 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Fest-gedicht einweihung des neus Israelitrschen
Title (Hebrew)    קול רנה
Author    [Community - Only Ed.] Mayer Kohn Bistritz
City    Wien
Publisher    Hofswarth
Publication Date    1859
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition. 20; 11 pp. octavo 198:134 mm.. light age staining, old hands. A very good copy bound in the original wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   Bi-lingual Hebrew-German dedicatory verse upon the occasion of the dedication of a new Culural Temple for the Jewish community of Vienna by the noted poet Mayer (Meïr) Kohn Bistritz. The text reads from right to left in Hebrew and from left to right in German.

Mayer (Meïr) Kohn Bistritz was a Hungarian Neo-Hebraic poet and author; born in Vag-Bistritz, Hungary, 1820; died in Vienna Sept. 7, 1892. He lived the greater part of his life in Vienna, where he published most of his works. The first of these was his notes and German translation of Mordecai b. Meïr Kalman's didactic poem, "Tabnit ha-Bayit" (The Shape of the House) (1858). In the following year he published "Kol Rinnah" (The Voice of Rejoicing), a Hebrew poem with a German translation, both composed by him on the occasion of the dedication of the new temple in Budapest. In 1863 he produced a new and improved edition of the anonymous "'Aruk ha-Kazer" (Abridged Dictionary). A year later he edited and published "Ziyyun le-Zikron 'Olam" (Sign of Eternal Remembrance), a work in honor of the seventieth birthday of Isaac Noah Mannheimer, containing addresses, songs, essays, etc., in Hebrew and German. He wrote other minor poems, and a humorous essay on the proverb "Wenn die Chassidim reisen, regnet es" ["Jüdisch-Deutsches oder Deutsch Jüdisches Sprichwort," Vienna, 1880]. He was also the author of a lengthy article in the Hebrew periodical "Bet Talmud" (iv. 140, 177, 206), to explain the difficult passages in Midrash Tanhuma, which were pointed out by Jacob Reifman.

Bistritz's last and largest work was the "Bi'ur Tit ha-Yawen" (The Cleaning up of the Mire; Presburg, 1888), a vindictive attack on the radical criticism of Osias H. Schorr in explaining the Talmud.The book is full of diatribes against Schorr's personality, and is written in abusive and bombastic style. Schorr's pupils or followers, and all Polish Jews who have adopted modern dress or modern views, come in for their share of abuse. The work, which is, however, not without merit as a contribution to the lexicography of the Talmud, closes with sixteen epigrams aimed at another alleged follower of the liberal editor of "He-Haluz," Asher Simhah Weissmann, author of "Ḳedushat ha-Tanak."

          
Paragraph 2    ביום חנוכת בית אלהים... בקהל... פעסטה... בשנת תרי"ט, מאת מאיר קאהן ביסטריץ...
          
Reference
Description
   JE; Bibliography: Lippe, Bibliographisches Lexicon, i. 243, 621; Zeitlin, Bibliotheca Hebraica, pp. 178, 179; Kayserling, in Winter and Wünsche, Jüdische Litteratur, iii. 896.L; CD-EPI 0140900
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
19th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Other:    Austria
  
Subject
Homiletics:    Checked
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    German, Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica