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Bidding Information
Lot #    20682
Auction End Date    5/6/2008 11:24:30 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Moses
Author    [The R. Ezriel Hildesheimer Copy]
City    Berlin
Publisher    Juedischer Verlag
Publication Date    1905
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition. 104 pp., [12] leaves of plates, illus., 275:225 mm., wide margins, light age staining. A very good copy bound in the original boards, rubbed.
          
Paragraph 1    A work in German on Moses. Contents include: Gelber, A. Moses, der Befreier. [the liberator]--George, H. Moses, der Gesetzgeber [the lawgiver]--Herder, J.G. Moses und die Dichtung.--Ha-am, A. Moses, der prophet. In addition, the plates are reproductions of famous works of art, including Michelangelo's Moses.
          
Detailed
Description
   JUEDISCHER VERLAG, the first Jewish-Zionist publishing house in Western Europe. It was established in 1902 by M. Buber; B. Feiwel, E. M. Lilien, L. Motzkin, A. Nossig, Ch. Weizmann, and others, who constituted the core of the Democratic Fraction. In line with the aims of the Fraction, the publishing house was to serve as an expression of the Jewish renaissance by publishing the spiritual, cultural, literary, and artistic treasures of the Jewish people over the ages as a basis for the spiritual-cultural rebirth of the Jewish people. The idea had received Herzl's warm support at the Fifth Zionist Congress (1901). The aim of the plan was to supplement the political activities of the Zionist Organization and to serve as a bridge between Western and Eastern Jews. The first book, Juedischer Almanach (1902) edited by Feiwel and Lilien, included authors from both East and West and presented all types of literary works, some of them translated from Hebrew and Yiddish. The second book, Eine juedische Hochschule (1902), written by Buber, Feiwel, and Weizmann (translated into Hebrew in 1968 by S. Esh with a preface by S. H. Bergman), voiced for the first time the idea of establishing a Hebrew University in Jerusalem. In 1907, when the publishing house was transferred to the Zionist Organization, it was removed to Cologne; it returned to Berlin in 1911. Until 1920 it was directed by A. Eliasberg, and from 1920 on by S. Kaznelson. The firm passed through periods of prosperity and times of crisis. It flourished especially under the direction of Kaznelson, when it became one of the greatest Jewish publishing firms in the world, maintained without external support. Among the hundreds of books published by it were the works of Ahad Ha-Am, Herzl, Nordau, A. D. Gordon, Agnon (in Hebrew and in German), Bialik, J. L. Peretz, Mendele Mokher Seforim, and Bergelson, Dubnow's Weltgeschichte des Juedischen Volkes, the five volume Juedisches Lexikon, L. Goldschmidt's German translation of the Talmud in twelve volumes, Adolf Boehm's Die Zionistische Bewegung, Tur-Sinai's German translation of the Bible, the book "Yizkor" (dedicated to Ha-Shomer in Erez Israel), Trumpeldor's diaries, Jabotinsky's book on the Jewish Legion, the monthly Der Jude, edited by Buber, etc. The distribution of some books was extraordinarily large (Dubnow's works on Jewish history and history of Hasidism, 100,000 copies; the Juedisches Lexikon, 50,000 copies; the translation of the Talmud, 100,000 copies; Herzl's works and diaries, 30,000 copies). In 1938 the firm was closed by the Gestapo and its warehouse confiscated. S Kaznelson, who had settled in Palestine, continued the work of the Juedischer Verlag on a small scale through a daughter company, Hoza'ah Ivrit, in partial partnership with the Dvir Publishing Company, Ltd. The company's work is continued by Kaznelson's heirs in Berlin
          
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