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Bidding Information
Lot #    21593
Auction End Date    10/7/2008 10:45:30 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Hungarian Jewry- One thousand Year Celebration
Title (Hebrew)    תפלה העבירה שופר במחנה
Author    [Liturgy - Kaiser Francis Joseph I]
City    Budapest
Publisher    Marcus
Publication Date    1896
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition. Flier, 250:175 mm., light age staining, creased on folds.
          
Detailed
Description
   Flier calling for blowing the shofar in the camp celebrating a millennium of the Hungarian people. Calling for song and thanksgiving “Rejoice and be glad, inhabitants of the land of Hungary” (cf. Lamentations 4:21). Mention is made of and prayers offered for Kaiser Francis Joseph I.

Kaiser Francis Joseph I of Hapsburg (1830–1916), emperor of Austria 1848–1916. During his long reign he won popularity among all strata of Jewry in his empire and abroad. When he died the executive of the Austrian Zionists credited him with the betterment of the lot of the Jews in the empire, describing him as the "donor of civil rights and equality before the law, and their ever benevolent protector" (Blochs Wochenschrift, 33 (1916), 784). Antisemites nicknamed him "Judenkaiser." The Jewish masses referred to him as הקיר״ה (ha-keisar, yarum hodo: "the emperor, may his Majesty be exalted"), and many folklorist tales were told of him, among them that the prophet Elijah had promised him a long life. The synagogues were always full for the services held on his birthday, which were also attended by gentile dignitaries. Francis Joseph appreciated the role of the Jews as a sector of the population both devoted to and dependent on the monarchy at a time of growing internal national tensions. On the question of Jewish emancipation he assented to the liberal attitude of the 1848 Revolution. In 1849 he granted the long-withheld recognition to the Vienna community simply by addressing its delegation as its representative (A.F. Pribram (ed.), Urkunden und Akten …, 2 (1918), 549). He intervened on behalf of the Jewish side in the Mortara case. Francis Joseph signed the decree canceling restrictions on Jewish occupations and ownership of real estate (1860), and the Fundamental Law, which made Jews full citizens of the state (1867). In 1869 he met Jewish representatives in Jerusalem and gave a contribution to enable completion of the Nisan Bak Synagogue (Tiferet Yisrael). When visiting synagogues and other Jewish institutions he would assure Jews of his favor and praise their virtues, such as their devotion to family life and charity. He several times expressed his dislike of antisemitism, and in the Lower Austrian Diet called attacks on Jewish physicians a "scandal and disgrace in the eyes of the world" (1892). He twice refused to confirm the antisemite Karl Lueger as mayor of Vienna, and on the day he finally did so conferred an order on Moritz Guedemann , the chief rabbi of Vienna. He ennobled 20 Jews during his reign. After World War I many Jews of the former Hapsburg dominions looked back nostalgically to the reign of Francis Joseph as a golden age.

          
Paragraph 2    העבירו שופר במחנה ...כי חג לנו היום חג מלאת אלף שנים מאז היתה ארץ מולדתנו לנחלת עם הונגאריא ... תנה עוזך למלכנו ... פערענץ יאזשעף הראשון ...

בשנת תרנ"ו חגגו בבודפסט 1000 שנה להונגריה.

          
Reference
Description
   EJ; CD-EPI 0326336 (on single copy in Bar-Ilan U.)
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
19th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Other:    Hungary
  
Subject
History:    Checked
Liturgy:    Checked
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica