23:21:01


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Bidding Information
Lot #    9467
Auction End Date    2/15/2005 2:46:00 PM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Yismakh Yisroel
Title (Hebrew)    ישמח ישראל
Author    [Ladino - Liturgy]
City    Belgrade
Publisher    Shmuel Horwitz
Publication Date    1896
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   Only edition of commentary. [2], 284 pp., 195:132 mm., usual age staining, nice margins, corners rounded and thumbed, lacks final f., bound in contemporary boards, rubbed.
          
Detailed
Description
   Daily prayer book with commentary in Ladino.

The Author, R. Jacob b. Joseph Israel, was from Monastir, Macedonia, where his father served in the rabbinate.

Monastir (Serbo-Croat, Bitolj; Macedonian, Bitola), town in Yugoslav Macedonia 1918–1992, now in the F.Y.R. of Macedonia, near the Greek border. Monastir was situated on one of the ancient and main trade routes of the Balkans (the Roman "Via Egnatia") which went from the Albanian port of Durazzo to Salonika and Constantinople. It is therefore not surprising that Jews lived there already in Roman times. Direct evidence of Jewish settlement in this region was discovered in 1930 by a Yugoslav archaeologist, Joso Petrovic, who found at nearby Stobi a column from a third-century C.E. synagogue donated by one Claudius Tiberius Polycharmos, pater synagogae ("father of the Synagogue") - the chief parnas. Marmorstein presumes that the ancestors of Polycharmos were freemen of the emperor Claudius who had left Rome for Macedonia around the middle of the first century.

Nothing is known about Jewish settlement in Monastir in the Byzantine period. In the 12th century there were Greek-speaking (Romaniot) Jewish artisans and traders in the town. More Jews arrived after the expulsion from Hungary in the 14th century. At the end of the 15th century refugees from Asia Minor and during the first half of the 16th century many Spanish exiles who came by the coast or through Salonika settled in Monastir. Throughout the Ottoman period (1382–1913) Monastir was a lively commercial center. Trade was mainly in Jewish hands (export of liquor, olive oil, salt and salted fish, and import of wool, silk and woven cloth, copper, etc.); many Jews were tanners, silversmiths, cheesemakers, etc. In the 16th century R. Joseph b. Lev was head of the yeshivah. In the 18th century Abraham b. Judah di Buton was a rabbi of Monastir. A fire which swept through the town in 1863 destroyed over 1,000 Jewish homes and shops. A blood libel accusation was leveled against the Jews in 1900. In 1884 there were 4,000 Jews in Monastir and in 1910, 7,000. After World War I the economic situation deteriorated considerably and many Jews left the town, mainly for the United States and Chile, while others settled in Jerusalem. The remaining Jews were impoverished and there were many unemployed and poor people who were workers, porters, and peddlers. Between the two world wars community activity was manifold and intense with growing Zionist conscience and endeavor; the leader was Leon Kamhi. In the 1930s the central Jewish bodies became aware of the acute social problems in this community and introduced vocational training courses, encouraged halutz youth movements and other activities, but the time was too short. This old community with its several synagogues, diverse social and cultural institutions, as well as a rich and original Judeo-Spanish folklore with some Turkish admixtures, was wiped out during the Holocaust; the approximately 3,500 Jews were deported by the Bulgarian occupation authorities, for the most part to Treblinka on April 5, 1943. In 1952 there were only one or two Jews in the town.

          
Paragraph 2    ובו שמו של... מ"א [מר אבי]... ר' ... יעקב... ישראל... זלל"ה... הצעיר... יוסף יעקב ישראל ס"ט. תפלת ימי חול ויום ר"ח [ראש-חודש] כמהנג [!] ק"ק ספרדים ופרוש בלשון לעז [לאדינו]...

הפירוש כולו בלאדינו. הדינים בעברית. המחבר הוא ר' יעקב יוסף ישראל.

          
Reference
Description
   CD-EPI 0174021; Yaari, Ladino 95; EJ
        
Associated Images
2 Images (Click thumbnail to view full size image):
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Listing Classification
Period
19th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Other:    Macedonia
  
Subject
Liturgy:    Checked
  
Characteristic
First Editions:    Checked
Language:    Ladino
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica