1836 Fiorda Furth Machzor Pasover Pessach Yiddish Hebrew Prayer Ashkenazi R.


1836 Fiorda Furth Machzor Pasover Pessach Yiddish Hebrew Prayer Ashkenazi  R.

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1836 Fiorda Furth Machzor Pasover Pessach Yiddish Hebrew Prayer Ashkenazi R.:
$69.00


1836 Fiorda Furth Machzor Pasover Pessach Yiddish Hebrew Prayer Ashkenazi R.

1836 Fiorda Furth Machzor Pasover Pessach Yiddish HebrewPrayer Ashkenazi

In this sale I offer:

Machzor

For pessach and

7-8th day of festival- two titles

Printed in Fiordah

By David ben Izik Zurndorffer

In 1836

Two titles

Yiddish translation

With one art title- very rich decoration

Very rare ancient print

Jewish prayer book forPessach festival days

Yiddish translation word byword

Very rare copy. Good shape

With art title

Ancient hard cover

Thick leaves- clean text

Good shape

5+120+8+ 104+10 leaves size;5-8 inches

The position enjoyed by Jews inFürth (compared with other towns) led to the sobriquet \"FranconianJerusalem\", though this is based on an older, pejoratively intendedreference to Fürth.

Jewish residentsare mentioned as early as 1440; in 1528 the Margrave of Ansbach, George the Pious, permittedtwo Jews, Perman und Uriel, to settle in Fürth (in return for high taxes), andfrom then on the number of Jewish residents increased.

By the 17th century, there was alocal Yeshiva(Talmudic academy) of considerable repute, and in 1617, a synagogue wasbuilt. In 1653, the first Jewish hospital in Germany (and Fürth\'s firsthospital) was built.

When Emperor Leopold I deported the Viennese Jewsin 1670, many upper-class Jewish families moved to Fürth, and by 1716 therewere about 400 Jewish families in the town. In 1807, the proportion of Jews inthe overall population was about 19%. Following the Mediatizationand the Bavarian Judenedikt (Jewish Edict) of1813,[6]there were more restrictions on Jews. In particular, the Matrikelparagraphprovisions prevented Jewish immigration. In 1824, the Talmudic academy wasclosed. The Bavarian Judenedikt of 1813, with itsrestrictions on Jewish life and Jewish immigration was rescinded by the law of29 June 1851, and further laws dated 16 April 1868, and 22 April 1871, whichled to further emancipation of the Jews, and restrictions on residence wereremoved.[7]By 1840, there were 2535 Jews living in Fürth, more than half of all BavarianJews.

In 1862, a Jewish primaryschool was founded, followed by a secondary school in 1882. The highest numberof Jewish residents was reached in 1880, at about 3,300.

The synagogue was destroyed inthe Kristallnacht pogroms of November 1938. Of theJews who remained in Fürth after the pogroms, many were later deported.

After the end of the SecondWorld War, a Displaced persons camp for Jewish Holocaustsurvivors was established in Fürth (Finkenschlag). In 1945 it housed 850 inhabitants;it was shut down in July 1950.

There is a memorial to the Jewishcommunity in the Geleitsgasse square, just off Königstrasse. Archaeologistsdiscovered a Mikvah(ritual bath) in a house in the centre of Fürth. This building now houses theJewish Museum of Franconia, which opened in 1998.

The old Jewish cemetery(Weiherstraße), which was established in 1607, is one of the oldest in Germany.It suffered considerable destruction and desecration during the Nazi regime andthe Second World War, but was restored in 1949 and is now one of the bestpreserved Jewish cemeteries in Germany.A new Jewish cemetery was consecrated in 1880, which has been in use from 1906to the present day.[edit] Nature

The \"Nature Trail for UrbanEcology\" was established in 1999 (3km, 10 stops) and expanded in 2003 toinclude a second route (7km,10 stops). Both tours begin at the Stadthalle underground railway

The mahzor(alternately machzor, plural mahzorim, Hebrew?????,pronounced[ma??zor] and [ma?zo?rim], respectively) is the prayer book used by Jews on the HighHolidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.Many Jews also make use of specialized mahzorim on the three\"pilgrimage festivals\" of Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot. The prayerbook is a specialized form of the siddur, whichis generally intended for use in weekday and Shabbatservices.

The word mahzor means\"cycle\" (the root ?-Z-R means \"to return\"). It is appliedto the festival prayer book because the festivals recur annually.

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1836 Fiorda Furth Machzor Pasover Pessach Yiddish Hebrew Prayer Ashkenazi R.:
$69.00

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