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Published by Shilo, 1995
ISBN 10: 0883280256ISBN 13: 9780883280256
Seller: Bookshop Baltimore, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Book
Paperback. Condition: Fair. 42 pages. Reading copy. Clean text, cover has heavy creases, scratches, former owner's name crossed out, page creases. A public disputation involving the fundamentals of Judaism held in four separate sessions at Barcelona;
Published by Yesivath Beth Moshe, 2006, 2006
ISBN 10: 1892692155ISBN 13: 9781892692153
Book
Condition: Near Fine. VOLUME 4 Hbk, 118pp + Glossary, text in English with some Hebrew, no dj as issued, fine, crisp laminated boards, a new and unread copy, excellent, clean, tight and unmarked, as new.
Condition: Very Good. Location:500 352 pp. dj torn volume one of two volume set 500.
Hardcover with dust jacket. Book is in very good condition, with previous owner's stamp inside. Dust jacket is badly stained. 504 pp.
Published by Shilo, New York, 1975
Seller: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
THIS VOLUME ONLY. 25.5x17.5 cm. 437 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Spine edges slightly bumped. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs. The book is in : English.
Published by Shilo, New York, 1973
Seller: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
THIS VOLUME ONLY. 25.5x17.5 cm. VI+648 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Spine edges slightly bumped. Stamp on first blank page. Else in good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs. The book is in : English.
Published by Shilo, New York, 1976
Seller: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
THIS VOLUME ONLY. 25.5x17.5 cm. 437 pages. Gilt hardcover with dust-jacket. Spine edges slightly bumped. Else in good condition. The book is in : English.
Published by Shilo Publishing House, Inc., New York, 1971
Seller: Library of Religious Thought, Omaha, NE, U.S.A.
Book
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 621pp. It has moisture that discolored the bottom outer edges of the pages when closed, did not seep into the inner at all.
Published by Shilo Publishing [Brooklyn, NY] nd (1973), 2005
ISBN 10: 0883280078ISBN 13: 9780883280072
Seller: Bear Bookshop, John Greenberg, Brattleboro, VT, U.S.A.
Book First Edition
648pp. 8vo Blue cloth 1st edition? No additional printings listed. Owner's stamp on endpaper else clean tight copy bright: Near Fine/Near Fine dj with small edge tear 0-88328-007-8.
Published by Generic, 1985
Seller: Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, U.S.A.
hardcover. Condition: Good. 2 volumes, in slipcase.
Published by Shilo, New York, 1976
Seller: The Book Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
255x175 mm. 437 pages. Gilt hardcover. Cover slightly stained. Cover edges slightly rubbed. Spine edges slightly bumped. Pen inscription on front white page. Else in good condition. The book is in : English.
Published by Shilo Publishing House Inc., New York, 1978
ISBN 10: 0883280132ISBN 13: 9780883280133
Seller: Henry Hollander, Bookseller, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.
Book
Hardbound. Condition: Very Good-. Octavos in dust jackets, xii, 353 + 354-747 pp., index, ink-stamps, soiling to the rear free endpapers Translated and Annotated with Index by Rabbi Dr. Charles B. Chavel.
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Also find First Edition
Hardcover, no dust jacket. Complete set, volume 1 through volume 5. Very good. Previous owner's name, some scuffing to covers 621, 648, 504, 424, 437 pages. Due to the weight of these volumes, the shipping cost will be higher than the regular rates shown on some web-sites. pp.
Published by Shilo Publishing House, Inc, New York, N. Y., 1985
Condition: NF/NF. Two hardcover books complete in its original dust jackets, housed within the original cardboard slipcase. 26 cm. 747 pages. The books are in near fine condition. No ownership marks/writing present within. Hinges tight, interior pages bright. Light edge wear/bumping, rubbing to the slipcase.
Published by Shilo Pub House, 1983
ISBN 10: 088328023XISBN 13: 9780883280232
Seller: dsmbooks, Liverpool, United Kingdom
Book
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Very Good. book.
Published by Shilo, 1971
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: VERY GOOD. First Edition Thus. 621, 648, 504, 424, 437 pp. Complete in five volumes. 8vo, Blue cloth, gilt spine lettering, sewn bindings. Some light shelfwear, spines just faintly toned, all volumes clean and unmarked otherwise with sound bindings.
New York, Shilo, 1971-1976. XIII,621, VI 648, VI,504, VI,424, VI,437pp. Owner's handwritten signature on each flyleaf and title. Else clean, in very good condition.Original cloth, Some corners slightly bumped. English language. Translated from the Hebrew. Apart from the signatures absolutely clean inside, no underlinings, markings or whatsoever. Heavy set, for shipment outside Europe, extra postage required. Ramban's exposition, intermingled with aggadic and mystical interpretations, is based upon careful philology and original study of the Bible (five books of Moses) . Judaism. Middle Ages.
Published by Judaica Press, 2010
ISBN 10: 1607630494ISBN 13: 9781607630494
Seller: Revaluation Books, Exeter, United Kingdom
Book
Paperback. Condition: Brand New. 9.30x6.90x6.70 inches. In Stock.
Published by Hevrat Hinukh Ne'arim (Berlin Freischule)/[n.p.], Berlin and Dessau, 1782
Seller: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Nearly Fine. First editions (2 of 4). Sammelband of four opuscules published between 1782 and 1819, octavo. Contemporary half calf (top inch perished) over pastepaper boards; spine lettered and tooled in gilt. Edges speckled blue. Covers lightly worn, else fine, clean copies (the fourth work lightly foxed throughout). The first three works issued from the Hevrat Hinukh Ne'arim (Berlin Freischule) under the supervision of Isaac Satanow (1732-1804), the most prolific Hebrew writer of the Berlin Haskalah. As director of the publishing house, Satanow was assigned the task of reissuing old Hebrew classics by the Marpeh ha-Nefesh, a philanthropic group headed by the banker Daniel Itzig, his son-in-law, David Friedländer, and the famous physican and philosopher, Marcus Herz. A number of these editions, however, were in fact original works by Satanow, which he presented as the work of earlier writers. The first item in the sammelband is an outstanding example of this latter type. I. Kuntres mi-Sefer ha-Zohar Hibura Tinyana, Berlin: Hevrat Hinukh Ne'arim, 1783. [aleph]-[gimel]8 [dalet]1; 25ff. Vinograd (Berlin) 313. First edition of this polemic styled in imitation of the Zohar as a response to the Mitpahat Sefarim (1768) of Jacob Emden (1697-1776), in which the latter calls into question the antiquity and textual integrity of that chief work of the Jewish mystical tradition. Emden's critique may be understood as an attempt to undermine the doctrinal foundation of the Frankists, who based their beliefs on the Zohar. "Emden had suspected the authenticity of the Zohar for a long time, and he hoped some time 'to reveal the strange things found in the book.' But these intentions were secretly nursed within him for many years until the time was propitious for his exposé" (Cohen). Perhaps surprisingly for a maskil, Satanow held a very different view: "While advocating secular knowledge and the study of science, Satanow also expressed great admiration for Kabbalah. In contrast to Emden he claims that the whole Zohar was written by Bar Yohai, and Moses De Leon had nothing to do with its writing. He also rejects Emden's claim that in the Zohar there are words against the Talmud, and promises to 'consult the Zohar and prove that all its words are right and truthful, none of them is crooked [Kuntres mi-Sefer ha-Zohar, pp. 25, 26]" (N. Rezler-Bersohn). Born in the Polish (now Ukrainian) town of Satanov, Isaac Satanow settled in Berlin around 1771. "Among the most prolific of the early Haskalah writers. Satanow demonstrated a wealth of knowledge of the Hebrew language, ranking as a model stylest throughout the Haskalah period" (EJ 14: 905-906). As a leading representive of the eighteenth-century Jewish Enlightement, Satanow boldly displayed a "conglomeration of contrasts" (Jewish Enc. XI: 71): "Though Orthodox in his beliefs, he nevertheless favored Reform in practice. He was one of the greatest authorities on Jewish tradition and lore, yet he was one of the most free-thinking of philosophers." For a more detailed discussion of this and other works by Satanow, see N. Rezler-Bersohn, "Isaac Satanow - An Epitome of an Era" [in:] Year Book XXV, Leo Baeck Institute (1980). For Emden in the present context, see M. L. Cohen, Jacob Emden, A Man of Controversy (Philadelphia: The Dropsie College, 1937), pp. 254ff. II. Sefer Igeret ha-Kodesh, Berlin, 553 [1793]. 7ff. Vinograd (Berlin) 415. Later edition of this well-known work. The celebrated talmudist and exegete, Nachmanides (the Ramban, Moses ben Nachman, ca. 1195-ca. 1270) acted as a conciliator between the parties in the early 13th-century controversies surrounding the philosophical and secular direction of Maimonides' growing influence. "After having given the earlier part of his life to his Talmudical works, Moses [Nachmanides] devoted himself to writing of a homiletic-exegetic and devotional character. To these belong the "Iggeret ha-Kodesh" and the "Torat ha-Adam." In the former, which deals with the holiness and significance of marriage, Moses criticizes Maimonides for stigmatizing as a disgrace to man certain of the desires implanted in the human body. In Moses' opinion, the body with all its functions being the work of God, none of its impulses can be regarded as intrinsically objectionable" (Jewish Enc. IX:88). The rare editio princeps appeared at Rome in 1546; the editor of the present edition, Isaac Satanow, notes at the title that the letter was "printed in Basel in the year [5]340," referring to the 1580 edition of Ambrosius Froben (Prijs 127). III. Nevu'at ha-Yeled, Berlin: [Hevrat Hinukh Ne'arim], 549 [1789]. [asterisk]8 2[asterisk]2. 10 unnumbered leaves. Vinograd (Berlin) 384. Later edition of a medieval Hebrew short story, with commentary, first printed at the end of Jacob Zemah's Sefer Nagid u-Metzaveh (Constantinople, 1726). "The body of the tale is followed by a number of occult prophecies in Aramaic. it was known already as early as the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the 16th when some kabbalists, among them R. Abraham b. Eliezer ha-Levi, wrote commentaries on the prophecies. The story tells of a wonder child, Nahman, born in the fifth century to a kabbalist; the child died very young, but immediately upon birth began to tell his mother secrets of the heavenly worlds. His father cautioned him not to reveal mysteries forbidden to man, and from then the child spoke only obscurely and enigmatically. Modern scholars have attempted to date the story and the prophecies therein by tracing known historical events hinted at, and relating them to the text. The obscurity of the text makes this very difficult, but it seems probable that historical events in the 15th century, especially in the East, are referred to in the prophecies. However, the purpose of the story and its prophecies was to anticipate the coming of the Messiah and to describe the major political and historical events and catastrophes bringing about his final revelation. The kabbalists interpreted the prophecies.