Auction 24 Auction No. 24 A special auction of Judaica details and rare and important Hasidic books from a private collection
Jul 31, 2019 (Your local time)
Israel
 Harav Kook Street 10 Bnei Brak

Auction no. 24

Will take place on Wednesday 28 Tamuz 5769 

31 July. 2019 

In the Achim Center of Rabbi Akiva st. 86, Bnei Brak 

At 20:00 Israel time  

The auction has ended

LOT 012:

Shot HaRemez—first edition, Vencie 1761. Bound with Kinat Sofrim and the pamphlet Chak L’Yisrael, Livorno 1740 ...

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Sold for: $250
Start price:
$ 250
Auction house commission: 20%
VAT: On commission only
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Shot HaRemez—first edition, Vencie 1761. Bound with Kinat Sofrim and the pamphlet Chak L’Yisrael, Livorno 1740, meyuchas copy, pretty.
Volume with three books:
1. Shot HaRemez by Rabbi Moshe Zechut. At the beginning are endorsements and introductions from rabbis of Venice and Constantinople, with a license from the committee of Venice in Hebrew and Italian—first edition, Venice 1761. [4], 56 pages (missing 2 pages with indices).
2. Kinat Sofrim, in which the author defends the Rambam’s sources for the mitzvot and responds to the criticism of the Rambam, with the pamphlet Chak L’Yisrael at the end, criticism of the Pri Chadash on the Yoreh De’ah, by Rabbi Chananya Kezis, a rabbi and doctor in Italy—first edition, Livorno 1740. [4], 39, [1], 23 pages.
Rare and important books bound together with old worn binding, tears and moth marks, generally very good condition. Stamps of ownership of “Shabtai HaKohen Rapaport, Krakow”, notes handwritten declaring ownership for Rabbi Shabtai HaKohen Rapaport and his father Rabbi Yitzhak Haim Katz Rapaport. Rabbi Yitzhak Haim Rapaport (1852-1921) was Av Beit Din of Ostrava and then Krakow, son of Rabbi Shabtai of Dombrova and son-in-law of Rabbi Zeev Nachum Burnstein of Biely (the Agudat Azov and father of the Avnei Nezer). Rabbi Yitzhak Haim was very learned, and was believed to be so nice that it was said he would take his jacket off in the street for any poor person who needed it. His brother-in-law the Avnei Nezer greatly appreciated him, and wrote that he was his “book depository.” Dozens of his responsa are in the Avnei Nezer, as well as in the Kochav MiYaakov (his father’s son-in-law) His son, Rabbi Shabtai HaKohen Rapaport (1885-1943) was a dayan and motz in Krakow, and died in the Shoah with his family, hy”d.


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