<<Mulder, Samuel>> (Ed.). Bikurei To'eleth. pp. (8), 152. <<* AND:>> Peri To'eleth. pp.(8), 160.
Auction 98 |
Thursday, June 16th,
2022 at 1:00pm
Fine Judaica: Rare Printed Books, Manuscripts, & Autograph Letters
Lot 104
(AMSTERDAM).
<<Mulder, Samuel>> (Ed.). Bikurei To'eleth. pp. (8), 152. <<* AND:>> Peri To'eleth. pp.(8), 160.
Amsterdam: J. Van Embden 1820 and 1825
Est: $500 - $700
PRICE REALIZED $300
To'eleth (or in the Dutch Jewish pronunciation: "Tongeleth") was a Dutch literary society of religious Jews, who as members of the Haskalah or Enlightenment movement, advocated revival of the Hebrew tongue as a literary vehicle. These two volumes contain literary contributions by several members of the short-lived movement.
Tongeleth was founded in 1816 by Dr. Samuel Israel Mulder (1792-1862), a central figure in Dutch Jewish civic affairs and a most prolific writer. Of especial note is Mulder's Hebrew romance, Beruryah (see Peri To'eleth, pp. 53-94). Lachower in his history of modern Hebrew literature, notes that Beruryah "far stands out among other poems and poetic creations of the time."
A glaring difference between the Dutch Haskalah and the German Haskalah movements is that the Dutch were conservative by nature and there was no demand for religious reforms - in contrast to the German Haskalah's rather extreme course.
See M.H. Gans, Memorbook, pp. 350; F.P. Hiegentlich, "Reflections on the Relationship between the Dutch Haskalah and the German Haskalah," in: Michman and Levie (Eds.) Dutch Jewish History (1984) pp. 207-18.