Sendschreiben an Seine Hochwürden, Herrn Oberconsistorialrath und Probst Teller zu Berlin, von einigen Hausvätern jüdischer Religion

AUCTION 33 | Tuesday, June 20th, 2006 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Including Hebrew Printed Books, Manuscripts, & Autograph Letters

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Lot 58
(FRIEDLAENDER, DAVID)

Sendschreiben an Seine Hochwürden, Herrn Oberconsistorialrath und Probst Teller zu Berlin, von einigen Hausvätern jüdischer Religion

pp.(2),86. * bound with: [Teller, Wilhelm Abraham]. Beantwortung des Sendschreibens...pp.(4),60. * [Hermes, Hermann Daniel]. Ueber das Sendschreiben...und die von demselben darauf ertheilte Antwort. pp.(2),150. * De Luc, J.A. Lettres aux Auteurs Juifs d’un Mémoire Adressé à Mr Teller, Conseiller du Consistoire Supérieur, et Prévot à Berlin. pp.99. Together four volumes bound in one. ALL FIRST EDITION Lightly foxed. Contemporary boards, rubbed, 8vo Freimann 233-34; Rosenberger Catalogue, Judaica (HUC, 1971) p.217 (illustrated); Eichstadt, Bibliographie zur Geschichte der Judenfrage (1938), nos. 334, 337, 348 and 346

Berlin (third, Leipzig): 1799

Est: $1,000 - $1,500
PRICE REALIZED $1,300
Following the death of Moses Mendelssohn in 1796, David Friedlaender became his intellectual successor and pioneer of the ideology of assimilation, occupying a prominent position in both Jewish and gentile circles in Berlin. In 1799 Friedlaender sent this famous anonymous petition to Berlin’s Pastor Teller “In the Name of Some Jewish Householders,” requesting admittance to the Church - although without the requirement of accepting Christ or performing Christian ritual. Friedlaender believed Christianity and Judaism shared a common natural religion free of ritual. His request was denied, but a significant and contentious debate followed the “Open Letter” calling forth many replies. The letter indicates the level of despair among quarters of German Jews in their struggle for civil equality