Mulder, Samuel (Ed). Peri To’eleth.

AUCTION 63 | Thursday, November 13th, 2014 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Autograph Letters, Graphic and Ceremonial Art

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Lot 33
(AMSTERDAM).

Mulder, Samuel (Ed). Peri To’eleth.

Hebrew signature of Itzik Levi Miller, Secretary of the Society (p. 6 of preliminary pages). A crisp, clean copy. pp. (8), 160. Signature of previous owner on half-title “Samuel ben Jacob Fas (known as Jacobs).” Contemporary half-calf over marbled boards, rubbed. 8vo. Vinograd, Amsterdam 2523.

Amsterdam: J. Van Embden 1825

Est: $300 - $500
PRICE REALIZED $400
To’eleth (or in the Dutch Jewish pronunciation “Tongeleth”) was a Dutch literary society of religious Jews, who as members of the Haskalah Movement, advocated revival of the Hebrew tongue as a literary vehicle. This volume contains literary contributions (poetry, eulogies, Talmudic novellae, biographies) by several members of the short-lived movement founded in 1816 by Dr. Samuel Israel Mulder (1792-1862), a central figure in Dutch Jewish civic affairs. Of especial note is Mulder’s Hebrew romance, Beruryah (see 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 and German Haskalah movements is that the Dutch were conservative by nature and thus did not demand the extreme religious reforms that was often typical of the German approach.