Auction 8 Rare Historical Items
By Rarity Auction House
Jun 23, 2021
17 Perlman Dr. Suite 204 Spring Valley NY 10977, United States

17 Sides Handwritten by the Ben Ish Chai


HISTORIC OPPORTUNITY! the Hatam Sofer’s unpublished novellae to Bava metsi‘a


First time on Auction! Panim Yafot – Ostroh, 1825- First Edition - nice copy


Great virtue! Coin for preservation - from the holy hands of the holy Rabbi Mofet Hador, the Tzaddik Rabbi Avraham Matityahu Friedman of Stepinesht


Wonderous Segulah! Card full of blessings signed by The Holy Rav Rabbi Eliezer Zvi Safrin of Komarno



HISTORIC! FIRST TIME ON AUCTION! letter full handwritten and signed by Rabbi Menachem Brody Av Beis Din of Kaliv



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LOT 163:

Carlebach, Joseph. DAS BUCH KOHELETH with signed Inscription

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Sold for: $260
Price including buyer’s premium and sales tax: $ 338.99
Start price:
$ 150
Estimate :
$400 - $700
Buyer's Premium: 22%
sales tax: 8.38% On lot's price, no sales tax on commission
Auction took place on Jun 23, 2021 at Rarity Auction House
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Carlebach, Joseph. DAS BUCH KOHELETH with signed Inscription

Carlebach, Joseph. DAS BUCH KOHELETH: EIN DEUTUNGSVERSUCH. Frankfurt A. M.; Hermon, 1936. Original Cloth. 8vo. 77 pages. 23 cm. First edition. In German. 'Book of Ecclesiastes, an interpretation. ' Commentary on Koheleth, with a major emphasis on the pessimistic worldview, the writings of Schopenhauer, and the struggle for life; by Joseph Carlebach (1882–1942), rabbi and educator … Carlebach published commentaries on the Song of Songs, the Prophets (1932), and Ecclesiastes (1936), and his thesis on Levi b. Gershom as a mathematician, besides many articles in German-Jewish periodicals. ” - EJ 2008. Subjects: Commentaries. Criticism, interpretation, etc. Bible. Ecclesiastes - Commentaries. Bible. 


Joseph Hirsch (Tzvi) Carlebach (January 30, 1883, Lübeck, German Empire – March 26, 1942, Biķerniecki forest, near Riga, Latvia) was an Orthodox rabbi and Jewish-German scholar and natural scientist (Naturwissenschaftler). Joseph Carlebach became rabbi, like many of his brothers, to wit David Carlebach, Emanuel Carlebach (rabbi in Memel and Cologne), Hartwig Naftali Carlebach (rabbi in Berlin, Baden near Vienna and New York), and Ephraim Carlebach (rabbi in Leipzig). Joseph Carlebach completed extensive studies in natural sciences. From 1901 on he studied at Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität in Berlin natural sciences, mathematics, astronomy, philosophy and history of art. The quantum physicist Max Planck and the philosopher Wilhelm Dilthey (hermeneutics) were among his teachers. In 1908 he graduated as high-school teacher (Oberlehrer-Examen) of natural sciences (at summa cum laude). In the same time Carlebach attended the orthodox Rabbinical Seminary in Berlin. In 1905 to 1907 Carlebach interrupted his studies in Germany and taught at the Lämel-School in Jerusalem. There Carlebach learned to know a number of excellent rabbis.




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