Аукцион 25 Часть 1 Rare books, privileged copies, chasiddut, rare letters, manuscripts, Chabad, and more.
от TZolman's auction
14.9.20
Arie ben eliezer 45 jerusalem, Израиль

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Аукцион закончен

ЛОТ 117:

Book of abbreviations and notes to Likutei Amarim (Sefer HaTanya). "First Edition". 1948.


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$ 10
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Аукцион проходил 14.9.20 в TZolman's auction
теги: Хабад

Book of abbreviations and notes to Likutei Amarim (Sefer HaTanya). "First Edition". 1948.

Book of abbreviations and notes to the book Likutei Amarim (Tanya) by the great, true, G-dly Rebbe Chassidah Kadisha Or Olam Nezer Yisrael and His Glory The Holy of the Lord, Marna and Rabbi Menachem Mendel of the Lubavitcher Rebbe. "First Edition". Served by the Hassidic treasury. (1948). In the Gherz Brothers print.


[2], XI, Kenaz, [5] p .; A cover title and text were added. P. III: Introduction ... In this we are the publisher ... From the Rebbe Tzemach Tzedek, there are abbreviations and comments on Tanya. "To understand the difficulty mentioned in the beginning of the book of the Tanya ..." d) Notes and commentaries in Chapters 1-23 of the Tanya ... Not included here are his comments ... scattered in his articles and writings. In [R. Shalom Dov Ber Schneerson] on the Tanya b) Letter from the Rebbe [Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson] about the Tanya. This is a report about the Tanya. D) Paximilia A manuscript of the Tanya and a commentary about it from the podium ... e) Paximilia from the beginning of the Tanya The first pattern ... In my remarks at the end of the book ... I mentioned ... brief references and explanations.


Brown soft cover slightly worn and detached. Condition: Very Good.

The Admor of Tzemach Tzedek Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, (5549-5626) known as the owner of Tzemach Tzedek after his book, was the third Rebbe of the Chassidic Chassidic dynasty. He headed it from the year 1827 until his death in 1866. Was born in the town of Liuzna in the seat of the Russian Empire (since the 1990s in the Vitebsk district of Belarus) to Dvora Leah Altshuler, the daughter of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi and to Rabbi Shalom Shachna Altshuler. It was named after Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Vitebsk. At the age of three he was orphaned by his mother, and according to her will grew up in the home of his grandfather, Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, who taught Torah. On the 5th of Kislev, 1803, at the age of 14, he married his cousin, Chaya Mushka, daughter of Rabbi Dovber Shniori, the Admor of Chabad-Lubavitch, until he died on his behalf. A year and a half later, he agreed to invite the Hasidim to treat them as Admor, and when he was appointed he began working to save Jewish youth from enlistment in the Russian army (in what was known as the "Cantonese section"). He also sent his followers to gather places in order to encourage them to remain loyal to Judaism, and he himself tried to bring troops closer to the army. A Hasidic article was written in Yiddish during a meeting (1839), he was awarded the title of "Honorary Citizen" of the Russian Empire, and in 1851 he was awarded by Nikolai the First , The Emperor of Russia was a "respected citizen of all generations." This title was valid until the collapse of the Russian Empire and the end of the Tsar's rule in 1917. According to the Admor Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson, in 1841 he founded a Yeshiva in Lubavitch in order to prevent the Enlightenment To her the young. The yeshiva survived 26 years. Fought determined struggles against the efforts of the maskilim, who persuaded the Russian authorities to interfere with the Jewish way of life and their educational systems. At the meeting of the rabbis in 1843 concerning the proposal to force secular studies on the Jews, the authorities warned him that his struggles were perceived as opposing the government, and his descendant Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneerson said that despite this he continued and was arrested twenty-two times during the assembly. Halachic questions were sent to him from various regions of the Russian Empire, and his replies and novellae were collected in the books of Tzemach Tzedek, also known for his large library, and he is said to have written Torah novellae from the age of 12. Some of his writings have been published, , Kabbalah and Hasidism. Many of his manuscripts were lost and some of them were later discovered and published. He died on March 29, 1866, and was buried in the Lubavitch cemetery. His deputy in Lubavitch was his youngest son, Rabbi Shmuel Schneerson. Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe of the Chabad dynasty, was the grandson of his grandson, Son after son). His second son, Rabbi Yehuda Leib (Maharil), established after his father's death the court of Chabad-Capost. He himself died six months after his father, while his sons continued to run the court. His third son, Rabbi Chaim Shneur Zalman Schneerson, established after his father's death the courtyard of the Chabad-Ladi, his son was succeeded by his son, but his fourth son, Rabbi Israel Noah (the Maharan) His fifth son, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak of Avoruch, established in his father's life and in spite of his opposition to the courtyard of "Avrutash." This courtyard was not a Chabad-style courtyard, but rather a courtyard. In the style of Chernobyl storks. His sixth son, Rabbi Ya'akov, died at a young age in 1877. He was married and his son was named Rabbi Shneur, and his seventh son, Rabbi Shmuel (Maharash), filled his father's place (in Lubavitch) under the leadership of the Chabad Lubavitch dynasty , As the will of the father.