Sephardic Greek women's clothing, Greece, by Archaiologia
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Sephardic Greek women's clothing, Greece, by Archaiologia

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Creatures from the Kennicott Bible, an illuminated manuscript copy of the Hebrew Bible, copied in A Coruña, Spain in 1476 by the calligrapher Moses ibn Zabarah and illuminated by Joseph ibn Hayyim 🔮🦇👼🏼🐉🐻🐊🐒🦚🪞
It is regarded as one of the most exquisite illuminated manuscripts in Hebrew and one of the most lavishly illuminated Sephardic manuscript of the 15th century. According to the historian Cecil Roth, one of the most outstanding aspects of this copy is the close collaboration it shows between the calligrapher and the illuminator, rare in this type of work.
In 1476, Isaac, a Jewish silversmith from Coruña, son of Salomón de Braga, commissioned an illuminated Bible from the scribe Moses ibn Zabarah who lived in Coruña with his family on behalf of his patron. He spent ten months to scribe the Bible, writing two folios on a daily basis. Illumination of the manuscript was the responsibility of Joseph ibn Hayyim, who is remembered thanks to this work.
The first documentation of the Jewish presence dates to 1375. Jewish population in A Coruña grew rapidly throughout the Late Middle Ages. It is thought that after the persecution of Jews in Castile, a large number of Jewish people took refuge in Galicia. The Jewish community in Coruña traded with Castile and Aragon, and in 1451 they contributed to the rescue of the Murcian Jews with a large sum of money, which could demonstrate the prosperity of the community.
Jewish (Sephardic) festive cloth from Bulgaria, 18th century
Megillat Esther, Italy, 18th century
Feels weird to say Chag Purim Sameach right now, but here’s a beautiful Megillat Esther
"A Jewish woman of Gibraltar," John Frederick Lewis, 1835.

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Antique and contemporary Seder plates (png).
A Jewish woman of Damascus, Syria, photographed by Charles Lallemand, c. 1865
Portrait of a Sephardic Jew (c. 1900) by Isidor Kaufmann. Jewish Museum.