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  • Immagine del venditore per Khativat HaNegev BaMa'arakha [The Negev Brigade in Battle] Hativat Chativat ha-negev venduto da Meir Turner

    EUR 9,05

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    Hardcover. Condizione: Fair. No Jacket. In Hebrew. 232 pages, foldout map. 240 x 173 mm. Wear to edges of boards and spine. Rubber stamp impression in Hebrew of early owner, "Meir Tir. POB 376, Tel Aviv." Yellowed leaves. The 12th Negev Brigade (Hebrew: Hativat HaNegev) is an Israeli reserve infantry brigade that originally served in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. The brigade was founded in March 1948 with two battalions, the 2nd and 8th. The 7th Battalion was created in April, with the 9th Battalion being the last of the four. Yisrael Galili, the Haganah Chief of Staff, and Yigal Allon, the Palmach commander, chose Sarig to command the brigade in December 1947, although the residents of the Negev and David Ben-Gurion appointed Shaul Avigur instead, without Sarig's knowledge. After Avigur toured the Negev, he told Ben-Gurion that he would not be able to command the brigade, citing deteriorating health, and praised Sarig. It was commanded by Nahum "Sergei" Sarig (which is why it was also called Sergei Brigade) and consisted of four Palmach battalions. The Negev Brigade participated in many operations in the Negev Desert, including Operation Yoav in the latter part of the war. Sarig decided to divide the Negev into two sectors, divided by the Beersheba-Gaza road (later Highway 25). Yigal Allon then named Haim Bar-Lev as the commander of the southern sector - the 8th Battalion. The Palmach memorial website records the names of 312 of its members who died whilst in the Negev Brigade.

  • Alterman, Nathan [Natan].

    Editore: Ha-Kibuts Ha-Meuhad, [Tel Aviv], 1973

    Da: Henry Hollander, Bookseller, Los Angeles, CA, U.S.A.

    Valutazione del venditore 4 su 5 stelle 4 stelle, Maggiori informazioni sulle valutazioni dei venditori

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    EUR 18,10

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    Hardbound. Condizione: Good. Small octavo in dust jacket, 63 pp., minor soiling to the endpapers, a few ink-stamps Text is in Hebrew.

  • EUR 13,58

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    Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. In Hebrew. 232 pages, foldout map. 240 x 173 mm. Yellowed leaves. The 12th Negev Brigade (Hebrew: Hativat HaNegev) is an Israeli reserve infantry brigade that originally served in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. The brigade was founded in March 1948 with two battalions, the 2nd and 8th. The 7th Battalion was created in April, with the 9th Battalion being the last of the four. Yisrael Galili, the Haganah Chief of Staff, and Yigal Allon, the Palmach commander, chose Sarig to command the brigade in December 1947, although the residents of the Negev and David Ben-Gurion appointed Shaul Avigur instead, without Sarig's knowledge. After Avigur toured the Negev, he told Ben-Gurion that he would not be able to command the brigade, citing deteriorating health, and praised Sarig. It was commanded by Nahum "Sergei" Sarig (which is why it was also called Sergei Brigade) and consisted of four Palmach battalions. The Negev Brigade participated in many operations in the Negev Desert, including Operation Yoav in the latter part of the war. Sarig decided to divide the Negev into two sectors, divided by the Beersheba - Gaza road (later Highway 25). Yigal Allon then named Haim Bar-Lev as the commander of the southern sector -the 8th Battalion. The Palmach memorial website records the names of 312 of its members who died whilst in the Negev Brigade.

  • Immagine del venditore per Khativat HaNegev BaMa'arakha [The Negev Brigade in Battle] venduto da Meir Turner

    EUR 13,58

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    Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. In Hebrew. 232 pages, foldout map. 240 x 173 mm. Rubber stamp impression indicating it was a de-accessioned duplicate of the Library of Congress. Minor damage to title page. Yellowed leaves. The 12th Negev Brigade (Hebrew: Hativat HaNegev) is an Israeli reserve infantry brigade that originally served in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. The brigade was founded in March 1948 with two battalions, the 2nd and 8th. The 7th Battalion was created in April, with the 9th Battalion being the last of the four. Yisrael Galili, the Haganah Chief of Staff, and Yigal Allon, the Palmach commander, chose Sarig to command the brigade in December 1947, although the residents of the Negev and David Ben-Gurion appointed Shaul Avigur instead, without Sarig's knowledge. After Avigur toured the Negev, he told Ben-Gurion that he would not be able to command the brigade, citing deteriorating health, and praised Sarig. It was commanded by Nahum "Sergei" Sarig (which is why it was also called Sergei Brigade) and consisted of four Palmach battalions. The Negev Brigade participated in many operations in the Negev Desert, including Operation Yoav in the latter part of the war. Sarig decided to divide the Negev into two sectors, divided by the Beersheba-Gaza road (later Highway 25). Yigal Allon then named Haim Bar-Lev as the commander of the southern sector -the 8th Battalion. The Palmach memorial website records the names of 312 of its members who died whilst in the Negev Brigade.

  • Immagine del venditore per Khativat HaNegev BaMa'arakha [The Negev Brigade in Battle] venduto da Meir Turner

    EUR 13,58

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    Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. In Hebrew. 232 pages, foldout map. 240 x 173 mm. Yellowed leaves. The 12th Negev Brigade (Hebrew: Hativat HaNegev) is an Israeli reserve infantry brigade that originally served in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. The brigade was founded in March 1948 with two battalions, the 2nd and 8th. The 7th Battalion was created in April, with the 9th Battalion being the last of the four. Yisrael Galili, the Haganah Chief of Staff, and Yigal Allon, the Palmach commander, chose Sarig to command the brigade in December 1947, although the residents of the Negev and David Ben-Gurion appointed Shaul Avigur instead, without Sarig's knowledge. After Avigur toured the Negev, he told Ben-Gurion that he would not be able to command the brigade, citing deteriorating health, and praised Sarig. It was commanded by Nahum "Sergei" Sarig (which is why it was also called Sergei Brigade) and consisted of four Palmach battalions. The Negev Brigade participated in many operations in the Negev Desert, including Operation Yoav in the latter part of the war. Sarig decided to divide the Negev into two sectors, divided by the Beersheba-Gaza road (later Highway 25). Yigal Allon then named Haim Bar-Lev as the commander of the southern sector -the 8th Battalion. The Palmach memorial website records the names of 312 of its members who died whilst in the Negev Brigade.

  • Immagine del venditore per REGA'IM sefer sheni [5]697 - [5]703 [= 1937-1943 C.E.][I the series: Kol Kitvey Nathan Alternan venduto da Meir Turner

    Alterman, Natan (Nathan) (1910-1970)

    Lingua: Ebraico

    Editore: Hakibbuz Hameuchad Hotsaat Ha-Kibuts Ha-Meuhad,, Tel Aviv, Israel, 1974

    Da: Meir Turner, New York, NY, U.S.A.

    Valutazione del venditore 5 su 5 stelle 5 stelle, Maggiori informazioni sulle valutazioni dei venditori

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    EUR 40,73

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    Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good. In vowelized Hebrew. 352, [6] pages. 220 x 148 mm. Ex library with de-accession stamp.Alterman ?(August 14, 1910 - March 28, 1970) was an Israeli poet, playwright, journalist, and translator. Though never holding any elected office, Alterman was highly influential in Socialist Zionist politics, both before and after the establishment of the State of Israel. He was born in Warsaw, Poland (then part of the Russian Empire). He moved to Tel Aviv with his family in 1925, when he was 15 years old, and continued his studies at the Herzliya Hebrew High School. When 19 years old, he travelled to Paris to study at the University of Paris (a.k.a. La Sorbonne), but a year later he decided to go to Nancy to study agronomy. Though maintaining close contacts with his family and friends in Tel Aviv and visiting them on vacations, Alterman spent three years in France and was highly influenced by his occasional meetings with French artists and writers. When he returned to Tel Aviv in 1932, he started working at the Mikveh Yisrael agricultural school, but soon left it in favour of working as a journalist and poet. Alterman is credited with bringing the seeds of the marmande tomato to Israel, where it was the main species cultivated in the country until the 1960s. Alterman's first published book of poetry was Kokhavim Bakhuts ("Stars Outside"), published in 1938. This volume, with its "neo-romantic themes, highly charged texture, and metrical virtuosity," as Israeli critic Benjamin Harshav puts it, established him as a major force in modern Hebrew literature. His next major book was "The Joy of the Poor", which many regard as his magnum opus. This is a kaleidoscopic phantasmagoria consisting of 31 interconnected poems, all from the viewpoint of the ghost of a dead man obsessed with the living woman he loves, a reversal of the Orpheus and Eurydice story. The dead man wants to protect his living love from war and poverty, but more than anything he wants to drag her into his world. His plans are continually frustrated. The light from a humble candle is enough to drive him back. The story reads like a supernatural thriller, but the rhyme and the meters are regular and elegant. In 1942, when the first news about the Holocaust reached the Zionist Jewish community in British Mandate Palestine, Alterman wrote a poem, which can be described as a sarcastic paraphrase on the Jewish prayer, "Praised are You . who has chosen us out of all the nations". In this poem Alterman says, "At our children's cry, shadowed by scaffolds, we heard not the world's furor. For you have chosen us out of all nations, you loved and favoured us. For you have chosen us of all nations, of Norwegians, Czechs and Britons. As they march toward scaffolds, Jewish children of reason, they know their blood shan't be reckoned among the rest, they just call to the mother 'turn away your face'." In 1943, Alterman wrote the maqama "The Swedish Tongue", in which he praised Sweden's willingness to welcome Jewish refugees from Denmark. In 1943, he also wrote a poem that was critical of Pope Pius XII, a poem that is featured at the Yad Vashem museum. During the 1945-1947 years of the Zionist movement's struggle against British rule, Alterman's weekly column in the Labour Movement "Davar" newspaper was highly influential, strongly denouncing the British army's oppressive measures and praising the illegal immigrant boats landing Jewish holocaust survivors on the country's shores, in defiance of British policy. The most well-known of these is the 1945 "In Praise of an Italian Captain." In the early stages of the Israeli War of Independence he wrote numerous patriotic poems, the most well-known of which is "The Silver Platter" ( magash ha-kesef). Having become a canonical text read on Israel's Remembrance Day, this poem was written in response to Chaim Weizmann's words in December 1947, after the adoption of the UN Partition Plan for Palestine, "No state is ever handed on a silver platter. . .

  • Alterman, Natan (Nathan)

    Lingua: Ebraico

    Editore: Israel. Machbarot le-Sifrut, 1957

    Da: Antiquariat Hennwack, Berlin, Germania

    Valutazione del venditore 5 su 5 stelle 5 stelle, Maggiori informazioni sulle valutazioni dei venditori

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    EUR 19,60

    Spedizione EUR 47,00
    Spedito da Germania a U.S.A.

    Quantità: 1 disponibili

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    Condizione: Gut. 8vo. 358, (2) S. OHLn. mit Vergoldung. Widmung auf Vorsatz, Blätter leicht gebräunt sonst gut erhaltenes Exemplar.

  • Immagine del venditore per Fedrah : Tragedyah Phedre : tragedie venduto da Meir Turner

    Racine, Jean, 1639-1699. Trnanslation into Hebrew by Alterman, Natan (Nathan) (1910-1970)

    Lingua: Ebraico

    Editore: Machbarot Lesifruth Publishing, Tel Aviv, Eretz Israel, 1945

    Da: Meir Turner, New York, NY, U.S.A.

    Valutazione del venditore 5 su 5 stelle 5 stelle, Maggiori informazioni sulle valutazioni dei venditori

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    EUR 79,65

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    Hardcover. Condizione: Very Good. No Jacket. In vowelized Hebrew. 118, [1] pages. 18 x 11 cm. Nathan Alterman (August 14, 1910 - March 28, 1970) was an Israeli poet, playwright, journalist, and translator. Though never holding any elected office, Alterman was highly influential in Socialist Zionist politics, both before and after the establishment of the State of Israel. He was born in Warsaw, Poland (then part of the Russian Empire). He moved to Tel Aviv with his family in 1925, when he was 15 years old, and continued his studies at the Herzliya Hebrew High School. When he was 19 years old, he traveled to Paris to study at the University of Paris (a.k.a. La Sorbonne), but a year later he decided to go to Nancy to study agronomy. Though maintaining close contacts with his family and friends in Tel Aviv and visiting them on vacations, Alterman spent three years in France and was influenced by his occasional meetings with French artists and writers. When he returned to Tel Aviv in 1932, he started working at the Mikveh Iisrael agricultural school, but soon left it to devote himself to journalism and poetry. Alterman is credited with bringing the seeds of the marmande tomato to Israel, where it was the main species cultivated in the country until the 1960s. Alterman's first published book of poetry was Kokhavim Bakhuts ("Stars Outside"), published in 1938. This volume, with its "neo-romantic themes, highly charged texture, and metrical virtuosity," as Israeli critic Benjamin Harshav puts it, established him as a major force in modern Hebrew literature. His next major book was "The Joy of the Poor", which many regard as his magnum opus. This is a kaleidoscopic phantasmagoria consisting of 31 interconnected poems, all from the viewpoint of the ghost of a dead man obsessed with the living woman he loves, a reversal of the Orpheus and Eurydice story. The dead man wants to protect his living love from war and poverty, but more than anything he wants to drag her into his world. His plans are continually frustrated. The light from a humble candle is enough to drive him back. The story reads like a supernatural thriller, but the rhyme and the meters are regular and elegant. In 1942, when the first news about the Holocaust reached the Jewish community in British Mandate Palestine, Alterman wrote a poem, which can be described as a sarcastic paraphrase on the Jewish prayer, "Praised are You . . . who has chosen us out of all the nations". In this poem Alterman says, "At our children's cry, shadowed by scaffolds, we heard not the world's furor. For you have chosen us out of all nations, you loved and favored us. For you have chosen us of all nations, of Norwegians, Czechs and Britons. As they march toward scaffolds, Jewish children of reason, they know their blood shan't be reckoned among the rest, they just call to the mother 'turn away your face'." In 1943, Alterman wrote the maqama "The Swedish Tongue", in which he praised Sweden's willingness to welcome Jewish refugees from Denmark. In 1943, he also wrote a poem that was critical of Pope Pius XII, a poem that is featured at the Yad Vashem museum. During the 1945-1947 years of the Zionist movement's struggle against British rule, Alterman's weekly column in the Labor Movement "Davar" newspaper was highly influential, strongly denouncing the British army's oppressive measures and praising the illegal immigrant boats landing Jewish holocaust survivors on the country's shores, in defiance of British policy. The most well-known of these is the 1945 "In Praise of an Italian Captain." In the early stages of the Israeli War of Independence he wrote numerous patriotic poems, the most well-known of which is "The Silver Platter" ( magash ha-kesef). Having become a canonical text read on Israel's Remembrance Day, this poem was written in response to Chaim Weizmann's words in December 1947, after the adoption of the UN Partition Plan for Palestine, "No state is ever handed on a silver platter. . .