The Halpern Judaica Collection: Tradition and Treasure | Part I
The Halpern Judaica Collection: Tradition and Treasure | Part I
Auction Closed
December 15, 09:26 PM GMT
Estimate
10,000 - 20,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
A Rare Irish Silver Memorial Lamp, maker's mark J.S, Dublin, 1891
baluster form in medieval taste, collar of chased foliage set with stones, with coronet top, engraved below the rim with extensive Hebrew inscription, with associated German silver canopy, marked on side
Height overall 41 in. (104 cm)
Engraved in Hebrew around the rim: “In eternal memory of the members of our community here in Dublin, may its Rock and Redeemer protect it, for from the year [5]552 [1791], when the synagogue was closed, nothing was done for their souls, and now, after the passage of one hundred years, the members of the community donated money to light the memorial lamp in their memory. May their souls be bound up in the Bond of Life. The eve of Rosh Hashanah [5]652 [1891].”
Below in the medallions, the names of the Twelve Tribes.
In the second half of the seventeenth century, a Jewish community established itself in Dublin, making it the second oldest community in the British Isles, after London. A small synagogue in Crane Lane gave way to larger premises in Marlborough Green in the mid-eighteenth century, but, due to a variety of causes, the congregation disintegrated about 1791, and its furnishings and Torah scrolls were moved to other sites. In 1822, following the arrival of a group of Ashkenazic immigrants, a new congregation formed in Stafford Street that, with time, would come to be called the Dublin Hebrew Congregation.
As immigration from Eastern Europe increased later in the century, a number of smaller synagogues sprang up in the South Circular Road-Clanbrassil Street area of Dublin, which became known as “Little Jerusalem.” One of these existed from 1891 to 1895 in Heytesbury Street. It may be this synagogue to which the present Eternal Lamp belonged. For further reading, see: https://www.patrickcomerford.com/2019/10/the-synagogues-of-dublin-9-camden.html.