Guide to the Duke University Libraries Collection of Haggadot, 1200-2003 (bulk1900-2003)
Collection Overview
The Duke University Libraries Collection of Haggadot consists mainly of Passover Haggadot (singular: Haggadah) from the past 1000 years. The 436 Haggadot in the collection, which are found in the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, the Divinity School Library, Perkins Library, and Lilly Library, span 800 years (1200-2003), represent five continents (excluding only Australia and Antarctica), are written in several different languages (including Russian, Marathi, Italian, Yiddish, Ladino and Arabic), and were created for a variety of specific purposes. A majority of the Haggadot were published in the 20th century. A large number of the Haggadot are illustrated or illuminated while others contain only the text. Although the majority of the Haggadot in the collection were created by printing press, or other printing methods, Duke does own a number of limited edition facsimile editions of handwritten manuscripts. Most, but not all, of the Haggadot found in the Special Collections Library come from the Abram and Frances Pascher Kanof Collection of Jewish Art, Archaeology, and Symbolism. This guide does not include the Duke University Libraries' collection of microfilmed Haggadot. See the last paragraph of the Processing and Searching Note below for further information on searching for Haggadot in the library.
Since many of the Haggadot have similar titles (e.g. Hagadah shel Pesah yields 121 results), and to accommodate the variety of ways in which patrons might want to search for Haggadot, the entire collection has been arranged into three different series: Date List Series, Location List Series, and Purpose List Series. Each of these series contains the entire collection of Haggadot, but arranged according to different criteria. Therefore, the item with call number Haggadah Pam #106, an advertising Haggadah from 19th century New York, can be found in three places: 1) in the Date List under the 19th Century Subseries; 2) in the Location List under the United States Subseries; and 3) in the Purpose List under the Advertising Subseries.
The Date List Series is subdivided by century for Haggadot published from the 13th through the 19th centuries and by decade (e.g., 1910-1919) for those Haggadot created during the 20th and 21st centuries. The majority of the Haggadot (84%) are from the 20th century.
The Location List Series arranges the collection by the country where each Haggadah was created--usually where the item was printed--then by the date of creation. However, facsimile editions have been arranged by the place of their original creation. In these cases, the location where the facsimile was printed is identified in the description of each facsimile. This series is further arranged into subseries by country, including Algeria, Argentina, Austria, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Canada, Czech Republic, England, France, Germany, India, Israel, Italy, Morocco, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Tunisia, and United States.
The Purpose List Series is further subdivided by the specific purpose for which each Haggadah was written. Most of the Haggadot were created for use at a Passover seder and thus are arranged into the General Subseries. These Haggadot are generally traditional in content and are meant to be used by anyone. Other purpose subseries include Advertising, Children, Christian, Denominations (of Judaism), Facsimiles, Fundraising, Kibbutz, Parody, and Resource.
Descriptive Summary
- Title
- Duke University Libraries Collection of Haggadot, 1200-2003 (bulk 1900-2003
- Creator
- Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library.
- Extent
- 436 Items
- Location
- For current information on the location of these materials, please consult the Library's online catalog.
- Language
- English.
Administrative Information
Collections are on the move for the renovation of the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Contact Rubenstein Library staff before visiting. Read More »
Access Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
However, patrons must sign the Acknowledgment of Legal Responsibility and Privacy Rights form before using this collection.
Also, all or portions of this collection may be housed off-site in Duke University's Library Service Center. Consequently, there may be a 24-hour delay in obtaining these materials.
Please contact Research Services staff before visiting the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library to use this collection.
Use Restrictions
The copyright interests in this collection have not been transferred to Duke University.
Contents of the Collection
Subdivided by century for Haggadot published from the 13th through the 19th centuries and by decade (e.g. 1910-1919) for those Haggadot created during the 20th and 21st centuries. The majority of the Haggadot (84%) are from the 20th century. Arranged alphabetically within each date subdivision.
Many Haggadot are dated by Hebrew year, which begins and ends in the Gregorian month of September or October. Therefore, certain Haggadot have a date such as 1909-1910 instead of 1909. Haggadot whose date range covers two subseries can be found in the subseries with the earlier date. Thus, a Haggadah with a date of 1909-1910 is located in the 1900-1909 Subseries, and a Haggadah with a date of 1899-1900 is located in the 19th Century Subseries).
[NOTE: Library call numbers for individual Haggadah are listed at the left (e.g., Haggadah q#4). All call numbers are actively linked directly to their individual records in the Duke University Libraries' Online Catalog. Bibliographic information for each Haggadah has been taken directly from the Online Catalog and thus includes some non-standard punctuation.]
13th Century Subseries
Location: Germany
Facsimile printed in 1965. Commentary volume included. Oldest surviving Ashkenazi illuminated Haggadah manuscript named for its illustrations of human figures with pronounced birds' heads. Signed by a scribed named Menahem.
14th Century Subseries
Location: Catalonia
Facsimile printed in 1992. Commentary volume included. Illuminations include images of medieval Spanish homes, synagogues and musical instruments. Early owners of the Haggadah are identified by signatures as is the 16th Century ecclesiastical censor Visto per me Fra. Luigi del Ordine de San Dominico.
Location: Northern Spain
Facsimile published in New York in 1966. English introduction by Cecil Roth. Consists of 34 full-page miniatures, an illuminated Haggadah text, and hymns and Torah readings for the Passover week. Signed in 1609 by Giovanni Domenico, a church censor. Named because of its location in the Sarajevo Museum. This Haggadah was almost destroyed during the bombardment of Sarajevo in 1994 but was saved by two staff members of the demolished museum where it was housed.
Location: Spain
Facsimile printed in Budapest, Hungary in 1957. Includes 14 full page miniatures and a decorated text.
Location: Northern Spain
Facsimile of the Sarajevo Haggadah from the 14th Century in Northern Spain. Published in New York in 1966. English introduction by Cecil Roth. Consists of 34 full-page miniatures, an illuminated Haggadah text, and hymns and Torah readings for the Passover week. Named because of its location in the Sarajevo Museum.
15th Century Subseries
Location: Italy
Facsimile printed in 1991. Commentary volume included. Signed by 15th Century scribe and artist, Joel ben Simeon. A number of pages contain wine stains as well as notes written in the margins. It is known as the Washington Haggadah because of its location at the Library of Congress in Washington D.C.
Location: Catalonia
Facsimile published in New York, 1988. Sephardi text. Commentary by an unidentified author. Introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: Germany
Facsimile. Published in Leipzig, Germany, 1927-1928. Written by the scribe Israel ben Meir of Heidelberg. The illuminations reflect contemporary German architecture and dress.
16th Century Subseries
Location: Prague
Reproduction of the Frankfurter Stadtbibliothek copy of the original edition, printed by Gershom ben Solomon ha-Kohen, in Prague in 1526. This reproduction was printed in Berlin, Germany in 1926.
Location: Prague
Reproduction published in 1940 in London, England. Translated from the German manuscript by Immanuel Goldschmidt.
Location: Prague
Facsimile. Published in 1954 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Includes an introduction in English. Oldest known Haggadah printed with woodcuts. The woodcuts were later used in other printed Haggadot. Unique to this Haggadah is the mention of an obscure practice. On p. 36 is a woodcut of a man holding and pointing to a leaf of lettuce. The accompanying note says, It is generally customary that the husband points to his wife because of the Biblical reference that a bad woman is more bitter than death.
Location: Prague
Facsimile. Printed in New York, 1964. Includes an English introduction.
Location: Prague
Reproduction published in 1940 in London, England. Translated from the German manuscript by Immanuel Goldschmidt.
Location: Prague
Facsimile printed in Jerusalem in 1972.
Location: Germany
Facsimile printed in 1985 in Tel Aviv. Additional artwork added by a different artist. Includes a transcription of the Hebrew as well as an English translation.
Location: Germany
Facsimile was printed in 1985 in New York. Additional artwork added by a different artist. Includes a transcription of the Hebrew as well as an English translation.
17th Century Subseries
Location: Venice, Italy
Facsimile printed in 1974 Jerusalem. The Venice Haggada of 1609: introduction (15 p.) inserted. Translated by Juda-Arie Leon de Modena.
18th Century Subseries
Location: Venice, Italy
Hebrew commentary by Abarbanel. Includes the traditional Hebrew text with an Italian translation.
Location: Offenbach, Germany
Facsimile printed in Jerusalem in 1972. Originally published by Yisra'el ben Mosheh
Location: Amsterdam
Pocket edition of Haggadah limiting its Yiddish commentary to occasional rubrics. It relies on eye-catching initial letters and woodcuts to make the text come alive. Handwritten note in Hebrew/Yiddish on the inside of the back cover.
Location: –ttingen, Germany
Facsimile printed in Tel Aviv in 1985. Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew and Yiddish. Facsimile of Pessach Haggadah, –ttingen, 1729. Scribe and illustrator: Jacob ben Michael May Segal. Introduction by Chaya Benjamin. Many of the illuminations are based on woodcuts and copper engravings from the printed Haggadot of Venice and Amsterdam.
Location: Amsterdam
Facsimile printed in 198-? The Illuminations are based on the well-known Amsterdam engravings with some additions and changes. Also known as the The Alexander Karl Floersheim Haggadah.
Location: Altona, Germany
Facsimile published in Tel Aviv in 1987. Includes an abbreviation of the Zevah Pesah commentary by Isaac Abravanel as well as a short mystical commentary. Ashkenazi and Sephardi rites included. Includes a separate introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile printed in Tel Aviv in 1986. The Artist is Uri Pheibush [Philip Isac Levy]. Introduction by Chaya Benjamin. Hebrew and English (12 p.) inserted.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Yiddish and Hebrew. Includes a list of laws for Passover. Contains many woodcuts as well as artistic initial letters with leaves growing from them. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile of The Altona-Hamburg Haggadah. Manuscript. 1751 (Codex Levy 22). Published in Tel Aviv in 1986. English and Hebrew. Map of the Land of Israel, drawn by Abraham Bar-Yaacov, the first Hebrew-letter printed map, attached to the Amsterdam Haggadah from 1696 found on pp. 27-30. By the Scriber ... Uri Feivisch, son of Rabbi Itzhak Eizik ....
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile of The Altona-Hamburg Haggadah. Manuscript. 1751 (Codex Levy 22). Published in Tel Aviv in 1986. English and Hebrew. Map of the Land of Israel, drawn by Abraham Bar-Yaacov, the first Hebrew-letter printed map, attached to the Amsterdam Haggadah from 1696 found on pp. 27-30. By the Scriber ... Uri Feivisch, son of Rabbi Itzhak Eizik ....
Location: Venice, Italy
Ladino and Hebrew. Includes the evening service for the first days of Passover.
Location: Amsterdam
Includes a short version of Isaac Abarbanel's Zevah Pesah commentary. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Breslau, Germany
Facsimile published in Tel Aviv in 1984. Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Yiddish. Accompanied by introductory material in Hebrew and English, including bibliographies, prepared by Chaya Benjamin.
Location: London, England
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Text and commentary in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Yiddish. Includes commentary by Isaac Abarbanel. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Amsterdam
Text and commentaries in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Yiddish. Signed on 1st page by Hare Lovy and Leopold Fried. Stamped on 2nd page by Dr. Hinko Urbah. A faded list of names appears in Hebrew and English on the final two pages. Includes the laws for Passover.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Ladino and Hebrew. Signed on title page by David b. Raphael Mendola. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Offenbach, Germany
Illustrations were made from woodcuts. Commentary by Joel Brill, based on the Berlin Haggadah of 1745.
Location: Dyhernfurth, Germany
Stamped on first page: Auguste Steinert Berlin. Includes laws for Passover. Some of the text is underlined in pencil and a few marginal notes are written in pencil. Includes commentary by Isaac Abarbanel.
Location: Karlsruhe, Germany
Ceremonial directions in Yiddish.
Location: Pisa, Italy
Hebrew and Spanish; Spanish is in Hebrew script. Wine stains throughout.
19th Century Subseries
Location: Venice, Italy
Ladino (in Rashi script) and Hebrew.
Location: Amsterdam
Not a Haggadah. Contains special readings for each of the four cups of wine.
Location: Verona, Italy
Hebrew text with some Latin on the title page. Primarily text with four simple illustrations: at the beginning, next to the descriptions of the Matzah and Bitter herbs, and after the final song.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Hebrew and Yiddish.
Location: London, England
Contains eight copper plates relating to the service.
Location: Amsterdam
English title: Haggadah for the Night of Drunks. This is a parody of the Passover Haggadah for use on the holiday of Purim. An example of parodied text: Instead of the son who doesn't know how to ask, this Haggadah has the son who doesn't know how to drink (p. 7). For this son, you are instructed to open his mouth for him. Written by Zevi Hirsch Sommerhausen.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Contains the traditional Hebrew text with an Italian translation. Handwritten notes appear throughout in Hebrew (Rashi script), Italian, and Greek. Four handwritten pages, in Hebrew and Italian, were inserted into the beginning of the Haggadah. These pages serve as an annotated table of contents. Signed on the inside of the cover.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew with commentary in Rashi script. Stampted on title and back pages by the Librairie Hebraique in Djerba, Tunisia. Wine stains appear throughout.
Location: Trieste, Italy
Wine stains throughout.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with Dutch translation and commentary.
Location: Trieste, Italy
Facsimile printed in Jerusalem in 1974.
Location: Vilna, Poland
Includes ten commentaries by well-known sages. Wine stains throughout.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic (using Rashi script).
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch. Missing pages 35-46.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew with Yiddish translation. Hebrew signature of the publisher is found on the title page. [Missing from shelf.]
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: New York
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic (in Hebrew characters). The pages of this Haggadah were not cut correctly; some pages are too wide and every two pages are connected at the top. Includes the evening service.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: New York
The front cover serves as an advertisement for The Original Felix Kosher Dining Rooms, a Kosher restaurant and importer of Kosher wines. On the back cover is an advertisement for The Hebrew Standard, a weekly Jewish Journal published in New York during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Location: Algiers, Algeria
Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Complete Haggadah text in Hebrew followed by complete Haggadah text in German. Stamped by Jakob B. Brandeis.
Location: London, England
Hebrew text with commentary in Hebrew, Arabic (in Hebrew characters), and Aramaic.
Location: London, England
Hebrew text with commentary in Hebrew, Arabic (in Hebrew characters), and Aramaic.
Location: London, England
Hebrew and English. Translated by Aaron Asher Green and authorized by the Chief Rabbi of England, Rabbi Naftali Adler ha-Kohen. A handwritten note on first page reads: Rebecca Melchior: a present from the Chief Rabbi N. Adler.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes an introduction by Netan'el Hayyim ben Mosheh Naman Pape. Includes additions and comments by the son of the author on page 16.
Location: Italy
Collection of 29 imprints made in 1977 from original 19th-century wood blocks based on the famous Venice Haggadah of 1609. The near completeness of the collection of biblical and ritual wood cuts intended for printing is a rare find. Not a Haggadah; does not contain text.
1900-1909 Subseries
Location: Prague
Hebrew and German text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew. According to the customs of Bagdad and the cities of India.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Italian and Hebrew. Includes the Evening prayer service.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Hebrew.
Location: Warsaw, Poland
Commentaries by Judah Loew ben Bezalel (ca. 1525-1609) and ehudah Yudl Rozenberg (1865-1935).
Location: Podgorze, Poland
Includes commentaries by 238 different sages.
Location: Amsterdam
Text in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew text with a German text (old German script). Printed by W. Heidenheim.
Location: Amsterdam
From the library of S. van Maarsen, with his bookplate.
Location: New York
Distributed by S.J. Gold, the South's Leading Kosher Delicatessen. [Missing from library shelf.]
1910-1919 Subseries
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in German.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Includes a special chapter with music for the Passover service composed, selected, and arranged by the Rev. Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow Maggid or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
Includes music arranged by Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
Yiddish cover page; English back cover. Text in both Hebrew and English. At the end of the Haggadah is the music for four songs signed by Henry A. Russotto, p. 63.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Includes a Hebrew commentary.
Location: Warsaw-Vilna, Poland
Hebrew and Yiddish. Wine stains throughout.
Location: New York
Text in Yiddish and Hebrew Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow Maggid or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
U.S. Army issued. National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: Calcutta, India
Copies can be obtained free of charge from the supervising officer for Jewish soldiers in India, Fort William, Calcutta.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. This undated Haggadah was edited by Dr. Herman Klopper and contains original music by Henry A. Russotto.
1920-1929 Subseries
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew with German translation. Limited edition of 100 copies on handmade paper.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Edited and printed by Union (Appel Brothers).
Location: New York
Hebrew and Yiddish. From the library of the Yeshiva d'Rambam & T.T., Brooklyn, N.Y., Rabbi Dr. Samuel L. Skolnick, Executive Director, with its stamp.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow Maggid or Dubner Maggid.
Location: Vilna, Poland
Includes 16 commentaries by well-known sages.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Haggadah text and notes are in Hebrew. Ceremonial directions are in Dutch. The cover has a black and white illustration of a man holding up a wine cup.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Hebrew text with an English translation by Rakhel Me'ir.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Handwritten by Baruch Parnetsiskah and illustrated by Jacob Steinhardt. Signed by the artist.
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes an essay at the end, The Passover in history, literature, and art (p. 123-162).
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes an essay at the end, The Passover in history, literature, and art (p. 123-162).
Location: Paris, France
Hebrew with a French translation. Limited edition of 1500 copies on rag paper.
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew and Yiddish; ceremonial directions and introduction in Yiddish. Includes a picture of Warsaw (p. 142).
Location: Amsterdam
Text in Hebrew; notes and ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with commentary in Rashi script.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Arranged and illustrated by Otto Geismar.
Location: New York
New English translation by Judah David Eisenstein. Illustrations by Lola.
Location: New York
Location: Porto, Portugal
Text in Portuguese.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Yiddish and Hebrew.
1930-1939 Subseries
Location: London, England
English translation by Betzalel Ruth. Illustrated and decorated by Albert Rutherston. Issued in gold-stamped blue crushed morocco; all edges gilt; signed inside front cover: Bound by Wood, London.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes music arranged by Solomon Rosowsky.
Location: London, England
A second title page claims that it was printed in Holland.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes a short biography on the life of the Rambam (Maimonides). Includes the Song of Songs.
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew and Yiddish. Includes commentaries by noted sages, including Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow Maggid or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
U.S. Army issued. Distributed by the National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: New York
U.S. Army issued. Distributed by the National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in Hebrew with a German translation.
Location: London, England
Distributed by the Pro-Palestine fund. The back of the Haggadah has two pictures of Jewish settlers in pre-1948 Palestine.
Location: Kibbutz Yagur, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew text with a Hebrew introduction and commentary.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew text with a Hebrew introduction and commentary.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Bound in decorated wooden boards, with cloth spine.
Location: Kibbutz Yagur, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with sketches and mimeographed for members of Kibbutz Yagur. Original text with a few traditional passages.
Location: Le Caire, France
Illustrations in this Haggadah are reproduced from the Livorno Haggadot.
Location: Jaffa, Israel
Follows the Yeminite version. The final pages have advertisements for other publications by the publisher.
1940-1949 Subseries
Location: London
Illustrations reproduced from original engravings.
Location: Kibbutz Giv`at Brener, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten non-traditional text.
Location: New York
Illustrated by Saul Raskin.
Location: New York
Includes an English translation by Abraham Regelson and illustrations by Sigmund Forst.
Location: Kibbutz Na'an, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with a non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Bet ha-Shitah, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with a non-traditional text. Wine stains on several pages.
Location: New York
Published by the Jewish Reconstructionist Movement. Includes a non-traditional text.
Location: New York
Location: Kibbutz Ein Harod, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements. Handwritten and typed; mimeographed.
Location: London
Includes the service for the counting of the Omer and the Song of Songs.
Location: New York
Location: Morocco
This Haggadah has been prepared ... by l'Association des Anciens Elèves de l'Alliance Israélite Universelle and Société Olam Katan in the celebration of the Passover Seder on the 15th day of Nissan 5703 (April 19th 1943) --Colophon.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the United Aged Home of Jerusalem.
Location: New York
Hebrew and English on facing pages.
Location: Kibbutz Giv'at Brener, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text; original four questions related to life on the Kibbutz.
Location: Kibbutz Giv`at ha-Sheloshah, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Includes musical settings by H.A. Russotto. Serves as a fundraising tool for Yeshiva Rabbi Solomon Kluger. A message in Yiddish (front) and English (back) asks for money to help the Yeshiva feed, clothe, educate, and medically treat unfortunate children.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for a number of Jewish organizations. Requests for donations are found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). Duke owns seven of these Haggadot which allows one to see the variety of covers as well as the different organizations which used this Haggadah for fundraising.
Location: New York
Haggadah was printed as a fundraising tool for a number of Jewish organizations. Requests for donations are found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover).
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: New York
Published by the National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Munich, Germany
Hebrew and Yiddish with English introduction. Published for the use of American Jewish soldiers in Germany. Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text that opens with, ...We were slaves to Hitler in Germany... Illustrations depict scenes from the Holocaust.
Location: Djerba, Tunisia
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: London, England
Text in Yiddish and Hebrew with commentaries in Yiddish. Published by the Chief Rabbi's (Religious Emergency) Council.
Location: Merhavyah, Israel
Published by Kibbutz Hashomer Hatzair, the Kibbutz federation of a Zionist youth movement. Non-traditional text with some traditional elements. Duke has two copies of this haggadah. Copy two contains hand written and stamped ceremonial directions in Hebrew.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Includes song for unaccompanied voice: Had gadya.
Location: Merhavyah, Israel
Hebrew date on the cover corresponds to 1946. Black and white drawings with first two pages colored in by hand. Non-traditional text which reflects the secular leanings of the early kibbutz community.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Gil`adi Tel Hai, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with a non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes commentaries by Abraham ben Ze'ev Nahum Bornstein and Samuel Bornstein.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten non-traditional text. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Kibbutz Giv`at ha-Sheloshah, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Annotated by Daniel Goldschidt.
Location: New York
Published by the Spero Foundation to support their goal of advancing traditional Judaism through the publication and distribution of Jewish classics, educational literature and allied purposeful philanthopic [sic] activities. Issued for the Jews of Europe by Agudath Israel Youth Council of America.
Location: Munich, Germany
Printed and distributed in Germany by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.
Location: Kansas City, Missouri
Spanish and Hebrew.
Location: Kibbutz, Israel
Non-traditional text. Illustrations relate to working and defending the land of Israel.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Commentary by Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook.
Location: Kibbutz Kevutsat ha-Tsofim, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text with added ceremonial directions in green ink. Signed on cover by Yehudah Engel.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Giladi, Israel
Written and Illustrated by Gidon Katsch. Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Printed for the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Includes music for voice and piano.
Location: Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrations by Arieh Alweil. Issued for soldies of the Haganah. Non-traditional text. Illustrations on page 15 show military figures from throughout Jewish history.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Published before the independence of Israel. Includes music for songs at the end.
Location: New York
Hebrew with notes in Rashi script. Published by Philipp Feldheim. Listing of other Jewish texts published by Philipp Feldheim at the back.
Location: Florence, Italy
Italian and Hebrew. Includes music for a few songs, including the Hatikvah (Israeli national anthem).
Location: London
Several illustrations have movable parts. Includes songs for voices.
Location: Merhavyah, Israel
Published by Kibbutz Hashomer Hatzair, the Kibbutz federation of a Zionist youth movement. Non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Heftsi-bah, Israel
Handwritten with a non-traditional text. Page 30 in a different hand than rest of Haggadah.
Location: Kibbutz Nezer, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Fundraising tool for Yeshivas Ohel Torah. Includes photographs of students studying, playing basketball, and playing ping pong on center pages.
Location: New York
Bibliography of Haggadot from 1500-1900. Hebrew with some German. Includes three loose pieces of paper with English handwritten notes about specific Haggadot and the history of the Haggadah.
Location: Buenos Aires
Hebrew and Spanish with ceremonial directions; notes and introduction in Spanish.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: New York
Gift of the Yeshiva & Mesifta Toras Chaim of Greater New York. Printed in honor of the first Passover in the modern State of Israel as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The illustrations near the end of the Haggadah (pp. 53, 57) connect the text of the seder to the pioneering efforts in the new state of Israel.
Location: New York
Exclusively produced as a Gift to the Friends and Supporters of the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls, Jerusalem, Israel ...--Cover. Printed in honor of the first Passover by the modern State of Israel as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The illustrations near the end of the Haggadah (pp. 53, 57) connect the text of the seder to the pioneering efforts in the new state of Israel.
Location: New York
Illuminated in the Medieval style. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Supplemental text in Hebrew and English. Includes Israel's Proclamation of Independence in both Hebrew and English. With the traditional songs of the Haggadah composed and arranged by Cantor Joshua S. Weisser.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Handwritten and illustrated by Arieh Alweil. Published by the Israeli Military Rabbinic Association for Israeli soldiers.
Location: Kibbutz 'En Harod, Israel
Illustrations are reproductions of Haim Atar's murals in the kibbutz's dining room. Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes illustrations from older Haggadot.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Several essays about Passover. Includes special Passover laws for soldiers. Published by the Israeli army.
Location: New York
Used as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls.
Location: New York
Used as an advertising tool by Streit's Matzos.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Monash, Israel
Handwritten and illustrated by Gidon Katsch.
Location: Kibbutz, Israel
Non-Traditional text with traditional elements. Handwritten and mimeographed.
Location: Kibutz, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten, non-traditional text.
Location: New York
Hebrew and English. Includes some small sketches. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Kibbutz Afikim, Israel
Handwritten non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Afikim, Israel
Handwritten non-traditional text. Page 10 (Hebrew numbers) with stylized illustration of Hebrew slaves and of free Hebrews leaving Egypt carrying unleavened dough on their heads. Page 10 (Arabic numbers) shows full page illustration of ship off coast of mandate Palestine at night with illegal immigrants coming ashore.
1950-1959 Subseries
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Bound in black cloth with padded boards, raised leaf design, cover and spine titles stamped in gold, tooled copper view of David's Tower from the wall of Jerusalem's old city outlined in gold stamping on upper board, and binder's name stamped in gold beneath copper tooling: Betsalel, Yerushalayim.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: Djerba, Tunisia
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Yiddish. Includes photographs and sketches of well-known rabbis as an illustration for the Rabbis from B'nei Barak.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Music only. Music by Yehudah Sharett. For celebrants, solo voices (SATB), mixed choir, children's choir, and instrumental ensemble.
Location: New York
Location: London
English and Hebrew with ceremonial directions and notes in English. Illustrations signed by Herz.
Location: New York
Includes facsimile of: Seder Hagadah shel Pesah ... / 'Ani Mosheh b.mo.h. Natan ha-Kohen katavti zo't ve-gamarti from 1816.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). Exclusively produced as a Gift to the Friends and Supporters of the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls, Jerusalem, Israel, ...--Cover. Duke has three copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Compliments of Maxwell House Coffee and Instant Maxwell House Coffee. Prepared by Joseph Jacobs Jewish Market Organization, New York, N.Y.--Cover. Duke has two of these Haggadot.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew text. English translation included as an insert. Written and decorated by J. Zimberknopf.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
This Hagada, printed in Jerusalem by Hamadpis Liphshitz Press, is a reproduction of an old Venetian edition ... It contained an Italian translation, for which English has been substituted.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Facsimile of Seder Hagadah shel Pesah : bi-leshon ha-kodesh u-fitrono bi-leshon Ashkenazim ... Venitsiyah : Stamperia Vendramina, 501 [1740 or 1741]. This Hagada--printed in Jerusalem by Hamadpis Lipshitz Press, is a reproduction of an old Venetian edition of which the above [as in Facsimile note] is the original title page. It contained an Italian [?] translation, for which English has been substituted--Colophon. Ha-tseva`im veha-tsiurim ve-seder ha-`amudim hut`amu le-tavnit ha-hotsa'at"--Colophon. "`Al ha-kerikhah tsiur Ha lahma `anya bi-tseva`im mi-tokh Hagadat Sarayevo--Yaari. Yaari 2416.
Location: United States
For the use of American Jewish soldiers serving in Korea.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Uses the illuminated letters from the 1923 edition of the Union Haggadah. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Illustrated by R. Leaf. Includes music arranged by Prof. A.W. Binder.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
This Haggadah was written and illustrated by David Alef.
Location: New York
Translation of the Haggadah text by Jacob Sloan, illustrated with woodcuts from the first illuminated Haggadah, Prague, 1526--T.p. verso.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. The Hagadah for the Third Seder was written under the impact of the great event in Jewish history which took place six years ago--the creation of the State of Israel (p. 4). Mostly an original text with some traditional elements.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Cover contains advertisements of the Home of the Sages of Israel. Imperfect copy: P. 3-12, 17-18, 21-24, 27-28 lacking; bottom half of p. 15-16, 33-34, 41-42, 57-64 cut away. Cover contains advertisements of the Home of the Sages of Israel
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Jacob Wechsler. Note on the front page indicates that the Haggadah was a gift to Dr. Pascher from Harold Scheinberg.
Location: New York
Text in English, Hebrew, and Yiddish; introduction in English.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Commentaries by Rashi, et al.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes commentaries by Moses Sofer, Samuel Ehrenfeld and David Tsevi Ehrenfeld. Reprint of the original which was published in Viena in 1883-1884.
Location: [Düsseldorf-Benrath?], Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in German. Includes illustrations from older Haggadot.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Plates printed on separate paper and mounted on leaves.
Location: New York
Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Changes made to make the seder more meaningful for the children (p. 3). Includes photographs of Jewish art and ritual objects.
Location: Kibbutz Giv€˜at Brener, Israel
Non traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Includes a special section for children.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Bound in white leather with padded upper board, tooled copper plate with title, Hagadah shel Pesaòh, outlined in gold stamping on upper board, in the style of Betzalel.
Location: Washington D.C.
Typed on a typewriter and stapled together. Adapted from Union prayer book--Leaf [1].
Location: New York
Illustrations by R. Leaf. English and/or Hebrew.
Location: Kibbutz Merhavyah, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: New York
Illustrated by Siegmund Forst. Fundraising tool for the United Charity Institutions of Jerusalem.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrations by Alvail. Plates printed on separate paper and mounted on leaves.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by Borden's as an advertising tool.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Reads from left to right.
Location: Kibbutz Merhavyah, Israel
Illustrated by Moshe Proops and handwritten by Mordekhai Amitai. Includes musical instructions.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Slip mounted on p. 4 of cover indicates Haggadah distributed to participants in Passover tour 1929 April 22 to 1959 May 3.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Haggadah contains the Samaritan ceremony for the Passover sacrifice. Text is written in the Paleo-Hebrew script still used by the Samaritan community, as well as the square Hebrew script.
Location: Merion, Pennsylvania
Martin Berkowitz was the Rabbi of Temple Adath Israel of the Main Line in Merion, Pennsylvania. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Music arranged by Solomon Rosowsky.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Giladi, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: Hartford, Connecticut
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The obviously Zionistic illustrations from earlier editions of the Haggadah (see Haggadah Pam 12 mo #15) are missing from this edition.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew Only. A sticker with Hebrew writing on the back reveals that it was intended for the participants of a tour group celebrating passover from 1959 April 22-1959 May 3.
Location: Hartford, Connecticut
English and Hebrew.
Location: Kefar Gil'adi, Israel
Hebrew only.
Location: Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan, Israel
Non traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Kibbutz Alummot, Israel
Non-traditional text. Hebrew without vowels.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Ze'ev. This Haggadah was an insert in the Maariv [Israeli] newspaper.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Handwritten and illustrated by David Alef and Ayelet ha-Shahar. Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Iris Shviitser. Non-traditional text written to emphasize the security provided by the Seneh, an Israeli security organization.
Location: New York
Hebrew only. Includes a number of pictures of well-known rabbis on the pages preceding and following the Haggadah text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
This Haggadah was handwritten and illustrated by David Alef. Non-traditional text. Duke owns two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Kibutz, Israel
Hebrew with non-traditional text. Includes a form for admittance into the hospital with a handwritten note on the back. This Haggadah was written and Illustrated by Gidon Katsch.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Illustrations by Siegmund Forst. Jewish Pocket Books published haggadah which includes a number of essays about Passover in Life and Literature. Printed as a fundraising tool for Yeshivah Torah Vodaath and Mesifta with a request for money in Yiddish and English.
1960-1969 Subseries
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew essays about the history of the Haggadah. On verso of t.p.: The Passover Haggadah: its sources and history, with the complete text of the traditional Haggadah, the most ancient Haggadah from the Cairo Genizah and sample pages of manuscript and printed Haggadot in reproduction. By Ernst Daniel Goldschmidt.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes commentaries by Menahem Kasher and Shmuel Ashkenazi.
Location: Manchester, England
Article about the John Rylands Haggadah by Cecil Roth . Reprinted from the Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, Vol. 43, No. 1, September, 1960.
Location: New York
Reprint of Prague, 1527 ed. Photo-copy of Hebrew text with English translation in parallel columns. Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphans' Home for Girls in Israel.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Jerusalem General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew on opposite pages; commentary in English.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
By Abraham Yaari. Bibliography of the Passover Haggadah from the earliest printed edition to 1900 with twenty five reproductions from rare editions.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls. Duke has three copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
By Abraham Yaari. Bibliography of the Passover Haggadah from the earliest printed edition to 1900 with twenty five reproductions from rare editions.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Location: Flushing, New York
Hebrew and German.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew text with some ceremonial directions in English and French. Illustrations by Moshe Proops.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes 34 illustrations by Ze'ev Raban.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Hebrew introduction with an English summary of the introduction.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Text in Hebrew with ceremonial directions in English and Hebrew. Sueded blue cloth binding with blue enameled metal title label on front cover.
Location: New York
Printed as an advertising tool for the Streit Matzo Company.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Handwritten and illustrated by Arthur Szyk.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Arranged by Walter Orenstein for a children's service. Includes explanations for difficult words as well as questions and answers about the laws of Passover.
Location: Los Angeles, California
Non-traditional text with music. Intended for children.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Hebrew introduction with an English summary of the introduction. Original from 1725.
Location: Los Angeles, California
Original text with traditional elements.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Merion, Pennsylvania
Second printing of the Haggadah for the American Family (1963). Includes the complete traditional Hebrew seder text as well as a shortened Hebrew/English text. Center pages contain an advertisement for Standard Brands Incorporated.
Location: London
Several illustrations have movable parts. Includes songs for voices, chiefly unaccompanied.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Program for an exhibition of Pesach-Haggadoth from the private collection of Mr. Nathan Steiner at the Museum of Ethnography and Folklore in Tel Aviv. In Hebrew.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Printed by General Foods Corporation as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: Armentières-en-Brie, France
Fundraising tool for Yeshivah Ohr Joseph in France. Hebrew and English. Illustrated by Roland Blum. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Includes commentaries.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Newly translated throughout, with an introduction, by Harold Fisch -- T.p. verso.
Location: Cincinatti, Ohio
Volume VII of the Journal Studies in Bibliography and Booklore. A number of articles about Haggadot in Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Printed by General Foods Corporation as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Preface in English and Hebrew by L. Marwick. Reproduction of the Washington Haggadah from 1470. Original written by Joel ben Simeon. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Haggadah contains photographs of the landscape and antiquities of Israel and her neighbors as well as photographs of ornamented utensils used for the Passover Holiday from previous centuries and housed at the Bezalel Jewish National Museum in Jerusalem. The English translation is by Prof. Cecil Roth and the introduction is by Prof. Michael Avi-Yonah. The first Hebrew map, an etching by Abraham bar Yacob, originally printed in the Amsterdam Hagaddah of 1695, on lining papers.
Location: Leiden, Netherlands
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for the Home of the Sages of Israel.
Location: Paris, France
Title on added t.p.: Haggadah for Passover. Hebrew t.p. dated 724 i. e. 1963 or 1964. One of 228 numbered copies.
Location: Miami, Florida
Traditional Hebrew text with a shortened English/Hebrew seder printed in the direction of an English book (left to right). Of special note are the kosher food ads found on the inside covers of the Haggadah as well as the center pages which divide the English from the Hebrew sections. The advertisements found on the center pages are clearly identified as being for foods which, while kosher, are not kosher for Passover.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Reproduction of the Mahzor Roma Haggadah. Hebrew text with commentary in Rashi script. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Hebrew text with an English introduction. Missing Dayyenu and some other traditional elements; includes hymns not found in the traditional text. Incorrect vocalization at times. Ceremonial directions written in the Judeo-Persian language, but using Hebrew characters.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Hebrew text with an English introduction. Missing Dayyenu and some other traditional elements; includes hymns not found in the traditional text. Incorrect vocalization at times. Ceremonial directions written in the Judeo-Persian language, but using Hebrew characters.
Location: New York
Published to accompany its facsimile edition.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: New York
Hebrew and Marathi. Reproduction (partially reduced) of Bombay, 1846 ed.(Yaari no. 656) with added prefatory material by Walter J. Fischel and others. Original was the first Hebrew book printed in India with illustrations.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed by the Carmel wine company. In addition to the traditional seder in both Hebrew and English, this Haggadah contains advertisements for the full line of Carmel wines, liquors and champagnes. At the back of the Haggadah are suggestions for how to serve Carmel€™s different products as well suggestions for Passover cocktails and how to cook with Carmel products.
Location: Haifa, Israel
Hebrew only. Illuminated by Shmuel Bonneh
Location: New York
Translation of the Haggadah text by Jacob Sloan.
Location: New York
Translation of the Haggadah text by Jacob Sloan.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Published by Eliez Winecellars as an advertising tool for their brand of wines. Different advertisements for their wines appear throughout at the bottom pages.
Location: New York
Published as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphan's Home in Jerusalem.
1970-1979 Subseries
Location: Waltham, Massachussetts
Program for an exhibit of Haggadot and Passover ceremonial art at the American Jewish Historical Society. Introductions by Dr. Cecil Roth and Abram Kanof, M.D. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: London
Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Haggadah contains photographs of the landscape and antiquities of Israel and her neighbors as well as photographs of ornamented utensils used for the Passover Holiday from previous centuries and housed at the Bezalel Jewish National Museum in Jerusalem. The English translation is by Prof. Cecil Roth and the introduction is by Prof. Michael Avi-Yonah. The first Hebrew map, an etching by Abraham bar Yacob, originally printed in the Amsterdam Hagaddah of 1695, on lining papers.
Location: New York
The aim in this Haggadah has been to include the beautiful and unforgettable utterances of tradition in an adaptation that will make the seder more pertinent to many who had come to regard it as rote€ --p. 13. Includes photographs of modern Israeli scenes. Handwritten notes in English throughout c.2.
Location: New York
Includes music.
Location: New York
Freedom Seder was first used on April 4, 1969, the first anniversary of [Dr. Martin Luther] King's death and the third night of Passover by 300 'Jews for Urban Justice' and 100 Christians -The Shalom Seders, pg. 8.
Location: Givatayim, Israel
Modern Israeli Haggadah, put out by the Israeli Defense Force, adds to the traditional story of redemption from Egypt new chapters which tell of the miracles experienced during the creation of the modern state of Israel. The traditional text of the seder appears on the top of each page with new parallels stories from the modern day in smaller print at the bottom of each page. For example, below the traditional four questions are four different questions pointing out the differences between seders of old and modern seders. The first new question points out that in the olden days Jews celebrated Israel leaving Egypt, while in modern days Jews also celebrate Egyptians leaving Israel. The haggadah is illustrated with photographs and illustrations of the Israeli army an other modern Israeli scenes.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
Includes supplementary English readings, including Dr. Martin Luther King's I Have a Dream speech.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Signed by the author. Hebrew and English text; reads from left to right. Illustrations are based on the plight of Soviet Jews.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Some ill. have movable parts.
Location: New York
Text of Hagadah (p. 158-250) in Hebrew and English. Includes 157 pages on the history of Passover and the Haggadah.
Location: New York
English only.
Location: New York
Hebrew with Judeo-Italian translation. Original edition prepared by Leone da Modena. Introd. in English and Hebrew by T. Preschel.
Location: New York
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew and Yiddish. Facsimile of the manuscript of the Passover Haggadah written and illustrated in Nickelsburg in 1748.
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Combines the traditional seder service - in both Hebrew and English - with commentary written throughout Jewish history. -Inside flap of dust jacket.
Location: Springfield, Massachussetts
Text is colored according to when it was written. Bookmark, with keys to colors and symbols, inserted. Bibliography: p. 129-130.
Location: New York
The New Union Haggadah prepared by the Central Conference of American Rabbis.-- Cover. ebrew and/or English. Unacc. melodies (Hebrew text romanized): p. 97-122.
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Combines the traditional seder service - in both Hebrew and English - with commentary written throughout Jewish history. -Inside flap of dust jacket.
Location: Philadelphia
History of the printed Haggadah with illustrations and descriptions of a representative selection.
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes music.
Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
Traditional text with contemporary readings for Russian Jewry, in memory of the Holocaust, etc.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. A reproductin of the The Kittsee Haggadah of 1782 for fundraising purposes.
Location: New Jersey
Location: London, England
Hebrew text of Hagadah with English translation and commentary.
Location: Philadelphia
History of the printed Haggadah with illustrations and descriptions of a representative selection.
Location: New York
Text in Judeo-German. Introduction in English and Hebrew by Tovia Preschel. Facsimile reproduction of the Fuerth haggadah, published in 1741.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew.
Location: Denver, Colorado
English only.
Location: New York
Reprint, with a new introduction in Hebrew and English. Originally published: Altona, 1738.
Location: New York
Written and illustrated in Vienna in the year 1751 by Aaron Schreiber Herlingen--Introd. Reprint, with a new introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew on opposite pages; commentary in English. Includes Halachic requirements for the amounts of ritual foods and beverages according to Harav David Feinstein.
Location: Los Angeles
Includes a chapter on the laws of Passover, prepared by Eliezer Diamond.
Location: New York
Reproductin of Seder ha-Hagadah shel Pesah. Tri'esti : Be-vet defus Y. Kohen, 5624 [1864].
Location: Michigan
Published by the Society for Humanistic Judaism. Non-traditional English text with Hebrew songs. Includes music arranged by Dorian Samuels for each song.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text. Handwritten marginal notes in Hebrew.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Published by the World Union of Jewish Students.
1980-1989 Subseries
Location: New York
Introductions in English and Hebrew. Manuscript, based on printed Amsterdam Haggadah of 1695, written and illustrated by Ya'akov ben Yehuda Leib of Berlin, p. [1]. Includes the commentary of Isaac Abravenel.
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew, Ladino, and Yiddish; introduction in English. Facsimile of the Hamburg-Amsterdam Haggadah, 1728, written by Ya`akov Sofer ben Yehuda Leyb, and held by the Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Illuminated by Shoshanna Walker. Signed by the artist.
Location: New York
Traditional Hebrew text with English translation and additional English readings.
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Original English text. Includes music.
Location: New York
Reprint, with a new introduction in English. Originally published: Amsterdam, 1662.
Location: New York
Introduction in English and Hebrew by M. I. Friedman. Reprint of the original which was published in Amsterdam, 1695.
Location: New York
Standard Haggadah of the Conservative movement in the United States. This paperback haggadah includes colorful modern illustrations on most pages as well as marginal commentaries on every page.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew Artscroll Mesorah series.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Illustrated by Naftali Bezem; Calligraphy by Moshe Mordechai ben Dov.
Location: New York
Published by the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.
Location: New York
Published by the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.
Location: Bedford, New York
Reform Judaism.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with the Introduction also in English. A catalogue and explanation of 18th Century Illustrated Haggadot on display at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Duke has two copies of this book.
Location: California
English and Hebrew. Egalitarian English text with the traditional Hebrew text, as well as alternative feminine versions of Hebrew passages which traditionally address God using the masculine form.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: Sarajevo
Companion to the 1983 facsimile edition. Does not include the actual Haggadah.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with the Introduction also in English. A catalogue and explanation of 18th Century Illustrated Haggadot on display at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Duke has two copies of this book.
Location: London
Hebrew with descriptive matter in English. The work of Maty Grünberg who drew seventy five illuminations engraved on wooden blocks carved from cherry wood and printed one hundred and fifty enumerated books. Individual folios with each plate signed and numbered by the artist.
Location: Ramat Gan, Israel
English and Hebrew. Illustrated by Aharon Shevo.
Location: New York
The Rainbow Seder was first used on April 4, 1969, the first anniversary of [Dr. Martin Luther] King's death and the third night of Passover by 300 'Jews for Urban Justice' and 100 Christians -pg. 8. The Seder of the Children of Abraham deals with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A Haggadah of Liberation deals with women's issues.
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Location: San Jose, California
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by the Student Organization of Yeshiva Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. Includes essays about Passover, the seder, and the Haggadah by various educators affiliated with Yeshiva University.
Location: Haifa, Israel
Forty-four leaves in portfolio; twelve leaves of plates. Mr. and Mrs. Zygfryd B. Wolloch commissioned this Haggadah as a memorial to their parents who perished at the hands of the Nazis. David Wander (Illustrator) and Yonah Weinreb (Calligraphy and Micrography) have produced a work that emphasizes slavery and redemption as exemplified both in the Exodus and in the Holocaust. The simplicity of the artwork helps convey the horror of the Holocaust. For example, alongside the text which reads in each generation one is obligated to regard him/herself as though he/she personally left Egypt appears an empty concentration camp uniform. Human figures are conspicuously absent from the Haggadah as a reminder of those who did not survive Nazi persecution.
Location: New Jersey
Mostly English with some Hebrew. Includes additional readings and Passover music (melodies, part with words in English, part in Hebrew transliterated).
Location: Marblehead, Massachussetts
Haggadah and manifesto for vegetarians. An introduction, in Hebrew and English, explains vegetarianism in light of Jewish sources and offers a new interpretation of the Passover holiday. The text is original and emphasizes the coexistence of the human and animal worlds, while still maintaining a number of elements from the traditional Haggadah. Vegetarian recipes are found at the beginning to assist in creating a vegetarian Seder.
Location: London, England
Produced by Scopus Films (London) Ltd. ; animation by Rony Oren. VHS format. Uses clay animation to tell the story of Children of Israel's liberation from slavery, Pharaoh's court, the burning bush, and the ten plagues.
Location: Hertsliyah, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
English and Hebrew. Illustrated by Ezekiel Schloss.
Location: San Diego
Published by the Woman's Institute for Continuing Jewish Education. Intended to be used for a women's seder on the 7th night of Passover. Includes an original English text which, for example, substitutes the four sons with the four daughters.
Location: Silver Spring, Maryland
Original English text.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew; rubrics in English.
Location: Rochester, New York
One page from the the Moss Haggadah, by David Moss. This page contains in its micrographic border, the entire text of the Haggadah in Hebrew. Duke also owns two versions of the complete Moss Haggadah: Haggadah f#12 and Haggadah f#26.
Location: Rochester, New York
Text in Hebrew; companion volume about the Moss Haggadah is in Hebrew and English. Artistically it includes: calligraphy, micrography, gouaches, gold leaf, acrylics and paper cuts. Moss reproduces the crafts and style of the medieval scribe with modern innovation designed to bring the story of the Exodus up to the present time and to connect it to present-day Jews and to the founding of the state of Israel.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Haggadah contains the traditional text in Hebrew with an English interpretation by Rabbi Menachem Hacohen. Includes select quotations from the writings of famous rabbis.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Haggadah and manifesto for vegetarians. An introduction, in Hebrew and English, explains vegetarianism in light of Jewish sources and offers a new interpretation of the Passover holiday. The text is original and emphasizes the coexistence of the human and animal worlds, while still maintaining a number of elements from the traditional Haggadah. Vegetarian recipes are found at the beginning to assist in creating a vegetarian Seder.
Location: Haifa, Israel
English and Hebrew. A smaller bound reproduction of the facsimile edition of the Haggadah in memory of the Holocaust (E ff#86).
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew, English and transliterated.
Location: New York
Published by General Foods Corp. as an advertisement for their Maxwell House Coffee brand.
Location: United States
Published by General Foods Corp. as an advertisement for their Maxwell House Coffee brand.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew and English. English translation by Prof. Harold Fisch--T.p. verso. Illustrations reproduced from Erna Michael Haggadah.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Facsimile editions of 4 different Haggadot (smaller than original size). 1) Italy, 1500s. 2) Mantova, Italy, 1480; by Abraham Favissol of Avignon. 3) Moravia, 1719; by R. Simmel Sofer. 4) Yemen, 1800s; by Yosef Hammami. Includes a pamphlet with a Hebrew and English introduction as well as a pamphlet with an English translation of the Haggadah text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Hoboken, NJ
...designed to serve nearly every sector of American Judaism, and contains virtually the entire traditional Haggadah text ... -- Cover p. [4].
1990-1999 Subseries
Location: Hertsliyah, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: Spring Valley, NY
Hebrew text with English translation and commentary ; source references and added material in Hebrew.
Location: Rochester, NY
Text of the Haggadah in Hebrew; commentary in English. Accompanied by: The Passover Haggadah : an English translation to accompany the Moss Haggadah; and a paper-cut print of The bird cage from the original work.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Judeo-Italian; introd. by Tovia Preschel in Hebrew and English. Published as a fundraising tool for the Diskin Orphan Home of Israel. Originally published in Venice by A. Bragadin, 1715-1716.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by Kraft General Foods as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: Chicago
Haggadah text in Hebrew with English translation and commentary.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text of Haggadah in Hebrew and English translation; prefatory matter and marginal anecdotes in English. The Hebrew text ... was photographed from a Hebrew-English Haggadah printed in New York in 1857.
Location: New York
Location: Middle Village, N.Y.
English and Hebrew.
Location: St. Petersburg, Russia
Haggadah text in Hebrew and Russian; prefatory matter in Russian and English. Illustrated by children at a Leningrad Jewish school.
Location: New York
Text of Hagadah (p. 158-250) in Hebrew and English. Includes 157 pages on the history of Passover and the Haggadah.
Location: California
Catalogue of Haggadot from 1695-1993 for collectors. All of the haggadot listed in the catalogue include short descriptions and were (in 1994) for sale by Irvin Ungar Historicana, a rare books dealer in California. Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Location: Collegeville, Minnesota
Missing from shelves.
Location: Northvale, New Jersey
Includes bibliographical references (p. 399-409) and indexes. Hebrew text accompanied by English translation.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Originally published in 1995 in Hebrew as 'Sha€˜arei Armon, Meshalim La-Haggadah shel Pesach--t.p. verso. ext of the Haggadah in Hebrew and English, commentary in English.
Location: Brooklyn, New York
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text is in Hebrew. English Title: The Haggadah Thesaurus: Bibliography of Passover Haggadot From the Beginning of Hebrew Printing until 1960. This is an annotated bibliography of Haggadot from 1480-1960. The bibliography is organized by year with indexes by author, publisher, location, language, etc. Includes a supplementary index.
Location: Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Text in Hebrew and English ; commentary in English.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text is in Hebrew. English Title: The Haggadah Thesaurus: Bibliography of Passover Haggadot From the Beginning of Hebrew Printing until 1960. This is an annotated bibliography of Haggadot from 1480-1960. The bibliography is organized by year with indexes by author, publisher, location, language, etc. Includes a supplementary index.
Location: San Francisco, California
Women's Haggadah. An original English text with some Hebrew.
Location: London, England
Location: Canada
Original English text with some original Hebrew.
Location: Pittsboro, N.C.
Written by the Kanof family. The purpose of this Haggadah is to simplify the second seder and to present fresh and stimulating ideas. In Hebrew and/or English.
2000-2003 Subseries
Location: Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Published by the Reconstructionist Press. Includes a cassette.
Location: Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Published by the Reconstructionist Press. Includes a cassette.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Haggadah in English and Hebrew; commentary by Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz in English.
Location: Northvale, New Jersey
Not a Haggadah. Twenty short essays on Passover.
Location: London, England
Arranged by the country where each Haggadah was created--usually where the item was printed--then by the date of creation, and then alphabetically by title. However, facsimile editions have been arranged by the place of their original creation. In these cases, the location where the facsimile was printed is identified in the description of each facsimile.
For countries that have changed names and for which Duke has Haggadot during times when the country had a different name, the modern name of the country is used. For example, there is a Haggadah from Tel Aviv (Haggadah Pam #7) which was printed prior to the creation of Israel in 1948, when the country was called Palestine. Since Tel Aviv presently lies within the borders of Israel, Haggadah Pam #7 is found in the Israel Subseries.
Countries represented in this series include Algeria, Argentina, Austria, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Canada, Czech Republic, England, France, Germany, India, Israel, Italy, Morocco, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Spain, Tunisia, and United States. Each individual Haggadah's description identifies the publication city if it is known.
[NOTE: Library call numbers for individual Haggadah are listed at the left (e.g., Haggadah Pam #47). Allcall numbers are actively linked directly to their individual records in the Duke University Libraries' Online Catalog. Bibliographic information for each Haggadah has been taken directly from the Online Catalog and thus includes some non-standard punctuation.]
Algeria Subseries, 1889-1890
Location: Algiers, Algeria
Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Argentina Subseries, 1949
Location: Buenos Aires
Hebrew and Spanish with ceremonial directions, notes and introduction in Spanish.
Austria Subseries, 1851-1922
Location: Vienna, Austria
Contains the traditional Hebrew text with an Italian translation. Handwritten notes appear throughout in Hebrew (Rashi script), Italian, and Greek Four handwritten pages, In Hebrew and Italian, were inserted into the beginning of the Haggadah. These pages serve as an annotated table of contents. Signed on the inside of the cover.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Edited and printed by Union (Appel Brothers)
Location: Vienna, Austria
Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Hebrew text with an English translation by Rakhel Me'ir.
Bosnia-Hercegovina Subseries, 1983
Location: Sarajevo
Companion to the 1983 facsimile edition. Does not include the actual Haggadah.
Canada Subseries, 1999
Location: Canada
Original English text with some original Hebrew.
Czech Republic Subseries, 1526-1900
Location: Prague
Reproduction of the Frankfurter Stadtbibliothek copy of the original ed., printed by Gershom ben Solomon ha-Kohen, in Prague in 1526. This reproduction was printed in Berlin, Germany in 1926.
Location: Prague
Reproduction was published in 1940 in London, England. Translated from the German manuscript by Immanuel Goldschmidt.
Location: Prague
Facsimile reproduction was published in 1954 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Includes an introduction in English. This Haggadah is the oldest known Haggadah to be printed with woodcuts. These woodcuts would go on to be the source for woodcuts used in many other printed Haggadot. Unique to this Haggadah is the mention of an obscure practice. On p. 36 is a woodcut of a man holding a leaf of lettuce and pointing to it with a note that It is generally customary that the husband points to his wife because of the Biblical reference that a bad woman is more bitter than death.
Location: Prague
Facsimile was printed in New York, 1964. Includes an English introduction.
Location: Prague
Reproduction was published in 1940 in London, England. Translated from the German manuscript by Immanuel Goldschmidt.
Location: Prague
Facsimile was printed in Jerusalem in 1972.
Location: Prague
Hebrew and German text.
England Subseries, 1779-2003
Location: London
Location: London
Contains 8 copper plates relating to the service.
Location: London
Hebrew text with commentary in Hebrew, Arabic (in Hebrew characters), and Aramaic.
Location: London
Hebrew text with commentary in Hebrew, Arabic (in Hebrew characters), and Aramaic.
Location: London
Hebrew and English. Translated by Aaron Asher Green and authorized by the Chief Rabbi of England, Rabbi Naftali Adler ha-Kohen. A handwritten note on first page reads: Rebecca Melchior: a present from the Chief Rabbi N. Adler.
Location: London
English translation by Betzalel Ruth. Illustrated and decorated by Albert Rutherston. Issued in gold-stamped blue crushed morocco; all edges gilt; signed inside front cover: Bound by Wood, London.
Location: London
Second title page claims that it was printed in Holland.
Location: London
Distributed by the Pro-Palestine fund. The back of the Haggadah has two pictures of Jewish settlers in pre-1948 Palestine.
Location: London
Illustrations reproduced from original engravings.
Location: London
Includes the service for the counting of the Omer and the Song of Songs.
Location: London
Text in Yiddish and Hebrew with commentaries in Yiddish. Published by the Chief Rabbi's (Religious Emergency) Council.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Includes song for unacc. voice: Had gadya.
Location: London
Several illustrations have movable parts. Includes songs for voices.
Location: London
English and Hebrew with ceremonial directions and notes in English. Illustrations signed by Herz.
Location: Manchester, England
Article about the John Rylands Haggadah by Cecil Roth . Reprinted from the Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, Vol. 43, No. 1, September, 1960.
Location: London
Several illustrations have movable parts. Includes songs for voices, chiefly unaccompanied.
Location: London
Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Some ill. have movable parts.
Location: London
Hebrew text of Hagadah with English translation and commentary.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Published by the World Union of Jewish Students.
Location: London
Hebrew with descriptive matter in English. The work of Maty Grünberg who drew seventy five illuminations engraved on wooden blocks carved from cherry wood and printed one hundred and fifty enumerated books. Individual folios with each plate signed and numbered by the artist.
Location: London
Produced by Scopus Films (London) Ltd. ; animation by Rony Oren. VHS format. Uses clay animation to tell the story of Children of Israel's liberation from slavery, Pharaoh's court, the burning bush, and the ten plagues.
Location: London
Location: London
France Subseries, 1925-1964
Location: Paris, France
Hebrew with a French translation Limited ed. of 1500 copies on rag paper.
Location: Le Caire, France
Illustrations in this Haggadah are reproduced from the Livorno Haggadot.
Location: Armentières-en-Brie, France
Fundraising tool for Yeshivah Ohr Joseph in France. Hebrew and English. Illustrated by Roland Blum. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Paris, France
Title on added t.p.: Haggadah for Passover. Hebrew t.p. dated 724 i. e. 1963 or 1964. One of 228 numbered copies.
Germany Subseries, 1200-=1954
Location: Germany
Facsimile printed in 1965. Commentary volume included. This is the oldest surviving Ashkenazi illuminated Haggadah manuscript and gets its name from its illustrations of human figures with pronounced birds' heads. It is signed by a scribed named Menahem.
Location: Germany
Facsimile published in Leipzig, Germany, 1927-28. Written by the scribe Israel ben Meir of Heidelberg. The illuminations reflect contemporary German architecture and dress.
Location: Germany
Facsimile printed in Tel Aviv, 1985. Additional artwork added by a different artist. Includes a transcription of the Hebrew as well as an English translation.
Location: Germany
Facsimile printed in New York, 1985. Additional artwork added by a different artist. Includes a transcription of the Hebrew as well as an English translation.
Location: Offenbach, Germany
Facsimile printed in Jerusalem in 1972. Originally published by Yisra'el ben Mosheh.
Location: –ttingen, Germany
Facsimile printed in Tel Aviv, 1985. Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew and Yiddish. Facsimile of Pessach Haggadah, –ttingen, 1729. Scribe and illustrator: Jacob ben Michael May Segal ; introduction by Chaya Benjamin. Many of the illuminations are based on woodcuts and copper engravings from the printed Haggadot of Venice and Amsterdam.
Location: Altona, Germany
Facsimile published in Tel Aviv, 1987. Includes an abbreviation of the Zevah Pesah commentary by Isaac Abravanel as well as a short mystical commentary. Ashkenazi and Sephardi rites included. Includes a separate introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
This facsimile was printed in Tel Aviv, 1986. The Artist: Uri Pheibush [Philip Isac Levy] ... Introduction by Chaya Benjamin (Hebrew and English, [12] p.) inserted.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Yiddish and Hebrew. Includes a list of laws for Passover. Contains many woodcuts as well as artistic initial letters with leaves growing from them. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile published in Tel Aviv, 1986. Facsimile of: The Altona-Hamburg Haggadah. Manuscript. 1751 (Codex Levy 22). English and Hebrew. Map of the Land of Israel, drawn by Abraham Bar-Yaacov, the first Hebrew-letter printed map, attached to the Amsterdam Haggadah from 1696--P. [27-30]. By the Scriber ... Uri Feivisch, son of Rabbi Itzhak Eizik ....
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile published in Tel Aviv, 1986. Facsimile of: The Altona-Hamburg Haggadah. Manuscript. 1751 (Codex Levy 22). English and Hebrew. Map of the Land of Israel, drawn by Abraham Bar-Yaacov, the first Hebrew-letter printed map, attached to the Amsterdam Haggadah from 1696--P. [27-30]. By the Scriber ... Uri Feivisch, son of Rabbi Itzhak Eizik ....
Location: Breslau, Germany
Facsimile published in Tel Aviv, 1984. Text in Hebrew, rubrics in Yiddish. Accompanied by introductory material in Hebrew and English, including bibliographies, prepared by Chaya Benjamin.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Text and commentary in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Yiddish. Includes commentary by Isaac Abarbanel. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Offenbach, Germany
Illustrations were made from woodcuts. Commentary by Joel Brill, based on the Berlin Haggadah of 1745.
Location: Karlsruhe, Germany
Ceremonial directions in Yiddish.
Location: Dyhernfurth, Germany
Stamped on first page: Auguste Steinert Berlin. Includes laws for Passover. Some of the text is underlined in pencil and a few marginal notes are written in pencil. Includes commentary by Abarbanel.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Hebrew and Yiddish.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew with Yiddish translation Hebrew signature of the publisher is found on the title page. [Missing from shelf.]
Location: Berlin, Germany
Complete Haggadah text in Hebrew followed by complete Haggadah text in German. Stamped by Jakob B. Brandeis.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Hebrew.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew text with a German text (old German script). Printed by W. Heidenheim.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in German.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew with German translation Limited ed. of 100 copies on handmade paper.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Haggadah text and notes are in Hebrew. Ceremonial directions are in Dutch. The cover has a black and white illustration of a man holding up a wine cup.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Handwritten by Baruch Parnetsiskah and illustrated by Jacob Steinhardt. Signed by the artist.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Arranged and illustrated by Otto Geismar.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in Hebrew with a German translation.
Location: Munich, Germany
Hebrew and Yiddish with English introduction. Published for the use of American Jewish soldiers in Germany. Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text that opens with, ...We were slaves to Hitler in Germany... Illustrations depict scenes from the Holocaust.
Location: Munich, Germany
Printed and distributed in Germany by the American Joint Distribution Committee.
Location: [Düsseldorf-Benrath?], Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in German. Includes illustrations from older Haggadot.
India Subseries, 1918-1968
Location: Calcutta, India
Copies can be obtained free of charge from the supervising officer for Jewish soldiers in India, Fort William, Calcutta.
Israel Subseries, 1899-2002
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes music arranged by Solomon Rosowsky.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes a short biography on the life of the Rambam (Maimonides). Includes the Song of Songs.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Bound in decorated wooden boards, with cloth spine.
Location: Merhavyah, Israel
Published by Kibbutz Hashomer Hatzair, the Kibbutz federation of a Zionist youth movement. Non-traditional text with some traditional elements. Duke has two copies of this haggadah. c.2 contains hand written and stamped ceremonial directions in Hebrew.
Location: Merhavyah, Israel
The Duke catalog has a date of 1949, but the Hebrew date on the cover corresponds to 1946. Black and white drawings with first two pages colored in by hand. Non-Traditional text which reflects the secular leanings of the early kibbutz community.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Gil`adi Tel Hai, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with a non-traditional text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Annotated by Daniel Goldschidt.
Location: Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrations by Arieh Alweil. Issued for soldies of the Haganah. Non-traditional text. Illustrations on page 15 show military figures from throughout Jewish history.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Published before the independence of Israel. Includes music for a few songs at the end.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Monash, Israel
Handwritten and illustrated by Gidon Katsch.
Location: Kibbutz, Israel
Non-Traditional text with traditional elements. Handwritten and mimeographed.
Location: Kibutz, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Afikim, Israel
Handwritten non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Afikim, Israel
Handwritten non-traditional text. P. 10 (Hebrew nos.) with stylized ill. of Hebrew slaves and of free Hebrews going out of Egypt carrying unleavened dough on their heads; p. 10 (Arabic nos.) shows full page ill. of ship off coast of mandate Palestine at night with illegal immigrants coming ashore.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Bound in black cloth with padded boards, raised leaf design, cover and spine titles stamped in gold, tooled copper view of David's Tower from the wall of Jerusalem's old city outlined in gold stamping on upper board, and binder's name stamped in gold beneath copper tooling: Betsalel, Yerushalayim.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Music only. Music by Yehudah Sharett. For celebrants, solo voices (SATB), mixed choir, children's choir, and instrumental ensemble.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes commentaries by Moses Sofer, Samuel Ehrenfeld and David Tsevi Ehrenfeld. This Haggadah is a reprint of the original which was published in Viena, 1883-1884.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Plates printed on separte paper and mounted on leaves.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Includes a special section for children.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Bound in white leather with padded upper board, tooled copper plate with title, Hagadah shel Pesaòh, outlined in gold stamping on upper board, in the style of Betzalel.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrations by Alvail. Plates printed on separate paper and mounted on leaves.
Location: Kibbutz Merhavyah, Israel
Illustrated by Moshe Proops and handwritten by Mordekhai Amitai. Includes musical instructions.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Slip mounted on p. 4 of cover indicates Haggadah distributed to participants in Passover tour 4/22/59 to 5/3/59.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Haggadah contains the Samaritan ceremony for the Passover sacrifice. Text is written in the Paleo-Hebrew script still used by the Samaritan community, as well as the square Hebrew script.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew Only. A sticker with Hebrew writing on the back reveals that it was intended for the participants of a tour group celebrating passover from April 22 - May 3 1959.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew essays about the history of the Haggadah. On verso of t.p.: The Passover Haggadah: its sources and history, with the complete text of the traditional Haggadah, the most ancient Haggadah from the Cairo Genizah and sample pages of manuscript and printed Haggadot in reproduction. By Ernst Daniel Goldschmidt.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes commentaries by Menahem Kasher and Shmuel Ashkenazi.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
By Abraham Yaari. Bibliography of the Passover Haggadah from the earliest printed edition to 1900 with twenty five reproductions from rare editions.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
By Abraham Yaari. Bibliography of the Passover Haggadah from the earliest printed edition to 1900 with twenty five reproductions from rare editions.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew text with some ceremonial directions in English and French. Illustrations by Moshe Proops.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes 34 illustrations by Ze'ev Raban.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Handwritten and illustrated by Arthur Szyk.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Program for an exhibition of Pesach-Haggadoth from the private collection of Mr. Nathan Steiner at the Museum of Ethnography and Folklore in Tel Aviv. In Hebrew.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Newly translated throughout, with an introduction, by Harold Fisch -- T.p. verso.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Haggadah contains photographs of the landscape and antiquities of Israel and her neighbors as well as photographs of ornamented utensils used for the Passover Holiday from previous centuries and housed at the Bezalel Jewish National Museum in Jerusalem. The English translation is by Prof. Cecil Roth and the introduction is by Prof. Michael Avi-Yonah. The first Hebrew map, an etching by Abraham bar Yacob, originally printed in the Amsterdam Hagaddah of 1695, on lining papers.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Haifa, Israel
Hebrew only. Illuminated by Shmuel Bonneh
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew and Yiddish. Facsimile of the manuscript of the Passover Haggadah written and illustrated in Nickelsburg in 1748.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Illuminated by Shoshanna Walker. Signed by the artist.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Illustrated by Naftali Bezem; Calligraphy by Moshe Mordechai ben Dov.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with the Introduction also in English. A catalogue and explanation of 18th Century Illustrated Haggadot on display at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Duke has two copies of this book.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with the Introduction also in English. A catalogue and explanation of 18th Century Illustrated Haggadot on display at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Duke has two copies of this book.
Location: Ramat Gan, Israel
English and Hebrew. Illustrated by Aharon Shevo.
Location: Haifa, Israel
Forty-four leaves in portfolio; twelve leaves of plates. Mr. and Mrs. Zygfryd B. Wolloch commissioned this Haggadah as a memorial to their parents who perished at the hands of the Nazis. David Wander (Illustrator) and Yonah Weinreb (Calligraphy and Micrography) have produced a work that emphasizes slavery and redemption as exemplified both in the Exodus and in the Holocaust. The simplicity of the artwork helps convey the horror of the Holocaust. For example, alongside the text which reads in each generation one is obligated to regard him/herself as though he/she personally left Egypt appears an empty concentration camp uniform. Human figures are conspicuously absent from the Haggadah as a reminder of those who did not survive Nazi persecution.
Location: Hertsliyah, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Haifa, Israel
English and Hebrew. A smaller bound reproduction of the facsimile edition of the Haggadah in memory of the Holocaust (E ff#86).
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew, English and transliterated.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew and English. English translation by Prof. Harold Fisch--T.p. verso. Illustrations reproduced from Erna Michael Haggadah.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Facsimile editions of 4 different Haggadot (smaller than original size). 1) Italy, 1500s. 2) Mantova, Italy, 1480; by Abraham Favissol of Avignon. 3) Moravia, 1719; by R. Simmel Sofer. 4) Yemen, 1800s; by Yosef Hammami. Includes a pamphlet with a Hebrew and English introduction as well as a pamphlet with an English translation of the Haggadah text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Hertsliyah, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text of Haggadah in Hebrew and English translation; prefatory matter and marginal anecdotes in English. The Hebrew text ... was photographed from a Hebrew-English Haggadah printed in New York in 1857.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Originally published in 1995 in Hebrew as 'Sha€˜arei Armon, Meshalim La-Haggadah shel Pesach--t.p. verso. ext of the Haggadah in Hebrew and English, commentary in English.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text is in Hebrew. English Title: The Haggadah Thesaurus: Bibliography of Passover Haggadot From the Beginning of Hebrew Printing until 1960. This is an annotated bibliography of Haggadot from 1480-1960. The bibliography is organized by year with indexes by author, publisher, location, language, etc. Includes a supplementary index.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text is in Hebrew. English Title: The Haggadah Thesaurus: Bibliography of Passover Haggadot From the Beginning of Hebrew Printing until 1960. This is an annotated bibliography of Haggadot from 1480-1960. The bibliography is organized by year with indexes by author, publisher, location, language, etc. Includes a supplementary index.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Haggadah in English and Hebrew; commentary by Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz in English.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes an introduction by Netan'el Hayyim ben Mosheh Naman Pape. Includes additions and comments by the son of the author on page 16.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew. According to the customs of Bagdad and the cities of India.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Includes a Hebrew commentary.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with commentary in Rashi script.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Yiddish and Hebrew.
Location: Kibbutz Yagur, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew text with a Hebrew introduction and commentary.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew text with a Hebrew introduction and commentary.
Location: Kibbutz Yagur, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with sketches and mimeographed for members of Kibbutz Yagur. Original text with a few traditional passages.
Location: Jaffa, Israel
Follows the Yeminite version. The final pages have advertisements for other publications by the publisher.
Location: Kibbutz Giv`at Brener, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Na'an, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with a non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Bet ha-Shitah, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten with a non-traditional text. Wine stains on several pages.
Location: Kibbutz Ein Harod, Israel
Non-Traditional text with traditional elements. Handwritten and typed; mimeographed.
Location: Kibbutz Giv'at Brener, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text; original four questions related to life on the Kibbutz.
Location: Kibbutz Giv`at ha-Sheloshah, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-Traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes commentaries by Abraham ben Ze'ev Nahum Bornstein and Samuel Bornstein.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Handwritten non-traditional text. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Kibbutz Giv`at ha-Sheloshah, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Kibbutz, Israel
Non-traditional text. Illustrations relate to working and defending the land of Israel.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Commentary by Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook.
Location: Kibbutz Kevutsat ha-Tsofim, Israel
Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text with added ceremonial directions in green ink. Signed on cover by Yehudah Engel.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Giladi, Israel
Written and Illustrated by Gidon Katsch. Handwritten and mimeographed. Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Printed for the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.
Location: Merhavyah, Israel
Published by Kibbutz Hashomer Hatzair, the Kibbutz federation of a Zionist youth movement. Non-traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Heftsi-bah, Israel
Handwritten with a non-traditional text. P. 30 in a different hand than rest of Haggadah.
Location: Kibbutz Nezer, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Handwritten and illustrated by Arieh Alweil. Published by the Israeli Military Rabbinic Association for Israeli soldiers.
Location: Kibbutz 'En Harod, Israel
Illustrations are reproductions of Haim Atar's murals in the kibbutz's dining room. Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes illustrations from older Haggadot.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew only. Several essays about Passover. Includes special Passover laws for soldiers. Published by the Israeli army.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Hebrew text. English translation included as an insert. Written and decorated by J. Zimberknopf.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
This Hagada, printed in Jerusalem by Hamadpis Liphshitz Press, is a reproduction of an old Venetian edition ... It contained an Italian translation, for which English has been substituted.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Facsim. of: Seder Hagadah shel Pesah : bi-leshon ha-kodesh u-fitrono bi-leshon Ashkenazim ... Venitsiyah : Stamperia Vendramina, 501 [1740 or 1741] This Hagada -- printed in Jerusalem by Hamadpis Lipshitz Press, is a reproduction of an old Venetian edition of which the above [as in Facsim. note] is the original title page. It contained an Italian [?] translation, for which English has been substituted--Colophon. Ha-tseva`im veha-tsiurim ve-seder ha-`amudim hut`amu le-tavnit ha-hotsa'at --Colophon. `Al ha-kerikhah tsiur Ha lahma `anya bi-tseva`im mi-tokh Hagadat Sarayevo--Yaari. Yaari 2416
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Haggadah written and Illustrated by David Alef.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Jacob Wechsler. Note on the front page indicates that the Haggadah was a gift to Dr. Pascher from Harold Scheinberg.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Commentaries by Rashi, et al.
Location: Kibbutz Giv€˜at Brener, Israel
Non traditional text.
Location: Kibbutz Merhavyah, Israel
Non traditional text.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Music arranged by Solomon Rosowsky.
Location: Kibbutz Kefar Giladi, Israel
Non-traditional text.
Location: Kefar Gil'adi, Israel
Hebrew only.
Location: Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan, Israel
Non traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Kibbutz Alummot, Israel
Non-traditional text. Hebrew without vowels.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text with traditional elements.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Ze'ev. This Haggadah was an insert in the Maariv [Israeli] newspaper.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Handwritten and illustrated by David Alef and Ayelet ha-Shahar. Non-traditional text.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Iris Shviitser. Non-traditional text written to emphasize the security provided by the Seneh, an Israeli security organization.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Haggadah handwritten and Illustrated by David Alef. Non-traditional text. Duke owns two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Kibutz, Israel
Hebrew with non-traditional text. Includes a form for admittance into the hospital with a handwritten note on the back. This Haggadah was written and Illustrated by Gidon Katsch.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Published by Eliez Winecellars as an advertising tool for their brand of wines. Different advertisements for their wines appear throughout at the bottom pages.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Text in Hebrew with ceremonial directions in English and Hebrew. Sueded blue cloth binding with blue enameled metal title label on front cover.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Includes commentaries.
Location: Givatayim, Israel
This modern Israeli Haggadah, put out by the Israeli Defense Force, adds to the traditional story of redemption from Egypt new chapters which tell of the miracles experienced during the creation of the modern state of Israel. The traditional text of the seder appears on the top of each page with new parallels stories from the modern day in smaller print at the bottom of each page. For example, below the traditional four questions are four different questions pointing out the differences between seders of old and modern seders. The first new question points out that in the olden days Jews celebrated Israel leaving Egypt, while in modern days Jews also celebrate Egyptians leaving Israel. The haggadah is illustrated with photographs and illustrations of the Israeli army an other modern Israeli scenes.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Non-traditional text. Handwritten marginal notes in Hebrew.
Italy Subseries, 1478-1951
Location: Italy
Facsimile printed in 1991. Commentary volume included. The Haggadah is signed by 15th Century scribe and artist, Joel ben Simeon. A number of pages contain wine stains as well as notes written in the margins. It is known as the Washington Haggadah because of its location at the Library of Congress in Washington D.C.
Location: Venice, Italy
Facsimile printed in Jerusalem in 1974. The Venice Haggada of 1609: introduction (15 p.)inserted. ranslated by Juda-Arie Leon de Modena.
Location: Venice, Italy
Hebrew commentary by Abarbanel. Includes the traditional Hebrew text with an Italian translation.
Location: Venice, Italy
Ladino and Hebrew. Includes the evening service for the first days of Passover.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Ladino and Hebrew. Signed on title page by David b. Raphael Mendola. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Pisa, Italy
Hebrew and Spanish; Spanish is in Hebrew script. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Venice, Italy
Ladino (in Rashi script) and Hebrew.
Location: Verona, Italy
This Haggadah has a Hebrew text with some Latin on the title page. The majority of the Haggadah only contains the text, however there are four simple illustrations: at the beginning, next to the descriptions of the Matzah and Bitter herbs, and after the final song.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew with commentary in Rashi script. Stampted on title and back pages by the Librairie Hebraique in Djerba, Tunisia. Wine stains appear throughout.
Location: Trieste, Italy
Wine stains throughout.
Location: Trieste, Italy
Facsimile printed in Jerusalem in 1974.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic (using Rashi script).
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic (in Hebrew characters). The pages of this Haggadah were not cut correctly; some pages are too wide and every two pages are connected at the top. Includes the evening service.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Italy
This is not a Haggadah, as it does not contain any text. This is, however, a collection of 29 imprints made in 1977 from original 19th Century wood blocks based on the famous Venice Haggadah of 1609. The near completeness of the collection of biblical and ritual wood cuts intended for printing is a rare find.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Italian and Hebrew. Includes the Evening prayer service.
Location: Florence, Italy
Italian and Hebrew. Includes music for a few songs, including the Hatikvah (Israeli national anthem).
Location: Livorno, Italy
Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Morocco Subseries, 1943
Location: Morocco
This Haggadah has been prepared ... by l'Association des Anciens Elèves de l'Alliance Israélite Universelle and Société Olam Katan in the celebration of the Passover Seder on the 15th day of Nissan 5703 (April 19th 1943) --Colophon.
Netherlands Subseries, 1728-1965
Location: Amsterdam
Handwritten note in Hebrew/Yiddish on the inside of the back cover. Pocket edition of Haggadah limiting its Yiddish commentary to occasional rubrics. It relies on eye-catching initial letters and woodcuts to make the text come alive.
Location: Amsterdam
Facsimile printed in 198-? The Illuminations are based on the well-known Amsterdam engravings with some additions and changes. Also known as the The Alexander Karl Floersheim Haggadah.
Location: Amsterdam
Includes a short version of Abarbanel's Zevah Pesah commentary. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Amsterdam
Text and commentaries in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Yiddish. Signed on 1st page by Hare Lovy and Leopold Fried. Stamped on 2nd page by Dr. Hinko Urbah. A faded list of names appears in Hebrew and English on the final two pages. Includes the laws for Passover.
Location: Amsterdam
Not a Haggadah. Contains special readings for each of the four cups of wine.
Location: Amsterdam
English title: Haggadah for the Night of Drunks. This is a parody of the Passover Haggadah for use on the holiday of Purim. An example of parodied text: Instead of the son who doesn't know how to ask, this Haggadah has the son who doesn't know how to drink. (p.7). For this son you are instructed to open his mouth for him. Written by Zevi Hirsch Sommerhausen.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with Dutch translation and commentary.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch. Missing Pages 35-46.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Amsterdam
Text in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Amsterdam
From the library of S. van Maarsen, with his bookplate.
Location: Amsterdam
Text in Hebrew; notes and ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Leiden, Netherlands
Poland Subseries, 1868-1922
Location: Vilna, Poland
Includes ten commentaries by well-known sages. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Warsaw, Poland
Commentaries by Judah Loew ben Bezalel (ca. 1525-1609) and Yehudah Yudl Rozenberg (1865-1935).
Location: Podgorze, Poland
Includes commentaries by 238 different sages.
Location: Warsaw-Vilna, Poland
Hebrew and Yiddish. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Vilna, Poland
Includes 16 commentaries by well-known sages.
Portugal Subseries, 1928
Location: Porto, Portugal
Haggadah text is in Portuguese only.
Russia Subseries, 1993
Location: St. Petersburg, Russia
Haggadah text in Hebrew and Russian; prefatory matter in Russian and English. llustrated by children at a Leningrad Jewish school.
Spain Subseries, 1300-1400
Location: Catalonia
Facsimile printed in 1992. Commentary volume included. Illuminations include images of medieval Spanish homes, synagogues and musical instruments. Early owners of the Haggadah are identified by signatures as is the 16th Century ecclesiastical censor Visto per me Fra. Luigi del Ordine de San Dominico.
Location: Northern Spain
Facsimile published in New York in 1966. English introduction by Cecil Roth. The Haggadah consists of 34 full-page miniatures, an illuminated Haggadah text, and hymns and Torah readings for the Passover week. Signed in 1609 by Giovanni Domenico, a church censor. Named because of its location in the Sarajevo Museum. This Haggadah was almost destroyed during the bombardment of Sarajevo in 1994 but was saved by two staff members of the demolished museum where it was housed.
Location: Spain
Facsimile printed in Budapest, Hungary in 1957. Includes 14 full page miniatures, and a decorated text.
Location: Northern Spain
Facsimile of the Sarajevo Haggadah from the 14th Century in Northern Spain. This reproduction was published in New York in 1966. English introduction by Cecil Roth. The Haggadah consists of 34 full-page miniatures, an illuminated Haggadah text, and hymns and Torah readings for the Passover week. Named because of its location in the Sarajevo Museum.
Location: Catalonia
Facsimile was published in New York, 1988. Sephardi text. Commentary by an unidentified author. Introduction in Hebrew and English.
Tunisia Subseries, 1945-1950
Location: Djerba, Tunisia
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Djerba, Tunisia
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
United States Subseries, 1869-2002
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Wine stains throughout.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Front cover serves as an advertisement for The Original Felix Kosher Dining Rooms, a Kosher restaurant and importer of Kosher wines. On the back cover is an advertisement for The Hebrew Standard, a weekly Jewish Journal published in New York during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Location: New York
Distributed by S.J. Gold, the South's Leading Kosher Delicatessen. Missing from library shelf
Location: New York
Location: New York
Includes a special chapter with music for the Passover service composed, selected and arranged by the Rev. Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
Includes music arranged by Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
This Haggadah has a Yiddish cover page, with an English back cover. The text is in both Hebrew and English. At the end of the Haggadah is the music for four songs. The music is signed by Henry A. Russotto, p. [63].
Location: New York
Text in Yiddish and Hebrew Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
U.S. Army issued. National Jewish Welfare Board
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. This undated Haggadah was edited by Dr. Herman Klopper and contains original music by Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Yiddish. From the library of the Yeshiva d'Rambam & T.T., Brooklyn, N.Y., Rabbi Dr. Samuel L. Skolnick, Executive Director, with its stamp.
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes an essay at the end, The Passover in history, literature, and art (p. 123-162).
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes an essay at the end, The Passover in history, literature, and art (p. 123-162).
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew and Yiddish; ceremonial directions and introduction in Yiddish. Includes a picture of Warsaw (p. 142).
Location: New York
New English translation by Judah David Eisenstein. Illustrations by Lola.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew and Yiddish. Includes commentaries by noted sages, including Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
U.S. Army issued. Distributed by the National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: New York
U.S. Army issued. Distributed by the National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: New York
Illustrated by Saul Raskin.
Location: New York
Includes an English translation by Abraham Regelson and Illustrations by Sigmund Forst.
Location: New York
Published by the Jewish Reconstructionist movement. Includes a non-traditional text.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the United Aged Home of Jerusalem.
Location: New York
Hebrew and English on facing pages.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Includes musical settings by H.A. Russotto. This Haggadah serves as a fundraising tool for Yeshiva Rabbi Solomon Kluger. A message in Yiddish (front) and English (back) asks for money to help the Yeshiva feed, clothe, educate and medically treat unfortunate children.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed as a fundraising tool for a number of Jewish organizations. Requests for donations are found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). Duke owns 7 of these Haggadot (c. 1-7) which allows one to see the variety of covers as well as the different organizations which used this Haggadah for fundraising.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed as a fundraising tool for a number of Jewish organizations. Requests for donations are found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover).
Location: New York
Published by the National Jewish Welfare Board.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Published by the Spero Foundation towards their goal of advancing traditional Judaism through the publication and distribution of Jewish classics, educational literature and allied purposeful philanthopic [sic] activities. Issued for the Jews of Europe by Agudath Israel Youth Council of America.
Location: Kansas City, Missouri
Spanish and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Includes music for voice and piano.
Location: New York
Hebrew with notes in Rashi script. Published by Philipp Feldheim. Listing of other Jewish texts published by Philipp Feldheim at the back.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Fundraising tool for Yeshivas Ohel Torah. Includes photographs of students studying, playing basketball and playing ping pong on center pages.
Location: New York
Bibliography of Haggadot from 1500-1900 Hebrew with some German Includes 3 loose pieces of paper with English handwritten notes about specific Haggadot and the history of the Haggadah.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: New York
Gift of the Yeshiva & Mesifta Toras Chaim of Greater New York. Printed by in honor of the first Passover in the modern State of Israel as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The illustrations near the end of the Haggadah (pp. 53, 57) connect the text of the seder to the pioneering efforts in the new state of Israel.
Location: New York
Exclusively produced as a Gift to the Friends and Supporters of the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls, Jerusalem, Israel ...--Cover. Printed in honor of the first Passover by the modern State of Israel as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The illustrations near the end of the Haggadah (pp. 53, 57) connect the text of the seder to the pioneering efforts in the new state of Israel.
Location: New York
Illuminated in the Medieval style. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Supplemental text in Hebrew and English. Includes Israel's Proclamation of Independence in both Hebrew and English. With the traditional songs of the Haggadah composed and arranged by Cantor Joshua S. Weisser.
Location: New York
Used as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls.
Location: New York
Used as an advertising tool by Streit's Matzos.
Location: New York
Hebrew and English. Includes some small sketches. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Hebrew an Yiddish. Includes photographs and sketches of well-known rabbis as an illustration for the Rabbis from B'nei Barak.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Includes facsimile of: Seder Hagadah shel Pesah ... / 'Ani Mosheh b.mo.h. Natan ha-Kohen katavti zo't ve-gamarti from 1816.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). Exclusively produced as a Gift to the Friends and Supporters of the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls, Jerusalem, Israel, ...--Cover. Duke has 3 copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Compliments of Maxwell House Coffee and Instant Maxwell House Coffee Prepared by Joseph Jacobs Jewish Market Organization, New York, N.Y.--Cover. Duke has two of these Haggadot.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Uses the illuminated letters from the 1923 edition of the Union Haggadah. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Illustrated by R. Leaf. Includes music arranged by Prof. A.W. Binder.
Location: United States
For the use of American Jewish soldiers serving in Korea.
Location: New York
Translation of the Haggadah text by Jacob Sloan, illustrated with woodcuts from the first illuminated Haggadah, Prague, 1526--T.p. verso.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. The Hagadah for the Third Seder was written under the impact of the great event in Jewish history which took place six years ago -- the creation of the State of Israel--P. 4. Mostly an original text with some traditional elements.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Cover contains advertisements of the Home of the Sages of Israel. Imperfect copy: P. 3-12, 17-18, 21-24, 27-28 lacking; bottom half of p. 15-16, 33-34, 41-42, 57-64 cut away. Cover contains advertisements of the Home of the Sages of Israel
Location: New York
Text in English, Hebrew, and Yiddish; introduction in English.
Location: New York
Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Changes made to make the seder more meaningful for the children. -- p. 3 Includes photographs of Jewish art and ritual objects.
Location: Washington D.C.
Typed on a typewriter and stapled together. Adapted from Union prayer book --Leaf [1]
Location: New York
Illustrations by R. Leaf. English and/or Hebrew.
Location: New York
Illustrated by Siegmund Forst. Fundraising tool for the United Charity Institutions of Jerusalem.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by Borden's as an advertising tool.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Reads from left to right.
Location: Merion, Pennsylvania
Martin Berkowitz was the Rabbi of Temple Adath Israel of the Main Line in Merion, Pennsylvania. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Hartford, Connecticut
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The obviously Zionistic illustrations from earlier editions of the Haggadah (see Haggadah Pam 12 mo #15) are missing from this edition.
Location: Hartford, Connecticut
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Hebrew only. Includes a number of pictures of well-known rabbis on the pages preceding and following the Haggadah text.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Illustrations by Siegmund Forst. Jewish Pocket Books published haggadah which includes a number of essays about Passover in Life and Literature. Printed as a fundraising tool for Yeshivah Torah Vodaath and Mesifta with a request for money in Yiddish and English.
Location: New York
Reprint of Prague, 1527 ed. Photo-copy of Hebrew text with English translation in parallel columns. Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphans' Home for Girls in Israel.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Jerusalem General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew on opposite pages; commentary in English.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls. Duke has three copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Location: Flushing, New York
Hebrew and German.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Hebrew introduction with an English summary of the introduction.
Location: New York
Printed as an advertising tool for the Streit Matzo Company.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Arranged by Walter Orenstein for a children's service. Includes explanations for difficult words as well as questions and answers about the laws of Passover.
Location: Los Angeles, California
Non-traditional text with music. Intended for children.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Hebrew introduction with an English summary of the introduction. Original from 1725.
Location: Los Angeles, California
Original text with traditional elements.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Merion, Pennsylvania
Second printing of the Haggadah for the American Family (1963). Includes the complete traditional Hebrew seder text as well as a shortened Hebrew/English text. Center pages contain an advertisement for Standard Brands Incorporated.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Printed by General Foods Corporation as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: Cincinatti, Ohio
Volume VII of the Journal Studies in Bibliography and Booklore. A number of articles about Haggadot in Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Printed by General Foods Corporation as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Preface in English and Hebrew by L. Marwick. Reproduction of the Washington Haggadah from 1470. Original written by Joel ben Simeon. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for the Home of the Sages of Israel.
Location: Miami, Florida
Traditional Hebrew text with a shortened English/Hebrew seder printed in the direction of an English book (left to right). Of special note are the kosher food ads found on the inside covers of the Haggadah as well as the center pages which divide the English from the Hebrew sections. The advertisements found on the center pages are clearly identified as being for foods which, while kosher, are not kosher for Passover.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Reproduction of the Mahzor Roma Haggadah. Hebrew text with commentary in Rashi script. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Hebrew text with an English introduction. Missing Dayyenu and some other traditional elements; includes hymns not found in the traditional text. Incorrect vocalization at times. Ceremonial directions written in the Judeo-Persian language, but using Hebrew characters.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Hebrew text with an English introduction. Missing Dayyenu and some other traditional elements; includes hymns not found in the traditional text. Incorrect vocalization at times. Ceremonial directions written in the Judeo-Persian language, but using Hebrew characters.
Location: New York
Published to accompany its facsimile edition.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Marathi. Reproduction (partially reduced) of Bombay, 1846 ed.(Yaari no. 656) with added prefatory material by Walter J. Fischel and others. Original was the first Hebrew book printed in India with illustrations.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed by the Carmel wine company. In addition to the traditional seder in both Hebrew and English, this Haggadah contains advertisements for the full line of Carmel wines, liquors and champagnes. At the back of the Haggadah are suggestions for how to serve Carmel€™s different products as well suggestions for Passover cocktails and how to cook with Carmel products.
Location: New York
Translation of the Haggadah text by Jacob Sloan.
Location: New York
Translation of the Haggadah text by Jacob Sloan.
Location: New York
Published as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphan's Home in Jerusalem.
Location: Waltham, Massachussetts
Program for an exhibit of Haggadot and Passover ceremonial art at the American Jewish Historical Society. Introductions by Dr. Cecil Roth and Abram Kanof, M.D. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Haggadah contains photographs of the landscape and antiquities of Israel and her neighbors as well as photographs of ornamented utensils used for the Passover Holiday from previous centuries and housed at the Bezalel Jewish National Museum in Jerusalem. The English translation is by Prof. Cecil Roth and the introduction is by Prof. Michael Avi-Yonah. The first Hebrew map, an etching by Abraham bar Yacob, originally printed in the Amsterdam Hagaddah of 1695, on lining papers.
Location: New York
The aim in this Haggadah has been to include the beautiful and unforgettable utterances of tradition in an adaptation that will make the seder more pertinent to many who had come to regard it as rote€ --p. 13. Includes photographs of modern Israeli scenes. Handwritten notes in English throughout c.2.
Location: New York
Includes music.
Location: New York
The Freedom Seder "was first used on April 4, 1969, the first anniversary of [Dr. Martin Luther] King's death and the third night of Passover by 300 'Jews for Urban Justice' and 100 Christians" -The Shalom Seders, pg. 8.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
Includes supplementary English readings, including Dr. Martin Luther King's, I Have a Dream speech.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Signed by the author. Hebrew and English text; reads from left to right. Illustrations are based on the plight of Soviet Jews.
Location: New York
Text of Hagadah (p. 158-250) in Hebrew and English. Includes 157 pages on the history of Passover and the Haggadah.
Location: New York
English only.
Location: New York
Hebrew with Judeo-Italian translation. Original edition prepared by Leone da Modena. Introd. in English and Hebrew by T. Preschel.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Combines the traditional seder service - in both Hebrew and English - with commentary written throughout Jewish history. -Inside flap of dust jacket.
Location: Springfield, Massachussetts
Text is colored according to when it was written. Bookmark, with keys to colors and symbols, inserted. Bibliography: p. 129-130.
Location: New York
The New Union Haggadah prepared by the Central Conference of American Rabbis. -- Cover. Hebrew and/or English. Unacc. melodies (Hebrew text romanized): p. 97-122.
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Combines the traditional seder service - in both Hebrew and English - with commentary written throughout Jewish history. -Inside flap of dust jacket.
Location: Philadelphia
History of the printed Haggadah with illustrations and descriptions of a representative selection.
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes music.
Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
Traditional text with contemporary readings for Russian Jewry, in memory of the Holocaust, etc.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. A reproductin of the The Kittsee Haggadah of 1782 for fundraising purposes.
Location: New Jersey
Location: Philadelphia
History of the printed Haggadah with illustrations and descriptions of a representative selection.
Location: New York
Text in Judeo-German. Introduction in English and Hebrew by Tovia Preschel. Facsimile reproduction of the Fuerth haggadah, published in 1741.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew.
Location: Denver, Colorado
English only.
Location: New York
Reprint, with a new introduction in Hebrew and English. Originally published: Altona, 1738.
Location: New York
Written and illustrated in Vienna in the year 1751 by Aaron Schreiber Herlingen--Introd. Reprint, with a new introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew on opposite pages; commentary in English. Includes Halachic requirements for the amounts of ritual foods and beverages according to Harav David Feinstein.
Location: Los Angeles
Includes a chapter on the laws of Passover, prepared by Eliezer Diamond.
Location: New York
Reproductin of Seder ha-Hagadah shel Pesah. Tri'esti : Be-vet defus Y. Kohen, 5624 [1864].
Location: Michigan
Published by the Society for Humanistic Judaism. Non-traditional English text with Hebrew songs. Includes music arranged by Dorian Samuels for each song.
Location: New York
Introductions in English and Hebrew. Manuscript, based on printed Amsterdam Haggadah of 1695, written and illustrated by Ya'akov ben Yehuda Leib of Berlin, p. [1]. Includes the commentary of Isaac Abravenel.
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew, Ladino, and Yiddish; introduction in English. Facsimile of the Hamburg-Amsterdam Haggadah, 1728, written by Ya`akov Sofer ben Yehuda Leyb, and held by the Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana.
Location: New York
Traditional Hebrew text with English translation and additional English readings.
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Original English text. Includes music.
Location: New York
Reprint, with a new introduction in English. Originally published: Amsterdam, 1662.
Location: New York
With introduction in English and Hebrew by M. I. Friedman. Reprint of the original which was published in Amsterdam, 1695.
Location: New York
Standard Haggadah of the Conservative movement in the United States. This paperback haggadah includes colorful modern illustrations on most pages as well as marginal commentaries on every page.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew Artscroll Mesorah series.
Location: New York
Published by the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.
Location: New York
Published by the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.
Location: Bedford, New York
Reform Judaism.
Location: California
English and Hebrew. Egalitarian English text with the traditional Hebrew text, as well as alternative feminine versions of Hebrew passages which traditionally address God using the masculine form.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Location: New York
The Rainbow Seder was first used on April 4, 1969, the first anniversary of [Dr. Martin Luther] King's death and the third night of Passover by 300 'Jews for Urban Justice' and 100 Christians -pg. 8. The Seder of the Children of Abraham deals with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A Haggadah of Liberation deals with women's issues.
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Location: San Jose, California
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by the Student Organization of Yeshiva Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. Includes essays about Passover, the seder, and the Haggadah by various educators affiliated with Yeshiva University.
Location: New Jersey
Mostly English with some Hebrew. Includes additional readings and Passover music (melodies, part with words in English, part in Hebrew transliterated).
Location: Marblehead, Massachussetts
Haggadah and manifesto for vegetarians. An introduction, in Hebrew and English, explains vegetarianism in light of Jewish sources and offers a new interpretation of the Passover holiday. The text is original and emphasizes the coexistence of the human and animal worlds, while still maintaining a number of elements from the traditional Haggadah. Vegetarian recipes are found at the beginning to assist in creating a vegetarian Seder.
Location: Bridgeport, Connecticut
English and Hebrew. Illustrated by Ezekiel Schloss.
Location: San Diego
Published by the Woman's Institute for Continuing Jewish Education. Intended to be used for a women's seder on the 7th night of Passover. Includes an original English text which, for example, substitutes the four sons with the four daughters.
Location: Silver Spring, Maryland
Original English text.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew; rubrics in English.
Location: Rochester, New York
One page from the the Moss Haggadah, by David Moss. This page contains in its micrographic border, the entire text of the Haggadah in Hebrew. Duke also owns two versions of the complete Moss Haggadah: Haggadah f#12 and Haggadah f#26.
Location: Rochester, New York
Text in Hebrew; companion volume about the Moss Haggadah is in Hebrew and English. Artistically it includes: calligraphy, micrography, gouaches, gold leaf, acrylics and paper cuts. Moss reproduces the crafts and style of the medieval scribe with modern innovation designed to bring the story of the Exodus up to the present time and to connect it to present-day Jews and to the founding of the state of Israel.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Haggadah contains the traditional text in Hebrew with an English interpretation by Rabbi Menachem Hacohen. Includes select quotations from the writings of famous rabbis.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Haggadah and manifesto for vegetarians. An introduction, in Hebrew and English, explains vegetarianism in light of Jewish sources and offers a new interpretation of the Passover holiday. The text is original and emphasizes the coexistence of the human and animal worlds, while still maintaining a number of elements from the traditional Haggadah. Vegetarian recipes are found at the beginning to assist in creating a vegetarian Seder.
Location: New York
Published by General Foods Corp. as an advertisement for their Maxwell House Coffee brand.
Location: United States
Published by General Foods Corp. as an advertisement for their Maxwell House Coffee brand.
Location: Hoboken, NJ
...designed to serve nearly every sector of American Judaism, and contains virtually the entire traditional Haggadah text ..." -- Cover p. [4].
Location: New York
Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Location: New York
English and Hebrew.
Location: Spring Valley, NY
Hebrew text with English translation and commentary ; source references and added material in Hebrew.
Location: Rochester, New York
Text of the Haggadah in Hebrew; commentary in English. Accompanied by: The Passover Haggadah : an English translation to accompany the Moss Haggadah; and a paper-cut print of The bird cage from the original work.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Judeo-Italian; introd. by Tovia Preschel in Hebrew and English. Published as a fundraising tool for the Diskin Orphan Home of Israel. Originally published in Venice by A. Bragadin, 1715-1716.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by Kraft General Foods as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: Chicago
Haggadah text in Hebrew with English translation and commentary.
Location: New York
Location: Middle Village, N.Y.
English and Hebrew.
Location: New York
Text of Hagadah (p. 158-250) in Hebrew and English. Includes 157 pages on the history of Passover and the Haggadah.
Location: California
Catalogue of Haggadot from 1695-1993 for collectors. All of the haggadot listed in the catalogue include short descriptions and were (in 1994) for sale by Irvin Ungar Historicana, a rare books dealer in California. Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Location: Collegeville, Minnesota
Missing from shelves.
Location: Northvale, New Jersey
Includes bibliographical references (p. 399-409) and indexes. Hebrew text accompanied by English translation.
Location: Brooklyn, New York
Location: Cleveland Heights, Ohio
Text in Hebrew and English ; commentary in English.
Location: San Francisco, California
Women's Haggadah. An original English text with some Hebrew.
Location: Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Published by the Reconstructionist Press. Includes a cassette.
Location: Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Published by the Reconstructionist Press. Includes a cassette.
Location: Northvale, New Jersey
Not a Haggadah. Twenty short essays on Passover.
Location: Pittsboro, N.C.
Written by the Kanof family. The purpose of this Haggadah is to simplify the second seder and to present fresh and stimulating ideas. In Hebrew and/or English.
Subdivided by the specific purpose for which each Haggadah was written, then arranged by date, then alphabetically. Most of the Haggadot were created for use at a Passover seder and thus are organized into the General Subseries. These Haggadot are generally traditional in content and are meant to be used by anyone. Other purpose subseries include Advertising, Children, Christian, Denominations (of Judaism), Facsimiles, Fundraising, Kibbutz, Parody, and Resource.
[NOTE: Library call numbers for individual Haggadah are listed at the left (e.g., Haggadah Pam #106). All call numbers are actively linked directly to their individual records in the Duke University Libraries' Online Catalog. Bibliographic information for each Haggadah has been taken directly from the Online Catalog and thus includes some non-standard punctuation.]
Advertising Subseries, 1889-1991
Printed as marketing tools for specific companies and products. Includes the well-known Maxwell House editions (Haggadah Pam 12mo #28, Haggadah Pam #36, Haggadah Pam #54, E Pam 12mo #9683, E Pam #6620, Haggadah Pam 12mo #63).
Location: New York
Front cover serves as an advertisement for The Original Felix Kosher Dining Rooms, a Kosher restaurant and importer of Kosher wines. On the back cover is an advertisement for The Hebrew Standard, a weekly Jewish Journal published in New York during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Location: New York
Distributed by S.J. Gold, the South's Leading Kosher Delicatessen. Missing from library shelf.
Location: New York
Used as an advertising tool by Streit's Matzos.
Location: New York
Compliments of Maxwell House Coffee and Instant Maxwell House Coffee Prepared by Joseph Jacobs Jewish Market Organization, New York, N.Y.--Cover. Duke has two of these Haggadot.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by Borden's as an advertising tool.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Illustrated by Ze'ev. This Haggadah was an insert in the Maariv [Israeli] newspaper.
Location: New York
Printed as an advertising tool for the Streit Matzo Company.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Printed by General Foods Corporation as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Printed by General Foods Corporation as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: Miami, Florida
Traditional Hebrew text with a shortened English/Hebrew seder printed in the direction of an English book (left to right). Of special note are the kosher food ads found on the inside covers of the Haggadah as well as the center pages which divide the English from the Hebrew sections. The advertisements found on the center pages are clearly identified as being for foods which, while kosher, are not kosher for Passover.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed by the Carmel wine company. In addition to the traditional seder in both Hebrew and English, this Haggadah contains advertisements for the full line of Carmel wines, liquors and champagnes. At the back of the Haggadah are suggestions for how to serve Carmel's different products as well suggestions for Passover cocktails and how to cook with Carmel products.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Published by Eliez Winecellars as an advertising tool for their brand of wines. Different advertisements for their wines appear throughout at the bottom pages.
Location: New York
Published by General Foods Corp. as an advertisement for their Maxwell House Coffee brand.
Location: United States
Published by General Foods Corp. as an advertisement for their Maxwell House Coffee brand.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Published by Kraft General Foods as an advertisement for their Maxwell House brand of coffee.
Location: Middle Village, N.Y.
English and Hebrew.
Children Subseries, 1948-1993
Created specifically for children.
Location: Kibbutz Ein Harod, Israel
Non-Traditional text with traditional elements. Handwritten and typed; mimeographed.
Location: London
Several illustrations have movable parts. Includes songs for voices.
Location: New York
Illustrated by R. Leaf. Includes music arranged by Prof. A.W. Binder.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Changes made to make the seder more meaningful for the children.-- p. 3 Includes photographs of Jewish art and ritual objects.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
English and Hebrew. Includes a special section for children.
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Reads from left to right.
Location: Los Angeles, California
Non-traditional text with music. Intended for children.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Arranged by Walter Orenstein for a children's service. Includes explanations for difficult words as well as questions and answers about the laws of Passover.
Location: London
Several illustrations have movable parts. Includes songs for voices, chiefly unaccompanied.
Location: London
English and Hebrew. Some ill. have movable parts.
Location: London
Produced by Scopus Films (London) Ltd. ; animation by Rony Oren. VHS format. Uses clay animation to tell the story of Children of Israel's liberation from slavery, Pharaoh's court, the burning bush, and the ten plagues.
Location: St. Petersburg, Russia
Haggadah text in Hebrew and Russian; prefatory matter in Russian and English. llustrated by children at a Leningrad Jewish school.
Location: Pittsboro, N.C.
Written by the Kanof family. The purpose of this Haggadah is to simplify the second seder and to present fresh and stimulating ideas. In Hebrew and/or English.
Christian Subseries, 1965-1995
Reflect Christian's interest in conducting their own Passover seders. All date from the late 20th century.
Location: Leiden, Netherlands
Location: New York
English only.
Location: Denver, Colorado
English only.
Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota
Location: San Jose, California
Location: Collegeville, Minnesota
Missing from shelves.
Denominations Subseries, 1757-2000
Created specifically for a particular denomination of Judaism, including Reform Judaism (Haggadah #24), Sephardic Judaism (Haggadah #70), and Conservative Judaism (E #17469). Also includes Haggadot geared towards types of people who also happen to be Jews, such as the Haggadah for Lesbians (Divinity -- 296.45371 S589, L727, 1999) and a Haggadah for Vegetarians (E #18543).
Denomination: Sephardic .
Location: Venice, Italy
Ladino and Hebrew. Includes the evening service for the first days of Passover.
Denomination: Sephardic .
Location: Livorno, Italy
Ladino and Hebrew. Signed on title page by David b. Raphael Mendola. Wine stains throughout.
Denomination: Sephardic .
Location: Pisa, Italy
Hebrew and Spanish; Spanish is in Hebrew script. Wine stains throughout.
Denomination: Sephardic .
Location: Venice, Italy
Ladino (in Rashi script) and Hebrew.
Denomination: Conservative .
Location: Trieste, Italy
Wine stains throughout.
Denomination: Reform .
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes an essay at the end, The Passover in history, literature, and art (p. 123-162).
Denomination: Reconstructionist .
Location: New York
Published by the Jewish Reconstructionist movement. Includes a non-traditional text.
Denomination: Samaritan .
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Contains the Samaritan ceremony for the Passover sacrifice. Text is written in the Paleo-Hebrew script still used by the Samaritan community, as well as the square Hebrew script.
Location: New York
Freedom Seder was first used on April 4, 1969, the first anniversary of [Dr. Martin Luther] King's death and the third night of Passover by 300 €˜Jews for Urban Justice' and 100 Christians -The Shalom Seders, pg. 8.
Denomination: Reform .
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Combines the traditional seder service - in both Hebrew and English - with commentary written throughout Jewish history. -Inside flap of dust jacket.
Denomination: Reform .
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Combines the traditional seder service - in both Hebrew and English - with commentary written throughout Jewish history. -Inside flap of dust jacket.
Denomination: Reform .
Location: New York
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes music.
Denomination: Humanistic Judaism .
Location: Michigan
Published by the Society for Humanistic Judaism. Non-traditional English text with Hebrew songs. Includes music arranged by Dorian Samuels for each song.
Denomination: Reform .
Location: New York
Published by the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.
Denomination: Conservative .
Location: New York
Published by the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly.
Denomination: Conservative .
Location: New York
Standard Haggadah of the Conservative movement in the United States. This paperback haggadah includes colorful modern illustrations on most pages as well as marginal commentaries on every page.
Denomination: Reform .
Location: Bedford, New York
Reform Judaism.
Denomination: Egalitarian .
Location: California
English and Hebrew. Egalitarian English text with the traditional Hebrew text, as well as alternative feminine versions of Hebrew passages which traditionally address God using the masculine form.
Denomination: New Jewish Agenda .
Location: New York
Rainbow Seder was first used on April 4, 1969, the first anniversary of [Dr. Martin Luther] King's death and the third night of Passover by 300 €˜Jews for Urban Justice' and 100 Christians -pg. 8. The Seder of the Children of Abraham deals with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. A Haggadah of Liberation deals with women's issues.
Denomination: Vegetarianism .
Location: Marblehead, Massachussetts
Haggadah and manifesto for vegetarians. An introduction, in Hebrew and English, explains vegetarianism in light of Jewish sources and offers a new interpretation of the Passover holiday. The text is original and emphasizes the coexistence of the human and animal worlds, while still maintaining a number of elements from the traditional Haggadah. Vegetarian recipes are found at the beginning to assist in creating a vegetarian Seder.
Denomination: Women .
Location: San Diego
Published by the Woman's Institute for Continuing Jewish Education. Intended to be used for a women's seder on the 7th night of Passover. Includes an original English text which, for example, substitutes the four sons with the four daughters.
Denomination: Feminism .
Location: Silver Spring, Maryland
Original English text.
Denomination: Vegetarianism .
Location: Boston, Massachussetts
Haggadah and manifesto for vegetarians. An introduction, in Hebrew and English, explains vegetarianism in light of Jewish sources and offers a new interpretation of the Passover holiday. The text is original and emphasizes the coexistence of the human and animal worlds, while still maintaining a number of elements from the traditional Haggadah. Vegetarian recipes are found at the beginning to assist in creating a vegetarian Seder.
Denomination: Sephardic .
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew.
Denomination: Women .
Location: San Francisco, California
A women's Haggadah. An original English text with some Hebrew.
Denomination: Lesbian .
Location: Canada
Original English text with some original Hebrew.
Denomination: Reconstructionist .
Location: Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Published by the Reconstructionist Press. Includes a cassette.
Denomination: Reconstructionist .
Location: Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
Published by the Reconstructionist Press. Includes a cassette.
Facsimile Subseries, 1200-1990
Includes detailed reproductions of early as well as modern manuscripts editions. Usually illuminated, often with Biblical scenes, depictions of Passover ritual and objects, and midrashic stories. The Birds Head Haggadah (Haggadah q #4), from 13th century Germany, is a richly illuminated manuscript which is unique in its handling of human figures. While there are many depictions of human beings throughout the Haggadah, most are fitted with birds' heads instead of human heads. It is often speculated that the birds' heads were used in strict compliance to the biblical prohibition of graven images. Other fine examples of facsimiles of early illuminated texts are the Washington Haggadah (A-34 #18) and the Barcelona Haggadah (A-34 #17).
In addition to facsimiles of early manuscripts, the Duke University Libraries also own a number of facsimile editions of more recent manuscripts. These include the Haggadah in Memory of the Holocaust (E ff#86), which links the memory of the Holocaust to the redemption from Egypt, and the Moss Haggadah(Haggadah f#26). Along with the exact reproductions of the manuscripts, most of the facsimile editions include introductory essays, or even entire volumes, describing and analyzing the Haggadah.
Location: Germany
Facsimile printed in 1965. Commentary volume included. This is the oldest surviving Ashkenazi illuminated Haggadah manuscript and gets its name from its illustrations of human figures with pronounced birds' heads. It is signed by a scribed named Menahem.
Location: Catalonia
Facsimile printed in 1992. Commentary volume included. Illuminations include images of medieval Spanish homes, synagogues and musical instruments. Early owners of the Haggadah are identified by signatures as is the 16th Century ecclesiastical censor Visto per me Fra. Luigi del Ordine de San Dominico.
Location: Spain
Facsimile was printed in Budapest, Hungary in 1957. Includes 14 full page miniatures, and a decorated text.
Location: Northern Spain
Facsimile of the Sarajevo Haggadah from the 14th Century in Northern Spain. This reproduction was published in New York in 1966. English introduction by Cecil Roth. The Haggadah consists of 34 full-page miniatures, an illuminated Haggadah text, and hymns and Torah readings for the Passover week. Named because of its location in the Sarajevo Museum.
Location: Northern Spain
Facsimile was published in New York in 1966. English introduction by Cecil Roth. The Haggadah consists of 34 full-page miniatures, an illuminated Haggadah text, and hymns and Torah readings for the Passover week. Signed in 1609 by Giovanni Domenico, a church censor. Named because of its location in the Sarajevo Museum. This Haggadah was almost destroyed during the bombardment of Sarajevo in 1994 but was saved by two staff members of the demolished museum where it was housed.
Location: Italy
Facsimile printed in 1991. Commentary volume included. The Haggadah is signed by 15th Century scribe and artist, Joel ben Simeon. A number of pages contain wine stains as well as notes written in the margins. It is known as the Washington Haggadah because of its location at the Library of Congress in Washington D.C.
Location: Germany
Facsimile was published in Leipzig, Germany, 1927-28. Written by the scribe Israel ben Meir of Heidelberg. The illuminations reflect contemporary German architecture and dress.
Location: Catalonia
Facsimile was published in New York, 1988. Sephardi text. Commentary by an unidentified author. Introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: Prague
Facsimile reproduction was published in 1954 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Includes an introduction in English. This Haggadah is the oldest known Haggadah to be printed with woodcuts. These woodcuts would go on to be the source for woodcuts used in many other printed Haggadot. Unique to this Haggadah is the mention of an obscure practice. On p. 36 is a woodcut of a man holding a leaf of lettuce and pointing to it with a note that It is generally customary that the husband points to his wife because of the Biblical reference that a bad woman is more bitter than death.
Location: Prague
Reproduction was published in 1940 in London, England. Translated from the German manuscript by Immanuel Goldschmidt.
Location: Prague
Reproduction was published in 1940 in London, England. Translated from the German manuscript by Immanuel Goldschmidt.
Location: Prague
Facsimile was printed in Jerusalem in 1972.
Location: Prague
Facsimile was printed in New York, 1964. Includes an English introduction.
Location: Germany
Facsimile was printed in Tel Aviv, 1985. Additional artwork added by a different artist. Includes a transcription of the Hebrew as well as an English translation.
Location: Germany
Facsimile was printed in New York, 1985. Additional artwork added by a different artist. Includes a transcription of the Hebrew as well as an English translation.
Location: Venice, Italy
Facsimile was printed in Jerusalem in 1974 The Venice Haggada of 1609: introduction (15 p.) inserted. ranslated by Juda-Arie Leon de Modena.
Location: Offenbach, Germany
Facsimile was printed in Jerusalem in 1972. Originally published by Yisra'el ben Mosheh.
Location: –ttingen, Germany
Facsimile printed in Tel Aviv, 1985. Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew and Yiddish. Facsimile of Pessach Haggadah, –ttingen, 1729. Scribe and illustrator: Jacob ben Michael May Segal ; introduction by Chaya Benjamin. Many of the illuminations are based on woodcuts and copper engravings from the printed Haggadot of Venice and Amsterdam.
Location: Amsterdam
Facsimile printed in 198-? The Illuminations are based on the well-known Amsterdam engravings with some additions and changes. Also known as the The Alexander Karl Floersheim Haggadah.
Location: Altona, Germany
Facsimile was published in Tel Aviv, 1987. Includes an abbreviation of the Zevah Pesah commentary by Isaac Abravanel as well as a short mystical commentary. Ashkenazi and Sephardi rites included. Includes a separate introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile was printed in Tel Aviv, 1986. The Artist: Uri Pheibush [Philip Isac Levy] ... Introduction by Chaya Benjamin (Hebrew and English, [12] p.) inserted.
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile was published in Tel Aviv, 1986. Facsimile of: The Altona-Hamburg Haggadah. Manuscript. 1751 (Codex Levy 22). English and Hebrew. Map of the Land of Israel, drawn by Abraham Bar-Yaacov, the first Hebrew-letter printed map, attached to the Amsterdam Haggadah from 1696--P. [27-30] By the Scriber ... Uri Feivisch, son of Rabbi Itzhak Eizik ....
Location: Altona-Hamburg, Germany
Facsimile was published in Tel Aviv, 1986. Facsimile of: The Altona-Hamburg Haggadah. Manuscript. 1751 (Codex Levy 22). English and Hebrew. Map of the Land of Israel, drawn by Abraham Bar-Yaacov, the first Hebrew-letter printed map, attached to the Amsterdam Haggadah from 1696--P. [27-30] By the Scriber ... Uri Feivisch, son of Rabbi Itzhak Eizik ....
Location: Breslau, Germany
Facsimile was published in Tel Aviv, 1984. Text in Hebrew, rubrics in Yiddish. Accompanied by introductory material in Hebrew and English, including bibliographies, prepared by Chaya Benjamin.
Location: Trieste, Italy
Facsimile was printed in Jerusalem in 1974.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Hebrew. Facsim. of: Seder Hagadah shel Pesah : bi-leshon ha-kodesh u-fitrono bi-leshon Ashkenazim ... Venitsiyah : Stamperia Vendramina, 501 [1740 or 1741] This Hagada -- printed in Jerusalem by Hamadpis Lipshitz Press, is a reproduction of an old Venetian edition of which the above [as in Facsim. note] is the original title page. It contained an Italian [?] translation, for which English has been substituted--Colophon. Ha-tseva`im veha-tsiurim ve-seder ha-`amudim hut`amu le-tavnit ha-hotsa'at--Colophon. `Al ha-kerikhah tsiur Ha lahma `anya bi-tseva`im mi-tokh Hagadat Sarayevo--Yaari. Yaari 2416
Location: Paris, France
Title on added t.p.: Haggadah for Passover. Hebrew t.p. dated 724 i. e. 1963 or 1964. One of 228 numbered copies.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew and Yiddish. Facsimile of the manuscript of the Passover Haggadah written and illustrated in Nickelsburg in 1748.
Location: London
Hebrew text of Hagadah with English translation and commentary.
Location: Haifa, Israel
Forty-four leaves in portfolio; twelve leaves of plates. Mr. and Mrs. Zygfryd B. Wolloch commissioned this Haggadah as a memorial to their parents who perished at the hands of the Nazis. David Wander (Illustrator) and Yonah Weinreb (Calligraphy and Micrography) have produced a work that emphasizes slavery and redemption as exemplified both in the Exodus and in the Holocaust. The simplicity of the artwork helps convey the horror of the Holocaust. For example, alongside the text which reads in each generation one is obligated to regard him/herself as though he/she personally left Egypt appears an empty concentration camp uniform. Human figures are conspicuously absent from the Haggadah as a reminder of those who did not survive Nazi persecution.
Location: Rochester, New York
Hebrew text; companion volume about the Moss Haggadah is in Hebrew and English. Artistically it includes: calligraphy, micrography, gouaches, gold leaf, acrylics and paper cuts. Moss reproduces the crafts and style of the medieval scribe with modern innovation designed to bring the story of the Exodus up to the present time and to connect it to present-day Jews and to the founding of the state of Israel.
Location: Rochester, New York
Page from the the Moss Haggadah, by David Moss. This page contains in its micrographic border, the entire text of the Haggadah in Hebrew. Duke also owns two versions of the complete Moss Haggadah: Haggadah f#12 and Haggadah f#26.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Facsimile editions of 4 different Haggadot (smaller than original size). 1) Italy, 1500s. 2) Mantova, Italy, 1480; by Abraham Favissol of Avignon. 3) Moravia, 1719; by R. Simmel Sofer. 4) Yemen, 1800s; by Yosef Hammami. Includes a pamphlet with a Hebrew and English introduction as well as a pamphlet with an English translation of the Haggadah text.
Location: Rochester, New York
Haggadah text in Hebrew; commentary in English. Accompanied by: The Passover Haggadah : an English translation to accompany the Moss Haggadah; and a paper-cut print of The bird cage from the original work.
Fundraising Subseries, 1937-1979
Printed and distributed in an effort to raise money for various organizations. Generally contain the traditional text and may have illustrations by well-known artists or be reproductions of early manuscripts. Always include a letter thanking the reader for, or requesting, donations. Duke University Libraries' earliest fundraising Haggadah was printed in 1937 by the Pro-Palestine Fund in its efforts to raise money for the Jewish pioneers who were living in Palestine (Haggadah Pam 12mo #34).
Location: London
Distributed by the Pro-Palestine fund. The back of the Haggadah has two pictures of Jewish settlers in pre-1948 Palestine.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the United Aged Home of Jerusalem.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed as a fundraising tool for a number of Jewish organizations. Requests for donations are found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). Duke owns 7 of these Haggadot (c. 1-7) which allows one to see the variety of covers as well as the different organizations which used this Haggadah for fundraising.
Location: New York
Haggadah printed as a fundraising tool for a number of Jewish organizations. Requests for donations are found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover).
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Includes musical settings by H.A. Russotto. This Haggadah serves as a fundraising tool for Yeshiva Rabbi Solomon Kluger. A message in Yiddish (front) and English (back) asks for money to help the Yeshiva feed, clothe, educate and medically treat unfortunate children.
Location: New York
Exclusively produced as a Gift to the Friends and Supporters of the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls, Jerusalem, Israel ...--Cover. Printed in honor of the first Passover by the modern State of Israel as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The illustrations near the end of the Haggadah (pp. 53, 57) connect the text of the seder to the pioneering efforts in the new state of Israel.
Location: New York
Gift of the Yeshiva & Mesifta Toras Chaim of Greater New York. Printed by in honor of the first Passover in the modern State of Israel as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The illustrations near the end of the Haggadah (pp. 53, 57) connect the text of the seder to the pioneering efforts in the new state of Israel.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Fundraising tool for Yeshivas Ohel Torah. Includes photographs of students studying, playing basketball and playing ping pong on center pages.
Location: New York
Used as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). Exclusively produced as a Gift to the Friends and Supporters of the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls, Jerusalem, Israel, ...--Cover. Duke has 3 copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Cover contains advertisements of the Home of the Sages of Israel. Imperfect copy: P. 3-12, 17-18, 21-24, 27-28 lacking; bottom half of p. 15-16, 33-34, 41-42, 57-64 cut away. Cover contains advertisements of the Home of the Sages of Israel
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. The request for donations is found in both English (back inside cover) and Yiddish (front inside cover). The obviously Zionistic illustrations from earlier editions of the Haggadah (see Haggadah Pam 12 mo #15) are missing from this edition.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Illustrations by Siegmund Forst. Jewish Pocket Books published haggadah which includes a number of essays about Passover in Life and Literature. Printed as a fundraising tool for Yeshivah Torah Vodaath and Mesifta with a request for money in Yiddish and English.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphans' Home for Girls in Israel.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Jerusalem General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphans' Home for Girls. Duke has three copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Reprint of Prague, 1527 ed. Photo-copy of Hebrew text with English translation in parallel columns. Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Text in English and Hebrew on opposite pages; commentary in English.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Hebrew introduction with an English summary of the introduction.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Hebrew introduction with an English summary of the introduction. Original from 1725.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: Armentières-en-Brie, France
Fundraising tool for Yeshivah Ohr Joseph in France. Hebrew and English. Illustrated by Roland Blum. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool. Preface in English and Hebrew by L. Marwick. Reproduction of the Washington Haggadah from 1470. Original written by Joel ben Simeon. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Printed as a fundraising tool for the Home of the Sages of Israel.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Reproduction of the Mahzor Roma Haggadah. Hebrew text with commentary in Rashi script. Duke has two copies of this Haggadah.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Hebrew text with an English introduction. Missing Dayyenu and some other traditional elements; includes hymns not found in the traditional text. Incorrect vocalization at times. Ceremonial directions written in the Judeo-Persian language, but using Hebrew characters.
Location: New York
Fundraising tool for the Orphan Hospital Ward of Israel. Hebrew text with an English introduction. Missing Dayyenu and some other traditional elements; includes hymns not found in the traditional text. Incorrect vocalization at times. Ceremonial directions written in the Judeo-Persian language, but using Hebrew characters.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Marathi. Reproduction (partially reduced) of Bombay, 1846 ed.(Yaari no. 656) with added prefatory material by Walter J. Fischel and others. Original was the first Hebrew book printed in India with illustrations.
Location: New York
Published as a fundraising tool for the General Israel Orphan's Home in Jerusalem.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. Preface signed by Tovia Preschel.
Location: New York
Hebrew with Judeo-Italian translation. Original edition prepared by Leone da Modena. Introd. in English and Hebrew by T. Preschel.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Yiddish and Hebrew. A reproductin of the The Kittsee Haggadah of 1782 for fundraising purposes.
Location: New York
Text in Judeo-German. Introduction in English and Hebrew by Tovia Preschel. Facsimile reproduction of the Fuerth haggadah, published in 1741.
Location: New York
Reprint, with a new introduction in Hebrew and English. Originally published: Altona, 1738.
Location: New York
Written and illustrated in Vienna in the year 1751 by Aaron Schreiber Herlingen--Introd. Reprint, with a new introduction in Hebrew and English.
Location: New York
Reproductin of Seder ha-Hagadah shel Pesah. Tri'esti : Be-vet defus Y. Kohen, 5624 [1864].
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew; rubrics in Hebrew, Ladino, and Yiddish; introduction in English. Facsimile of the Hamburg-Amsterdam Haggadah, 1728, written by Ya`akov Sofer ben Yehuda Leyb, and held by the Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana.
Location: New York
Introductions in English and Hebrew. Manuscript, based on printed Amsterdam Haggadah of 1695, written and illustrated by Ya'akov ben Yehuda Leib of Berlin, p. [1]. Includes the commentary of Isaac Abravenel.
Location: New York
Reprint, with a new introduction in English. Originally published: Amsterdam, 1662.
Location: New York
Introduction in English and Hebrew by M. I. Friedman. Reprint of the original which was published in Amsterdam, 1695.
Location: New York
Hebrew and Judeo-Italian; introd. by Tovia Preschel in Hebrew and English. Published as a fundraising tool for the Diskin Orphan Home of Israel. Originally published in Venice by A. Bragadin, 1715-1716.
General Subseries, 1526-2003
For use at a Passover seder. Typically traditional in content, come in a variety of languages, and include both illustrated and non-illustrated examples.
Location: Prague
Reproduction of the Frankfurter Stadtbibliothek copy of the original ed., printed by Gershom ben Solomon ha-Kohen, in Prague in 1526. This reproduction was printed in Berlin, Germany in 1926.
Location: Venice, Italy
Hebrew commentary by Abarbanel. Includes the traditional Hebrew text with an Italian translation.
Location: Amsterdam
Handwritten note in Hebrew/Yiddish on the inside of the back cover. Pocket edition of Haggadah limiting its Yiddish commentary to occasional rubrics. It relies on eye-catching initial letters and woodcuts to make the text come alive.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Yiddish and Hebrew. Includes a list of laws for Passover. Contains many woodcuts as well as artistic initial letters with leaves growing from them. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Amsterdam
Includes a short version of Abarbanel's Zevah Pesah commentary. Wine stains throughout.
Location: London
Location: Amsterdam
Text and commentaries in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Yiddish. Signed on 1st page by Hare Lovy and Leopold Fried. Stamped on 2nd page by Dr. Hinko Urbah. A faded list of names appears in Hebrew and English on the final two pages. Includes the laws for Passover.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Text and commentary in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Yiddish. Includes commentary by Isaac Abarbanel. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Karlsruhe, Germany
Ceremonial directions in Yiddish.
Location: Offenbach, Germany
Illustrations were made from woodcuts. Commentary by Joel Brill, based on the Berlin Haggadah of 1745.
Location: Verona, Italy
This Haggadah has a Hebrew text with some Latin on the title page. The majority of the Haggadah only contains the text, however there are four simple illustrations: at the beginning, next to the descriptions of the Matzah and Bitter herbs, and after the final song.
Location: Fuerth, Germany
Hebrew and Yiddish.
Location: London
Contains 8 copper plates relating to the service.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Contains traditional Hebrew text with an Italian translation. Handwritten notes appear throughout in Hebrew (Rashi script), Italian, and Greek Four handwritten pages, In Hebrew and Italian, were inserted into the beginning of the Haggadah. These pages serve as an annotated table of contents. Signed on the inside of the cover.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew with commentary in Rashi script. Stampted on title and back pages by the Librairie Hebraique in Djerba, Tunisia. Wine stains appear throughout.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with Dutch translation and commentary.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic (using Rashi script).
Location: Vilna, Poland
Includes ten commentaries by well-known sages. Wine stains throughout.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. Wine stains throughout.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch. Missing Pages 35-46.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew with Yiddish translation Hebrew signature of the publisher is found on the title page. [Missing from shelf.]
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: New York
Location: Livorno, Italy
Hebrew and Judaeo-Arabic (in Hebrew characters). The pages of this Haggadah were not cut correctly; some pages are too wide and every two pages are connected at the top. Includes the evening service.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Complete Haggadah text in Hebrew followed by complete Haggadah text in German. Stamped by Jakob B. Brandeis.
Location: London
Hebrew text with commentary in Hebrew, Arabic (in Hebrew characters), and Aramaic.
Location: London
Hebrew text with commentary in Hebrew, Arabic (in Hebrew characters), and Aramaic.
Location: Amsterdam
Hebrew text with ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: London
Hebrew and English. Translated by Aaron Asher Green and authorized by the Chief Rabbi of England, Rabbi Naftali Adler ha-Kohen. A handwritten note on first page reads: Rebecca Melchior: a present from the Chief Rabbi N. Adler.
Location: Algiers, Algeria
Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes an introduction by Netan'el Hayyim ben Mosheh Naman Pape. Includes additions and comments by the son of the author on page 16.
Location: Italy
Not a Haggadah, as it does not contain any text. This is, however, a collection of 29 imprints made in 1977 from original 19th Century wood blocks based on the famous Venice Haggadah of 1609. The near completeness of the collection of biblical and ritual wood cuts intended for printing is a rare find.
Location: Prague
Hebrew and German text.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Hebrew.
Location: Warsaw, Poland
Commentaries by Judah Loew ben Bezalel (ca. 1525-1609) and Yehudah Yudl Rozenberg (1865-1935).
Location: Podgorze, Poland
Includes commentaries by 238 different sages.
Location: Amsterdam
Text in Hebrew; ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew text with a German text (old German script). Printed by W. Heidenheim.
Location: Amsterdam
From the library of S. van Maarsen, with his bookplate.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
English and Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew. According to the customs of Bagdad and the cities of India.
Location: Livorno, Italy
Italian and Hebrew. Includes the Evening prayer service.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in German and Hebrew; ceremonial directions in German.
Location: New York
Includes music arranged by Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
Includes a special chapter with music for the Passover service composed, selected and arranged by the Rev. Henry A. Russotto.
Location: New York
Location: New York
Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
This Haggadah has a Yiddish cover page, with an English back cover. The text is in both Hebrew and English. At the end of the Haggadah is the music for four songs. The music is signed by Henry A. Russotto, p. [63].
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew only. Includes a Hebrew commentary.
Location: Warsaw-Vilna, Poland
Hebrew and Yiddish. Wine stains throughout.
Location: New York
Text in Yiddish and Hebrew Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: New York
English and Hebrew. This undated Haggadah was edited by Dr. Herman Klopper and contains original music by Henry A. Russotto.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Commentary by Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Edited and printed by "Union" (Appel Brothers)
Location: New York
Hebrew and Yiddish. From the library of the Yeshiva d'Rambam & T.T., Brooklyn, N.Y., Rabbi Dr. Samuel L. Skolnick, Executive Director, with its stamp.
Location: Rodelheim, Germany
Hebrew with German translation Limited ed. of 100 copies on handmade paper.
Location: Vienna, Austria
Hebrew text with an English translation by Rakhel Me'ir.
Location: Vilna, Poland
Includes 16 commentaries by well-known sages.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Haggadah text and notes are in Hebrew. Ceremonial directions are in Dutch. The cover has a black and white illustration of a man holding up a wine cup.
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio
Edited by The Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association for Reform Judaism. Includes an essay at the end, The Passover in history, literature, and art (p. 123-162).
Location: Berlin, Germany
Handwritten by Baruch Parnetsiskah and illustrated by Jacob Steinhardt. Signed by the artist.
Location: Paris, France
Hebrew with a French translation Limited ed. of 1500 copies on rag paper.
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew and Yiddish; ceremonial directions and introduction in Yiddish. Includes a picture of Warsaw (p. 142).
Location: Amsterdam
Text in Hebrew; notes and ceremonial directions in Dutch.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Hebrew with commentary in Rashi script.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Arranged and illustrated by Otto Geismar.
Location: New York
Location: New York
New English translation by Judah David Eisenstein. Illustrations by Lola.
Location: Porto, Portugal
Haggadah text is in Portuguese only.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Yiddish and Hebrew.
Location: Jerusalem, Israel
Includes music arranged by Solomon Rosowsky.
Location: London
English translation by Betzalel Ruth. Illustrated and decorated by Albert Rutherston. Issued in gold-stamped blue crushed morocco; all edges gilt; signed inside front cover: Bound by Wood, London.
Location: London
Second title page claims that it was printed in Holland.
Location: Tel Aviv, Israel
Includes a short biography on the life of the Rambam (Maimonides). Includes the Song of Songs.
Location: New York
Text in Hebrew and Yiddish. Includes commentaries by noted sages, including Jacob ben Wolf Kranz (1740?-1804), who is also known as the Dubnow or Dubner Maggid.
Location: Berlin, Germany
Text in Hebrew with a German translation.
