Obj. ID: 54243
  Sacred and Ritual Kame'a Yerushalmit, Jerusalem, circa 1910
The following description was prepared by William Gross:
This specific form of amulet was first published by Israel Dov Frumkin soon after the establishment of his printing press in Jerusalem in 1874. It was published in two different versions then as well as on different colored paper. Subsequently, it appeared in many different printings, some by Frunkin himself but afterward by many different presses in other variations even today. Many of these publications are represented in the Gross Family collection. Frumkin was an important printer of books and single sheets for almost 30 years. Such a single sheet was printed to be hung on the wall of a home and represents the kind of printed single pages that made their frequent appearence in the marketplace during the last half of the 19th century. This is the type of decorative page that provided the average Jewish person with the ability to have "art" on the walls of his home. Franklin was the son-in-law of the first printer in Jerusalem, Yisrael Bak, and worked in Bak's printing establishment from 1870 until he acquired his own press four years later. He was also the printer and editor of the Hebrew newspaper "Havatzelet".
This amulet was intended, as described in the large letters at the top, as a talisman and Shmirah against fire, as a protection for a pregnant woman, and as a general shield against all bad things. It contains many Kabbalistic formulae and "names" as well as a number of visual elements, including the depiction of an angel at the center that became the defining image of a great many amulets printed in Jerusalem. The image originated in Eastern Europe but was copied in the Holy Land and became exceedingly popular as an amuletic device on publications in Jerusalem. The amount of text is much greater than what is normally seen and deals with names of angels and other Kabbalistic lore for protection of the house and its inhabitants.
A two-page amulet. It is an identical amulet to 027.011.071, except that on the right-hand page are printed instructions for maximizing the benefit instead of the Menorah as well as the depiction of several holy places in Eretz Israel. The angel in the center of the left hand page is derived from the Zuckerman model as well as the Menorah on the right-hand side.
sub-set tree: 
J | Jerusalem | Sites in Jerusalem: | Western Wall (Kotel) הכותל המערבי
H | Holy and other places in the Land of Israel | Holy Tombs | Rachel's Tomb
J | Jerusalem | Zion, Holy City עיה'ק ציון
A | Angel
T | Tree | Cypress (Cupressus)
O | Ornamentation: | Full page framed
O | Ornamentation: | Full page framed | Full page framed by text
A | Angel | Sanoy, Sansanoy and Semangelaf (Sanvi, Sansanvi and Semangelaf)
D | Diagram
A | Aaron | Aaron lighting the Menorah
H | Hamsa
M | Magen David | Magen David, inscribed
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