Re: [Cz-L] Iuliu Barasch's Travel Log - Stage 6: What is a Sterntikhl/Sternbindel?

From: HARDY BREIER <HARDY3_at_BEZEQINT.NET>
Date: Tue, 11 Mar 2014 14:19:49 +0200
To: Edgar Hauster <bconcept_at_hotmail.com>, Czernowitz Discussion Group <czernowitz-l_at_cornell.edu>
Reply-To: HARDY BREIER <HARDY3_at_BEZEQINT.NET>

We Bukoviner Jews consider ourselves resonable and practical people.
 We gave the world the Bible.
   Now comes this Sterntichl.
 Have you read it ?

Hardy

----- Original Message -----
From: "Edgar Hauster" <bconcept_at_hotmail.com>
To: "Czernowitz Discussion Group" <czernowitz-l_at_cornell.edu>
Cc: "Irene Fishler" <irenef_at_netvision.net.il>
Sent: Tuesday, March 11, 2014 7:23 AM
Subject: [Cz-L] Iuliu Barasch's Travel Log - Stage 6: What is a
Sterntikhl/Sternbindel?

Czernowitzers...

Let's keep following the Galician-born Jewish physician, philosopher and
writer on his adventurous journey to the Jewish communities in the Krakow
Area, Galicia, Bukovina, Moldavia and Walachia:

http://hauster.blogspot.de/2014/01/iuliu-baraschs-travel-report-on-jewish.html

March 11, 1843 - Stage 6: Still in Tarnów in Galicia, Iuliu Barasch has a
focus on the traditional Jewish outfit at that time and especially on "The
Sterntikhl/Sternbindel" as accurately visualized to all of us by Irene:

Presentation: http://hauster.de/data/Sterntikhl.pdf

Between 1/3 and 1/2 of the dowry were spent for "The
Sterntikhl/Sternbindel"; what an unemployed capital! By the way, Iuliu
Barasch examines the organization of marriages in mid 19th Century, which
were far from love matches at that time.

German transcription: http://hauster.de/data/Barasch1843031110.pdf

Sotheby's: "The sterntikhl (Yiddish for 'forehead kerchief') is a
distinctive and lavish head covering worn on the Sabbath and festivals by
married women in Eastern Europe during the eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. Decorated with pearls and precious stones, it was a reflection
of a family’s fortune. According to early accounts, affluent women would on
occasion donate a precious stone from their sterntikhls to help a poor bride
adorn her own. Historically, this sumptuous head covering was worn by both
Hasidic and non-Hasidic women, but since the twentieth century, only a small
number of Hasidic women continue this custom. Very few of the early examples
of this distinctive head covering remain still extant."

http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/2013/a-treasured-legacy-steinhardt-n08961/lot.225.html

Edgar Hauster
Lent - The Netherlands
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Received on 2014-03-11 08:09:21

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