Jacob Pinkerfield

Jacob Pinkerfield
Born Przemysl, Galicia, Poland
Died 1956
Ramat Rachel
Nationality Israeli
Occupation Architect
The Anda Pinkerfeld house in Tel Aviv where the writer Anda Pinkerfeld - Amir and her brother, the architect Jacob Pinkerfeld lived and created.

Jacob Pinkerfield Hebrew: יעקב פינקרפלד(1897–1956) was an Israeli archaeologist and architect.

Biography

Jacob Pinkerfeld was born in the city of Przemysl, Galicia, Poland in 1897, the son of an architect. He joined the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement and later studied architecture at the Technical High Institution in Vienna, Austria. Pinkerfeld moved to the Land of Israel with Hashomer Hatzair in 1920 and lived in Zichron Ya'acov. He returned to Europe to graduate university and moved back to the Land of Israel in 1925.

According to the Artlog website, "his dream was to establish a Research Institute for Jewish Art. Together with a group of friends he founded "Ganza", the Society for Jewish Craft, which later became the Museum of Ethnography and Folklore in Tel Aviv, and acted as its Director from 1950 until his untimely death.[1]

He worked on excavations at Tell el-Kheleifeh which Nelson Glueck at the time had mistakenly identified as Solomon's Ezion-geber[2] and the putative site of the Church of Zion, Jerusalem, forming the basis of Bargil Pixner's thesis of a pre-Crusader Jewish-Christian church on the site.

Shooting Attack

He was one of the four archaeologists killed in the Ramat Rachel shooting attack on September 23, 1956.

Published Works

External Links

Jacob Pinkerfield page on Hebrew Wikipedia

References

  1. "Artlog online catalog of notable Israeli architecture".
  2. Israel exploration journal: Israel. Miśrad ha-ḥinukh ṿeha-tarbut. Dept. of Antiquities and Museums, Universiṭah ha-ʻIvrit bi-Yerushalayim. Makhon le-arkheʾologyah, Ḥevrah la-ḥaḳirat Erets-Yiśraʾel ṿe-ʻatiḳoteha - 1996 "The chapters are: Chapter 1: Tell el-Kheleifeh 1937-1940: A Summary of the Work of Nelson Glueck and Architect Jacob Pinkerfield'; Chapter 2: The Data for Reappraisal of Glueck's Excavations';
  3. "בתי הכנסיות בארץ-ישראל: מסוף תקופת הגאונים עד עלית [עליית] החסידים / פינקרפלד, יעקב - הגלריה לספרות - ספרים משומשים, נדירים ועתיקים". www.bookgallery.co.il. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  4. Pinkerfeld, Jacob (1954-01-01). The Synagogues of Italy (First Edition edition ed.). Bialik Institute.
  5. Pinkerfeld, Jacob (1954-01-01). The Synagogues of Italy.Their architectural development since the Rennaisance - in HEBREW. Bialik Institute.
  6. bullstar. "בשבילי אמנות יהודית יעקב פינקרפלד ספר זכרון חנות ספרים יד שניה". ספרים וספרי יד שנייה :: בוקספר, booksefer. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  7. Pinkerfeld, Jacob (1974-01-01). The Synagogues of North Africa - text in HEBREW. Bialik Institute.
  8. "ירושלים : בית הכנסת ועדת הקראים - יעקב פינקרפלד". סימניה. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
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