Written on legal stationary. Name of the groom (?): Yitsḥaq ben Aharon Schottländer, Additional document to a marriage contract, Hebrew square and cursive script, and Danish printed Latin script
Fols. 162ff contains a supercommentary on the preceeding work, by the same author. The letters are one from S. L. Israelsson to David Simonsen (1899-11-16), about the work, and one from the author to David Simonsen (May 1900)., Commentaries on Song of Songs, Hebrew square and cursive script, Attached letters written in Danish and Hebrew, and Allony & Kupfer 1964, # 125
Names mentioned: Ya'aqov ben Simḥa Segal (יעקב בן שמחה סגל), Rivka bat Yitsḥaq(ריבכא בת יצחק), Peska (פכסכא), T. Simonsen, D. Simonsen, J. M. Levin, Jac. Simonsen. With stamp (relief) of M. H. Hartig, OKB [overkirkebetjent = gabbai/shammesh)., List of aliyot etc. in connection with an engangement/wedding (?), Hebrew cursive script, and partly in Hebrew square script and Danish cursive script
Note on the provenance etc. in David Simonsen's hand on the inner front cover., Danish translation of אלה דברי הברית (Altona, 1819), a collection of responsa, and Danish cursive script
Doc. 1, 3 and 4 printed, with hand-written additions. The back of fol. 2 included in the digitization. Hebrew title supplied., Legal documents, and Square and cursive Hebrew script
Groom: Menaḥem ben Gershon (מנחם בן גרשון), Bride: Deikha [?] bat Reuven (דייבא בן ראובן), Ketubah (marriage contract), Hebrew square script, and Signatures in cursive Hebrew script
Groom: Yehuda Leib ben Aharon (יהודה ליב בן אהרן), Bride: Tsipor bat Meir (ציפור בת מאיר), Ketubah (marriage contract), Hebrew square script, and Signatures in Hebrew cursive script
Groom: Yitsḥaq ben Yehuda (יצחק בן יהודא), Bride: Fesil bat Yisaskhar (פעסיל בת יששכר), Ketubah (marriage contract), Hebrew square script, and Signatures in Hebrew cursive script
Note by David Simonsen in Danish on fol. 1: "Torn from a מחזור [mahzor] given by Line Salomon, given to Meyer Kanter in Horsens Prison March 1889". The two fols., of which only the inscribed front pages has been digitized, is attached to one another by a piece of adhesive at the bottom edges., List of children born to a family in Odense [?], Denmark, and Hebrew cursive script
For technical reasons, the digital facsimile opens with a blank page., Sermons and commentaries on the Talmud (Pesaḥim), Hebrew square and cursive script, and Allony & Kupfer 1964, # 250