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LISTING OF PATRONS: click here to view list
With this the concluding volume of The Jewish Encyclopedia the Funk & Wagnalls Company fulfil
the promise made to their subscribers nearly eight years ago to supply the world at large with a full account
of the history, views, and sociology of the Jewish people from their appearance in history down to the present
day. The publishers feel that they may claim to have carried out their promise unstintingly, and with sole
regard to thoroughness of workmanship. A few figures, which may be interesting in themselves, will suffice to
substantiate this claim. The promise was made to provide twelve volumes containing 8,000 pages supplied by 400
contributors, and embellished by 2,000 illustrations. The twelve volumes contain 8,572 pages, written by 605
contributors, and supplemented by 2,464 illustrations, a large number of them full-page, with a considerable
number of photogravures, and 23 reproduced in facsimile by lithographic process in colors. Of the merits of the
work it is scarcely the publishers' place to speak, but the universal verdict of the press of the world has
been that it presents its subjects in fulness of detail and with perfect impartiality of treatment. It has been
the aim of the editorial board to present all sides of Jewish life from every standpoint held by any important
section of the Jewish community. Imperfections there must needs be in a work of this scope, which has
absolutely no forerunners by which it can be checked; but care has been taken to reduce these to a minimum by
every device that has been suggested by the ingenuity of the editorial board or the experience of the
publishing-house. In cases of doubt resort was had to the advice of the boards of consulting editors in Europe
and America, especially on matters of general policy. During the making of the Encyclopedia the American board
was unfortunately decreased by the regretted deaths of Dr. M. Mielziner and Dr. M. Jastrow, the latter of whom
to the end of the second volume was editor of the Talmudic Department, and who showed his interest in the work
by remaining a consulting editor till his death. The foreign board lost Prof. Moritz Lazarus, Dr. Eude Lolli,
and Dr. Kayserling, the last of whom, besides acting as a consulting editor, contributed the largest number of
articles to the Encyclopedia of all contributors other than the office staff.
The 8,168,957 words the presentation of which this volume completes have been selected for the reader
from the 9,630,211 that were supplied by the contributors; or, in other words, one word out of every six has
been eliminated in order to present the fullest amount of information within the space limits. By this use of
the pruning-knife the alphabetical division of the volumes was made to coincide almost exactly with the
schedule laid down before the first volume was issued. In this way alone it became possible to treat subjects
in the later letters of the alphabet with just as much fulness as those in the earlier volumes.
As promised in the first volume, the Funk & Wagnalls Company repeat herewith the list of stanch
friends of The Jewish Encyclopedia who by their loyal trust have rendered the production of these volumes
practicable. In an enterprise of this kind, addressed in the first place to a special public, the support of
that public during the progress of the work is as necessary for its adequate completion as is the literary
ability of the editorial board or the executive capacity of the publishing-house. The promises of the list of
patrons contained in the first volume encouraged the Funk & Wagnalls Company to undertake the work; the
fulfilment has enabled them to carry it through to what may be fairly termed a triumphant conclusion. They
hereby render their thanks to those who throughout this arduous undertaking have stood by their side as silent
but very efficacious helpers.
Unfortunately, great discrepancies exist between the former list and that now presented to the
reader. Through misunderstanding, through ill health, or through failure of means, a number of the original
subscribers found themselves unable to carry out their engagements, and at one time the Funk & Wagnalls
Company had in view the suspension of the work owing to this lack of support. At this juncture a number of
public-spirited gentlemen in America undertook to guarantee the sale of a certain number of copies of the
Encyclopedia, and others in England, headed by Sir Isidore Spielmann, made an earnest and successful appeal for
increased subscription. Thus encouraged, the Funk & Wagnalls Company determined to continue in a task
which, if it promised no adequate profit, seemed to them a worthy contribution to the higher life of America
and of the world. Sustained by the support of these gentlemen, the Funk & Wagnalls Company have spared no
pains or expense to carry out the plans of the editorial board in their entirety, and
trust that the work now presented to the reader is a worthy outcome of American constructive scholarship and of
American publishing enterprise.
The names of the American public-spirited gentlemen referred to above are as follows:
Nathan Bijur
Charles S. Henry
Philip S. Henry
L. N. Hershfield
Adolph Lewisohn
Leonard Lewisohn
Louis Marshall
M. Warley Platzek
Jacob H. Schiff
James Speyer
Leopold Stern
Louis Stern
Isidor Straus
C. L. Sulzberger
Mayer Sulzberger
Felix M. Warburg (Deceased) New York, Dec., 1905.

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