Ticho House

Coordinates: 31°47′02″N 35°13′10″E / 31.78396°N 35.21957°E / 31.78396; 35.21957
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ticho House
Ticho House entrance

Ticho House (

Old City walls in the 19th century. [1]

History

Ticho House was built in the early 1860s outside the

Moses Wilhelm Shapira, whose daughter Myriam Harry described growing up there in her memoir, "La petite flle de Jerusalem."[2] The family lived there between 1873 and 1883.[3]

Ticho House interior

In 1924, Dr. Abraham Albert Ticho, an ophthalmologist, and his wife, Anna Ticho, an artist, bought the house.[4] Dr. Ticho was stabbed and seriously wounded during the 1929 Palestine riots.[5]Thousands of Jews, Christians and Arabs prayed for his recovery. When he was able to return to work, he opened a new clinic on the first floor of Beit Ticho and continued to take patients there until his retirement in 1950.[6]Trachoma was widespread in Jerusalem at the time, and he often treated hundreds of patients per day.[7]

The Tichos hosted local and British government officials in their home, as well as artists, writers, academics and intellectuals.

Anna Ticho bequeathed the house and its contents, including her husband's

Judaica collections and library, to the Israel Museum.[8]

References

  1. ^ Ticho House, Jerusalem
  2. ^ Ticho House, Jerusalem
  3. ^ Hershel Shanks (2002). "Fakes!". Archaeology Odyssey 5:05, Sep/Oct 2002. Biblical Archaeology Society. Retrieved 2014-12-06.
  4. ^ Peeking through the highrises: famed Jerusalem street's old architectural glories, Haaretz
  5. ^ Physicians group protests Ticho attack
  6. ^ Ticho House - Israel Museum Archived 2012-01-20 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ The days and years of the Tichos
  8. ^ The days and years of the Tichos

External links

31°47′02″N 35°13′10″E / 31.78396°N 35.21957°E / 31.78396; 35.21957