He assisted with the engravings for the 1695 Passover Haggadah, which was printed by Kosman Emrich.
In 1709, Moses established a printing-office in the German town of Halle, where in 1712 he printed his Tela'ot Moshe (or "Weltbeschreibung"), a Judeo-German work on the Ten Tribes, having collected the material from a number of sources, particularly from Abraham Farissol and Gedaliah ibn Yahya.
Owing to anti-Christian passages in these two works, his printing-office was closed by royal order.
His coreligionists, however, helped him to escape to Amsterdam, where he printed in the same year (1714) Mesechtas Rosh ha-Shanah.
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