Auction 85 Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts, Graphic & Ceremonial Art
By Kestenbaum & Company
Nov 7, 2019
242 West 30th Street, 12th Floor, New York NY 10001, United States
The auction has ended

LOT 50:

(BIBLE,
Hebrew Proverbs, Mishlei). With commentary by Immanuel ben Solomon of Rome. Edited by Chaim bar Isaac ...

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 

Estimated price :
$ 6,000 - $8,000
Buyer's Premium: 25%
tags:

(BIBLE,
Hebrew Proverbs, Mishlei). With commentary by Immanuel ben Solomon of Rome. Edited by Chaim bar Isaac Halevi Aschkenazi (see colophon).



FIRST EDITION OF COMMENTARY. Text of Proverbs in square Hebrew type with nikud (vocalization). A peculiarity of this edition is that a line occurs over the “soft” consonants veith, khaph, and thav. From the fact that the other three “raphah” (soft) consonants, gimmel, dhaleth, and phei, have not received such treatment, one might deduce that the Italian Jewish community no longer differentiated between the “hard” (degushah) and “soft” (raphah) sounds of those letters.
ff. 81 (of 104). Lacking first 17 leaves and final 6 leaves. Marginal repairs throughout, opening 11 leaves and final 5 leaves with marginal loss affecting several lines of text. Modern tooled morocco within slip-case. Sm. folio. Vinograd, Naples 3; Goff 34; Offenberg 43; Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. no. 1066; Thes. A58; Wineman Cat. 32.
(Naples: Joseph ben Jacob Aschkenazi Gunzenhauser 1487)
The commentary was composed by the celebrated poet who authored the Machbaroth. In his commentary to Proverbs, Immanuel displays strong interest in astronomy and navigation. As an example, see f. 61v. (commentary to Proverbs 25:3) and f. 80r. (commentary to Proverbs 30:19). In the latter passage, Immanuel explains the words of the Amorite Rabbi Joshua ben Levi to Rabban Gamliel in Tractate Horayoth (f.10a):”There is a star that rises once in seventy years which confounds navigators.” Immanuel explicates this Talmudic passage in an astronomical vein - with reference to the North and South Stars. Within five years, this data would be revolutionized by Columbus’s discovery of America.
The commentary was composed by the celebrated poet who authored the Machbaroth. In his commentary to Proverbs, Immanuel displays strong interest in astronomy and navigation. As an example, see f. 61v. (commentary to Proverbs 25:3) and f. 80r. (commentary to Proverbs 30:19). In the latter passage, Immanuel explains the words of the Amorite Rabbi Joshua ben Levi to Rabban Gamliel in Tractate Horayoth (f.10a):”There is a star that rises once in seventy years which confounds navigators.” Immanuel explicates this Talmudic passage in an astronomical vein - with reference to the North and South Stars. Within five years, this data would be revolutionized by Columbus’s discovery of America.

catalog
  Previous item
Next item