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Archive for March, 2010

Hebrew Manuscripts in the Vatican Library

March 20th, 2010 1 comment

I came across this excellent book. Download the PDF.

Hebrew Manuscripts in the Vatican Library

 

Talmudic and midrashic fragments from the Italian Genizah

March 18th, 2010 No comments

Excellent book about the Italian Geniza fragments. Contains many photos of folios of the manuscripts in the back.

Talmudic and midrashic fragments from the Italian Genizah: reunification of the manuscripts and Catalogue

By Mauro Perani, Enrica Sagradini

 

The Fragments of Hebrew Manuscripts discovered in the binding of books in the Biblioteca del Dottorato of the University of Perugia

March 16th, 2010 1 comment

I came across this fascinating website which talks about various fragments of Hebrew manuscripts that were discovered in book bindings. The site contains some nice images of selected fragments. Read it here.

Leiden Yerushalmi Manuscript is Online

March 2nd, 2010 No comments

The Leiden Yerushalmi manuscript is online and can be viewed here.  Click on the METS icon to view the actual folios.

The description of the manuscript from University of Leiden’s website:

The Jerusalem Talmud: a gem from the Leiden Hebrew collections

The Talmud is the great repository of the Jewish rabbinic tradition. The most prominent collection originated in ‘Babylonia’ (Mesopotamia) in the fourth and fifth centuries CE, but a second, less voluminous collection was compiled in Palestine, the so-called Palestinian or Jerusalem Talmud.

The first edition was printed in Venice in 1523-1524 by Daniel van Bomberghen from Antwerp, more commonly known as Daniel Bomberg, who was active in Venice between 1511 and 1538.

This codex in two volumes, Leiden Or. 4720, is the only surviving manuscript that was used by Bomberg for his edition, and indeed the only complete manuscript of the text to have come down to us at all. Written on parchment and dated in the year 5049 of the Jewish calendar (1289 CE), it was made by the copyist and scholar Jechiel ben Jekutiel ha-Rofe, most probably in Rome.

In the mid-sixteenth century the manuscript was bought from Bomberg by the French ambassador and bibliophile Jean Hurault de Boistailler, who paid twelve gold pieces for his prize. After his death it passed into the hands of the famous humanist scholar Josephus Justus Scaliger, who moved from his native France to Leiden in 1593 and died there in 1609. It now rests among Scaliger’s bequest of Oriental manuscripts and books.

In the early 1970s the manuscript was lovingly restored by sister Lucie Gimbrère, who replaced the old, but not original vellum binding with one of sturdy oak boards. Now, for the first time, this literally unique manuscript is available online to the scholarly community.