Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
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Displaying 61 - 72 of 131
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $27,000
Sold for: $60,000
Including buyer's premium
Five Books of the Torah, with Targumim and commentaries, and with the Or HaChaim commentary by R. Chaim ibn Attar. Slavita: R. Shmuel Avraham Shapira, son of the Rabbi of Slavita, [1824-1825]. Complete five-volume set.
Some words on title page in red.
The first volume contains approbations by Rebbe Avraham Yehoshua Heshel of Apta, R. Mordechai Margaliot of Brody, R. Yitzchak Eizik of Berditchev, R. Chaim HaKohen of Pinsk and R. Efraim Wohl of Sudylkiv. All approbations were granted to R. Moshe Shapira, father of the printer.
Title page of Bereshit dated 1825; title pages of other parts dated 1824.
The Or HaChaim commentary is printed alongside the commentary of Rashi and the Aramaic Targumim: Onkelos, Yonatan ben Uziel and Targum Yerushalmi. Includes Five Megillot.
Chassidic leaders profusely extol the holiness of the Or HaChaim. The Baal Shem Tov said that every night the Or HaChaim hears Torah directly from G-d and he "was among those who have plunged the depths of the Merkavah and the revelation of souls, and has risen to the level of true divine inspiration". He said further that when his own soul ascends each night, he sees that of all the tzaddikim, only R. Chaim ibn Attar precedes him in the ascent, and all his efforts to overtake him were unsuccessful. Reputedly, the reason the Baal Shem Tov attempted to immigrate to Eretz Israel was in order to meet R. Chaim ibn Attar, who was "a spark of Mashiach", to thereby bring about the redemption.
Five volumes. Bereshit: 82, 89-196 leaves. Shemot: 182; 23, [1] leaves. Vayikra: 144 leaves. Bamidbar: 162 leaves. Devarim: 132; 26 leaves. 25-26.5 cm. Bluish paper. Varying condition of volumes, fair to fair-good. Stains, including dampstains (dark stains to title page of Shemot and other places; wax stains in several places). Wear. Tears and open tears to some title pages and other places, affecting text, partially repaired with paper. Large open tear to margins of last leaf of first volume, not affecting text. Worming, affecting text (worming to inner margins in several places). Inscriptions and stamps. Early bindings, with wear and defects, worming in many places and open tears to spines (volume II has only back binding, detached).
Printing the Or HaChaim in Slavita at the Directive of R. Pinchas of Korets, as a Segulah for Protection
The story goes that "R. Pinchas of Korets… instructed his sons [R. Moshe Shapira Rabbi of Slavita, and his brother R. Yechezkel Shapira, who was also involved in the establishment of the Slavita printing press] to print the Or HaChaim every year… that they might thereby be saved from calamity and misfortune, and they fulfilled his directive. But after the books of the Or HaChaim became so prevalent that they could no longer find buyers for them, they stopped printing them, and that year the infamous slander and misfortune occurred" (Migdal Oz, p. 268). (Today, only seven editions of the Slavita Or HaChaim Chumash are bibliographically known, printed between 1791-1832).
The Slavita Printing Press, Founded by R. Moshe Shapira, Rabbi of Slavita
The Jewish printing press in Slavita (present-day Slavuta, Khmelnytskyi Province, Western Ukraine) operated between 1790 and 1836. The founder of the printing press was the Rabbi of the city, R. Moshe Shapira (1762-1840), son of the renowned R. Pinchas of Korets. Already in his youth, he showed exceptional talent in scribal writing, tracing, carving and etching. His illustrious father encouraged him to develop his talent to master these skills. In the early 1790s, R. Moshe was appointed Rabbi of Slavita, yet he concurrently established his famous printing press, not wishing to utilize Torah as a livelihood. The typeface used in the printing press was fashioned by R. Moshe. Apart from the printing press, he also established workshops for production of the paper and type. A large portion of Slavita's Jews earned their livelihood honorably in one of the many divisions of the printing firm. Slavita books were reputed in the Jewish world for their beauty, splendor and accuracy; as well as for the owner of the press, R. Moshe, who was revered by the great Chassidic leaders. R. Moshe of Slavita was close to the Baal HaTanya, R. Shneur Zalman of Liadi, who commended him: "Exceptional in Torah, fear of G-d is his treasure, of holy descent". Sipurim Nora'im by R. Yaakov Keidner (Lviv, 1875) relates the wondrous account of how the Baal HaTanya assisted R. Moshe in attaining a government license for his printing press.
A special advantage of this printing press was that it only produced sacred books, and its type was never desecrated by secular books. Most of the workers were G-d-fearing Jews. According to a famous Chassidic tradition, the equipment and type were immersed in a mikveh before use (regarding the printing press in Slavita, see [in Hebrew]: Haim Dov Friedberg, History of Printing in Poland, Tel Aviv, 1950, p. 104; Ch. Lieberman, Ohel Rachel, I, New York, 1980, pp. 199-202; Sh.D.B. Levine, History of Chabad in Tsarist Russia, Brooklyn, 2010, p. 61). Chassidic masters especially prized siddurim and books printed in holiness in the Slavita press for prayer and study, especially the Tikunei HaZohar edition, which was meant for those with the custom to study the present book of Tikunim between Rosh Chodesh Elul and Yom Kippur.
Category
Slavita and Zhitomir Presses, and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $1,800
Sold for: $4,750
Including buyer's premium
Mishnah – Seder Zeraim, with commentaries of R. Ovadiah of Bartenura and the Tosafot Yom Tov, with Tosafot Chadashim, with selected novellae by Rebbe Levi Yitzchak of Berditchev. Slavita: R. Moshe Shapira, [1830]. On title page: 1828.
Some words on title page printed in red.
Ownership inscriptions on title page and endpapers.
Lengthy inscription continuing from leaves 14-22.
[4], 132 leaves. 26.5 cm. Fair condition. Stains, including light traces of former dampness, and wax stains. Much wear. Marginal tears and open tears to some leaves (not affecting text). Worming to several leaves, affecting text. Inscriptions and signatures. Original leather binding, with wear and defects.
Seder Zeraim of this Mishnah edition is recorded in the Bibliography of the Hebrew Book, but not in the NLI catalog.
The Slavita Printing Press, Founded by R. Moshe Shapira, Rabbi of Slavita
The Jewish printing press in Slavita (present-day Slavuta, Khmelnytskyi Province, Western Ukraine) operated between 1790 and 1836. The founder of the printing press was the Rabbi of the city, R. Moshe Shapira (1762-1840), son of the renowned R. Pinchas of Korets. Already in his youth, he showed exceptional talent in scribal writing, tracing, carving and etching. His illustrious father encouraged him to develop his talent to master these skills. In the early 1790s, R. Moshe was appointed Rabbi of Slavita, yet he concurrently established his famous printing press, not wishing to utilize Torah as a livelihood. The typeface used in the printing press was fashioned by R. Moshe. Apart from the printing press, he also established workshops for production of the paper and type. A large portion of Slavita's Jews earned their livelihood honorably in one of the many divisions of the printing firm. Slavita books were reputed in the Jewish world for their beauty, splendor and accuracy; as well as for the owner of the press, R. Moshe, who was revered by the great Chassidic leaders. R. Moshe of Slavita was close to the Baal HaTanya, R. Shneur Zalman of Liadi, who commended him: "Exceptional in Torah, fear of G-d is his treasure, of holy descent". Sipurim Nora'im by R. Yaakov Keidner (Lviv, 1875) relates the wondrous account of how the Baal HaTanya assisted R. Moshe in attaining a government license for his printing press.
A special advantage of this printing press was that it only produced sacred books, and its type was never desecrated by secular books. Most of the workers were G-d-fearing Jews. According to a famous Chassidic tradition, the equipment and type were immersed in a mikveh before use (regarding the printing press in Slavita, see [in Hebrew]: Haim Dov Friedberg, History of Printing in Poland, Tel Aviv, 1950, p. 104; Ch. Lieberman, Ohel Rachel, I, New York, 1980, pp. 199-202; Sh.D.B. Levine, History of Chabad in Tsarist Russia, Brooklyn, 2010, p. 61). Chassidic masters especially prized siddurim and books printed in holiness in the Slavita press for prayer and study, especially the Tikunei HaZohar edition, which was meant for those with the custom to study the present book of Tikunim between Rosh Chodesh Elul and Yom Kippur.
Category
Slavita and Zhitomir Presses, and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $3,000
Sold for: $3,750
Including buyer's premium
Zohar, Bereshit-Devarim. Zhitomir: R. Chanina Lipa and R. Yehoshua Heshel Shapira, grandsons of the Rabbi of Slavita, 1863. Complete three-volume set.
Handwritten inscriptions. In second volume (on leaf after title page), signature of kabbalist R. Aharon Slotky.
Three volumes. Volume I (Bereshit): [4], 251, 13, 13-16 leaves. Volume II (Shemot): [1], 1, 3-280 leaves. Volume III (Vayikra-Devarim): 115; [1], 117-309, 11 leaves. 19.5-20 cm. Overall good-fair condition. Stains, including dampstains and dark stains. Marginal tears and open tears to several leaves (including open tear to title page of volume II, not affecting text, repaired with paper). Worming, slightly affecting text (including one title page), partially repaired with paper. Stamp on third volume, and handwritten inscriptions. New bindings.
Category
Slavita and Zhitomir Presses, and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $300
Sold for: $1,000
Including buyer's premium
Torat Kohanim, Shulchan Aruch Choshen Mishpat, Parts I-II, with commentators. Zhitomir: R. Chanina Lipa and R. Yehoshua Heshel Shapiro, grandsons of the Rabbi of Slavita, 1856. Two volumes.
Two title pages for each part. Some words on title pages printed in red ink.
In first volume: tens of handwritten glosses, lengthy and short.
In second volume: ownership stamp of R. "Yehudah Leib Chaikin – dayan and posek in Babruysk".
R. Yehudah Leib Chaikin ("Yudel the dayan") was the dayan of the Chabad community of Babruysk in the 1910s-1920s. Posek in the Beit Din of Rebbe Shemaryahu Noach Schneersohn, Rabbi of Babruysk (grandson of the Tzemach Tzedek of Lubavitch).
Two volumes. Part I: 556; 25 pages. Part II: 528 pages. 37.5-38 cm. Overall fair-good condition. Many stains, including dampstains (especially to first volume). Wear. Tears, including many marginal open tears to title page and other leaves of first volume (bordering text). Worming, affecting text (mainly to second volume). Old bindings, with defects.
Part II, and index leaves at end of Part I, not recorded in NLI library.
Category
Slavita and Zhitomir Presses, and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $250
Sold for: $1,625
Including buyer's premium
Collection of books printed in Russia-Poland (present-day Ukraine) between 1817 and 1906 – Berditchev, Mohyliv, Zhitomir, Ostroh and more.
See Hebrew description for a detailed list of books.
16 volumes. Varying size and condition. Signatures, stamps and ownership inscriptions. New bindings. The books have not been thoroughly examined, and are being sold as is.
Category
Slavita and Zhitomir Presses, and Books Printed in Russia-Poland
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $500
Sold for: $6,875
Including buyer's premium
Large assorted collection of books, including books with teachings of rebbes of Ujhel and Sighet and other books. Distinguished copies, with dedications, signatures and stamps of rabbis and various figures, including rabbis from the Ujhel and Sighet dynasties and their families – Rebbe Yekutiel Yehudah Teitelbaum of Sighet, R. Chananiah Yom Tov Lipa Deutsch Rabbi of Helmec, R. Naftali Teitelbaum Rabbi of Nyírbátor, Rebbe Yoel Mayer-Teitelbaum of Királyháza and others.
See Hebrew description for a detailed list of books.
14 books in 15 volumes. Varying size and condition. New bindings. The books have not been thoroughly examined, and are being sold as is.
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Sighet and Satmar
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $1,200
Sold for: $4,000
Including buyer's premium
Toldot Adam VeChavah and Sefer Meisharim, by Rabbeinu Yerucham. Kopust: Avraham son of Yaakov Segal and Yitzchak son of Shmuel, 1808.
Three parts in one volume. Divisional title page for third part. Approbations of R. Levi Yitzchak of Berditchev (end of approbation affected by open tear), R. Chaim of Volozhin and others.
R. Yerucham son of R. Meshulam of Provence was a 14th century Torah scholar and disciple of the Rosh who passed through southern France on his way to Spain. His halachic works are Sefer Meisharim and Sefer Adam VeChavah, and he is cited frequently by the Beit Yosef.
Distinguished copy, from the library of Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar.
On the title page appears the stamp: "Yoel Teitelbaum, Rabbi of Irshava and the region". We surmise that these stamps were made and stamped on the books at a later date than his rabbinic tenure in Irshava – see Kedem, Auction 99, 5 November 2024, Lot 185. The title page contains catalog inscriptions (deleted) made during the arrangement of the Satmar Rebbe's library in his home in the United States.
On pages of book and inner title page of Part III, early stamp: "Yaakov son of R. M. Y. S." [possibly one of the dayanim in the Beit Din of R. Eliyahu Guttmacher Rabbi of Grodziec, in 1851 – see Responsa of R. Eliyahu Guttmacher, Even HaEzer, 18, p. 63].
On title page, handwritten signature (dating to ca. 1840s): "Yehoshua Falk son of R. Tzvi Hirsch Auerbach" – R. Yehoshua Falk Auerbach, Rabbi of Brisk (Brześć Kujawski) and Polotsk, son of R. Tzvi Hirsch Auerbach, Rabbi of Konin (d. 1883).
Signature on back endpaper. Short handwritten glosses on p. 103b (of first sequence).
Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar (1887-1979), author of Divrei Yoel, a leader of his generation, president of the Edah HaCharedit in Jerusalem and leader of American Orthodox Jewry, one of the founding pillars of Chassidic Jewry after the Holocaust. Born in Sighet, he was the son of Rebbe Chananiah Yom Tov Lipa, the Kedushat Yom Tov, and grandson of Rebbe Yekutiel Yehudah, the Yitav Lev, who both served as rabbis of Sighet (Sighetu Marmației) and were leaders of Chassidic Jewry in the Maramureș region. He was renowned from his youth for his acumen and intelligence, as well as for his holiness and outstanding purity. After his marriage to the daughter of Rebbe Avraham Chaim Horowitz of Polaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidut to an elite group of disciples and followers. He later served as Rabbi of Irshava (1911-1915, 1922-1926), Karoly (Carei; from 1926) and Satmar (Satu Mare; from 1934), managing in each of these places a large yeshiva and Chassidic court. He stood at the helm of faithful, uncompromising Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureș region. During the Holocaust, he was rescued through the famous Kastner Train, and after a journey through Bergen-Belsen, Switzerland and Eretz Israel, he reached the United States, where he established one of the largest Chassidic communities in the world.
[1], 10, 6, 17-185, [1]; 5, 5-82 leaves. 33.5 cm. Varying condition of leaves, fair to good-fair. Stains. Worming, affecting text, partially repaired with paper filling. Tears and open tears, affecting text, including open tear to title page, affecting text on verso. Margins of title page and other leaves repaired with paper. Some leaves may have been supplied from another copy. Stamps. New elegant leather bindings.
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Sighet and Satmar
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $3,500
Including buyer's premium
Rosh Amanah, principles of faith, by Don Yitzchak Abarbanel. Altona: Moshe son of Mendel Bonn Segal, [1770].
On title page and verso of last leaf, stamps: "Yoel Teitelbaum, Rabbi of Irshava and the region". We surmise that these stamps were made and stamped on the books at a later date than his rabbinic tenure in Irshava – see Kedem, Auction 99, 5 November 2024, Lot 185.
Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar (1887-1979), author of Divrei Yoel, a leader of his generation, president of the Edah HaCharedit in Jerusalem and leader of American Orthodox Jewry, one of the founding pillars of Chassidic Jewry after the Holocaust. Born in Sighet, he was the son of Rebbe Chananiah Yom Tov Lipa, the Kedushat Yom Tov, and grandson of Rebbe Yekutiel Yehudah, the Yitav Lev, who both served as rabbis of Sighet (Sighetu Marmației) and were leaders of Chassidic Jewry in the Maramureș region. He was renowned from his youth for his acumen and intelligence, as well as for his holiness and outstanding purity. After his marriage to the daughter of Rebbe Avraham Chaim Horowitz of Polaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidut to an elite group of disciples and followers. He later served as Rabbi of Irshava (1911-1915, 1922-1926), Karoly (Carei; from 1926) and Satmar (Satu Mare; from 1934), managing in each of these places a large yeshiva and Chassidic court. He stood at the helm of faithful, uncompromising Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureș region. During the Holocaust, he was rescued through the famous Kastner Train, and after a journey through Bergen-Belsen, Switzerland and Eretz Israel, he reached the United States, where he established one of the largest Chassidic communities in the world.
At top of title page, old ownership inscription, partially deleted; at bottom of title page, signature: "Eliezer son of R. Shlomo Zalkind" [mentioned in a list of officials of Vilna in the 18th century – see Fuenn, Kiryah Ne'emanah, p. 113].
[3], 1-25, 29-35, [1] leaves. 18.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, including dampstains. Light wear. Marginal tear on title page, repaired with tape. Stamp. New leather binding.
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Sighet and Satmar
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $400
Sold for: $875
Including buyer's premium
Mekor Chaim, year-round homiletics, by the kabbalist R. Shmuel Vital of Damascus, son and disciple of R. Chaim Vital. Livorno: R. Yaakov Nunez-Vaez and R. Refael Meldola, [1792]. First edition.
Copy studied by Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar. A letter from R. Menachem Mendel Greenberg, attendant of the rebbe, is mounted inside the board (of the new binding), testifying that he lent the book "to the Rebbe of Satmar in 1959, and he cherished it greatly and studied it in great depth". The title page bears stamps of the same R. "Mendel Greenberg".
Rebbe Yoel Teitelbaum of Satmar (1887-1979), author of Divrei Yoel, a leader of his generation, president of the Edah HaCharedit in Jerusalem and leader of American Orthodox Jewry, one of the founding pillars of Chassidic Jewry after the Holocaust. Born in Sighet, he was the son of Rebbe Chananiah Yom Tov Lipa, the Kedushat Yom Tov, and grandson of Rebbe Yekutiel Yehudah, the Yitav Lev, who both served as rabbis of Sighet (Sighetu Marmației) and were leaders of Chassidic Jewry in the Maramureș region. He was renowned from his youth for his acumen and intelligence, as well as for his holiness and outstanding purity. After his marriage to the daughter of Rebbe Avraham Chaim Horowitz of Polaniec, he settled in Satmar and taught Torah and Chassidut to an elite group of disciples and followers. He later served as Rabbi of Irshava (1911-1915, 1922-1926), Karoly (Carei; from 1926) and Satmar (Satu Mare; from 1934), managing in each of these places a large yeshiva and Chassidic court. He stood at the helm of faithful, uncompromising Orthodox Jewry in the Maramureș region. During the Holocaust, he was rescued through the famous Kastner Train, and after a journey through Bergen-Belsen, Switzerland and Eretz Israel, he reached the United States, where he established one of the largest Chassidic communities in the world.
[2], 86 leaves. 28 cm. Fair condition. Many dark stains. Wear and tears, affecting text. Many paper repairs. Stamp. New binding.
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Sighet and Satmar
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $6,000
Including buyer's premium
Small-format volume with four books by R. Chaim Yosef David Azulai – the Chida: Moreh BaEtzba, Tziporen Shamir, Kesher Gudal and Kaf Achat. Livorno: Eliezer Saadon, [1802].
Divisional title page for each book. At top of first title page, handwritten dedication by the author – the Chida – to the emissary R. Yehudah Aharon Skali: "A small gift to the comprehensive scholar R. Yehudah Aharon HaKohen, may G-d grant him success and favor and bring him home safely. The author".
On verso of title page, self-dedication of R. Yehudah Aharon HaKohen Skali, recipient of the book: "'One who studies gifts will live', from… R. Chaim Yosef David Azulai, the author, may his light shine for me… Yehudah Aharon HaKohen Skali, 1807", with another cursive signature of his.
On leaf 2, stamp of R. Yehudah Aharon HaKohen Skali.
On front endpaper, inscription in Western script: "This book belongs to… Aharon HaKohen… signed Shlomo Gabison HaLevi" [cursive signature].
R. Yehudah Aharon HaKohen Skali, a rabbi of Jerusalem, grandson of R. Yitzchak HaKohen, author of Batei Kehunah. He set out as an emissary from Jerusalem to Italy, and was unusually one of the signatories permitting playing the organ in the Reform synagogue of Hamburg in 1817, although he is believed to have hinted at being compelled to sign. Avraham Yaari (Shluchei Eretz Yisrael, p. 710) dates his mission to Italy to the year 1817, likely based on the above signature, but the self-dedication appears to indicate that he had already received the book from the Chida in 1807!
He continued his journey from Trieste to Tripoli, North Africa, but was captured by pirates on the way there. After the Jews of Ancona redeemed him, he continued on his journey, and later detailed his tribulations in a letter to R. Moshe Elbaz in Sefrou (see: Yaari, ibid.).
Several inscriptions and pen trials on front endpapers.
131, [1] leaves. 14 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains. Dark inkstains to first leaves. Tears, affecting text on leaves 130-131. Original leather binding (gilt inscriptions of book names on spine, in initials). Tears and defects to binding.
Bookplate of Naphtali Herz van Biema of Amsterdam.
Bookplates of Mozes Heiman Gans.
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Glosses, Signatures and Dedications
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $300
Sold for: $525
Including buyer's premium
Responsa Tashbetz, three parts, by R. Shimon son of Tzemach Duran. With Responsa Chut HaMeshulash by grandsons of the author. Amsterdam: Naftali Hertz Levi, [1738-1739]. First edition, with four title pages. First title page illustrated with figures of Moses, Aaron, David and Solomon.
Copy of R. Yedidiah Tiah Weil, Rabbi of Karlsruhe, son of the Korban Netanel. Handwritten ownership inscription on title page (incorporated into printed title): "I purchased this [book], Yedidiah called Tiah Weil".
R. Yedidiah Tiah Weil (1721-1805), a leading Torah scholar of his generation, and close disciple of R. Yehonatan Eibeshitz. From 1770 he served as Rabbi of Karlsruhe and Baden, succeeding his father R. Netanel Weil, author of Korban Netanel. Corresponded with the Noda BiYehudah and the Haflaah. Only his Marbeh Lesaper commentary on the Haggadah was printed in his lifetime, anonymously, but dozens of other works are being printed from manuscript in recent years.
Short glosses on several leaves.
[11], 91; 69, [1]; 68, [1]; [1], 36, [2], 39-83, 85-101, [1] leaves. 31 cm. Good-fair condition, last leaves in fair condition. Stains, including dampstains and traces of former dampness (many traces to last leaves). Worming to margins of last leaves, slightly affecting text. Small tears and open tears, including marginal open tears to last leaves, repaired with paper. Remains of paper repairs on title page, over part of title frame. Early leather binding. Wear and defects to binding (tears to spine).
This edition has several known variants, which can be distinguished by the number of title pages. Some copies are known to have seven to eight title pages (see: Kedem, Auction 59, 20 February 2018, Lot 88), while others, including the present copy, have only four title pages (see Bibliography of the Hebrew Book, and see: Dan and Gita Yardeni, Seder Hadpasato LaRishonah Shel Sefer HaTashbetz LeRabbi Shimon Bar Tzemach Duran BiDefus Naftali Hertz Levi BeAmsterdam, Alei Sefer, X, 1982, pp. 119-132).
The present copy contains four title pages, an illustrated title page for Part I (dated 1741), and one for each of the three sections of Part IV.
Provenance: Collection of Yosef Weinman (1906-1974).
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Glosses, Signatures and Dedications
Catalogue Value
Auction 103 Part 2 Early Printed Books | Sabbateanism and Crypto-Jews of Spain and Portugal | Chassidut and Kabbalah | Books Printed in Slavita and Jerusalem | Letters and Manuscripts
Sep 2, 2025
Opening: $300
Sold for: $1,000
Including buyer's premium
Levush HaButz VeArgaman, on Tur Even HaEzer, and Levush Ir Shushan, on Tur Choshen Mishpat, by R. Mordechai Yoffe. Prague: Moshe son of R. Yosef Betzalel Katz, 1609. Second edition, printed in the author's lifetime, with his additions. Two parts in one volume. Title page of Levush Ir Shushan illustrated with figures. Lacking title page of Levush HaButz VeArgaman.
On leaf 2 of Levush HaButz VeArgaman, in Ashkenazic script: "This is an inheritance from[---] R. Azriel". Further inscriptions on this leaf, in Sephardic script: "Avraham Ezovi" [apparently R. Avraham Ezovi, a rabbi of Salonika]; "Nissim Yehoshu[a] Eliezer son of R. Chaim Yehudah Avraham".
Glosses in early Ashkenazic script, some with short glosses, others with copyings from the Tur, Rama and other halachic authorities.
Levush HaButz VeArgaman: 2-116 leaves. Lacking title page. Levush Ir Shushan: 201, 204-209 leaves. Lacking last leaf. 30.5 cm. Some leaves particularly dark. Fair to fair-poor condition. Many stains, including heavy dampstains and traces of former dampness, with mold stains. Wear (much wear to some leaves). Tears and open tears, affecting text, partially repaired with paper. Worming, affecting text. New binding.
Category
Books of Important Ownership – Glosses, Signatures and Dedications
Catalogue Value
