Seder Tefiloth mikol HaShanah KeMinhag Kehiloth Ashkenazim [Order of Prayers for the Entire Year]. According to the rite of German-speaking lands.

Auction 94 | Thursday, June 17th, 2021 at 11:00am
Rare & Excellent Hebrew Printed Books: From the Library of Arthur A. Marx

Back to Catalogue Download Catalogue

Lot 261
(LITURGY).

Seder Tefiloth mikol HaShanah KeMinhag Kehiloth Ashkenazim [Order of Prayers for the Entire Year]. According to the rite of German-speaking lands.

<<A nearly immaculate copy, with remarkably wide margins.>> ff. 352 [1-448]. Some marginal dampstaining, otherwise in extraordinarily fine condition. Owner’s inscriptions on front free endpaper and f. 352v. Later limp vellum, partial yapp edges, edge of lower cover with minimal loss, remnants of leather ties. (Incorrect) title in manuscript on spine. 16mo. Vinograd, Basle 138.

Basle: Ambrosius Froben [and Israel Zifroni] 1579

Est: $50,000 - $60,000
PRICE REALIZED $50,000
<<The first Hebrew prayer-book printed in Switzerland.>> It is exceedingly rare to find a prayer-book in this state. The pristine nature of this copy may very likely be attributable to its having remained undisturbed for centuries in the library of Perseigne Abbey, a Cistercian Monastery near Neuchâtel, a mere fifty miles from where it came off the press in Basle. The monks were clearly unaware of the small volume’s true identity, as they mislabeled the binding to read “Biblia Hebraica.” The Siddur was later acquired by the renowned Hebrew scholar Paul Humbert (1885-1972), professor and librarian at the University of Neuchâtel. Prijs records only two copies of this Siddur, located in the British Library and at the Bodleian Library, Oxford. Ambrosius Froben belonged to the third generation of his family’s Hebrew printing operation in Basle. Concurrent to his printing of the present work, he was also in the midst of preparing the Basle Talmud (1578-80), which was to be heavily censored by Church operatives. <<An impeccable copy of a highly scarce volume.>>