KIMCHI, DAVID (RaDa’K). Sepher Michlol [grammar]

AUCTION 15 | Tuesday, March 12th, 2002 at 1:00
Fine Hebrew Books, Manuscripts and Works of Art The Property of Various Owners

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Lot 452
(EMDEN, JACOB)

KIMCHI, DAVID (RaDa’K). Sepher Michlol [grammar]

Edited by Elijah Ashkenazi (Bachur). Title within architectural arch. THE JACOB EMDEN COPY, WITH over two hundred important Autograph marginal comments and textual corrections ff. 69. Foxed and stained in places, marginal repairs to first few leaves and upper margins throughout unaffecting text. Modern calf. Folio

Venice: Cornelio Adelkind for Daniel Bomberg 1545

Est: $60,000 - $70,000
THE JACOB EMDEN COPY. WITH HIS EXTENSIVE AUTOGRAPHED MARGINAL NOTES. AN IMPORTANT GRAMMATICAL TEXT WITH AUTOGRAPH CORRECTIONS BY A MASTER OF THE SUBJECT MATTER Alongside his outstanding accomplishments as an Halachist and Aggadist, Jacob Emden was a supreme philosophical and grammatical scholar. In marginal anotations to this work, Emden vehemently disagrees with the Michlol’s editor's notes and comments, whilst more respectful to the author - although occasionally he dismisses Kimchi's opinion as “nonsense and futile.” In addition to Emden’s pure linguistic and grammatical expertise, many comments display his discerning eye and scientific grasp of the text. He indicates that certain passages are not written in the correct order and surmises that they may have originally been marginal comments in the author's manuscript and subsequently erroneously placed by a printer or copyist, commenting: “they misunderstood the author's intentions and greatly corrupted this subject...[it was] published without proper supervision." (See notes on ff. 11v, 17r, 22v and 31r). Emden also makes comparisoms to other works and Biblical manuscripts by Kimchi. This volume was clearly in the posession of Jacob Emden for many years and he consulted it often, testified by the style of Emden’s hand-writing style as he aged. In the introduction to his prayer-book Amudai Shamayim (Altona, 1745) Emden makes reference to a notation of his in the Sepher Michlol. (See lot 160)