Tzemach Tzadik

AUCTION 16 | Tuesday, June 25th, 2002 at 1:00
Important Hebrew Printed Books and Manuscripts From the Library of the London Beth Din

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Lot 189
(MODENA, JUDAH ARYEH (LEONE) DA)

Tzemach Tzadik

FIRST EDITION. Title within decorative typographical border. Numerous woodcut text illustrations ff. 40. Touch dampstained. Later auburn morocco backed boards, gently rubbed at edges. 12mo Vinograd, Venice 910

Venice: Daniel Zanetti 1600

Est: $10,000 - $15,000
PRICE REALIZED $27,000
A RARE HEBREW ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF FABLES. One of a MERE handful of Hebrew books WITH ILLUSTRATIONS printed in the first century-and-a-half of Hebrew printing. An attractive copy. Most INFREQUENT to APPEAR AT auction. Leone da Modena was an enigmatic figure whose ethical approach belied his occasional lapses into gambling and other pleasurable pursuits. Although the Tzemach Tzadik is based upon the Italian ethical work "Fior di Virtu," Modena broadened and molded it into a distinctive, first-class Jewish ethical treatise. He quotes liberally from the Bible, Talmud and later sources, which often serves to bolster the thoughts of Diogenes, Aristotle and other secular scholars presented here. The illustrations in this work deserve particular study. Each image illuminates the particular concept discussed in the text adjacent. Using the two examples illustrated above: The author discusses the nature of foolishness ("Kesiluth") by depicting a bull whose rage resulted in its’ horns to be imbedded into a tree and thus easy prey for the hunter alongside. The section on faintheartedness or cowardice ("Morech") shows two "scared rabbits" fleeing from a wind-blown leaf. Although published anonymously, Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. (col. 1354, no.34) detected the work was Modena’s, noting the initials letters beginning chapter 1 (p.4) form the acrostic Yehuda Aryeh Me’Modena. Steinschneider designates the work "opusculum inter omnia rarissimum."