Tikun Keri’ath Shema. Liturgy/Anonymous

AUCTION 21 | Thursday, December 04th, 2003 at 1:00
Kestenbaum & Company Holds Inaugural Auction of Hebrew Printed Books & Manuscripts at Their New Galleries

Back to Catalogue

Lot 126
(KABBALAH)

Tikun Keri’ath Shema. Liturgy/Anonymous

Prima facie first edition. TItle within unusually elaborate decorative frame with cherubs atop. Letters of key words Shema and Ehad (2b, 3a) ornately illuminated. ff.12. Generally excellent condition. Slight discoloration. Loose in contemporary wrappers. Sm. 4to Vinograd, Prague 477; St. Cat. Bodl., 3085

(Prague): (Judah ben Jacob Back) 1668

Est: $2,000 - $3,000
PRICE REALIZED $1,700
The Lurianic kavanoth (intentions) before retiring for the night. By the early seventeenth century, the kabbalah of ARI (R. Isaac Luria) had penetrated both eastern and western Europe. In Venice 1620, a Sepher Kavanoth was published, based on fragments of both Rabbi Hayim Vital and Rabbi Moshe Yonah. And in the 1640-50s, Rabbi Jacob Zemah composed three Siddurei Kavanoth, at least two of them condensed versions or kitsurei kavanoth. The kavanoth contained in our manual tally with the material in the authoritative Peri Ets Chayim and Sha’ar ha-Kavanoth (both of which were still in manuscript at the time of publication). The tikun keri’ath shema, a small manual of prayers before retiring, complete with Lurianic intentions, became a popular genre. To this day, the Braslav chasidim keep these petite prayerbooks in print (now embellished with tidbits of Braslav philosophy). Our specimen differs from the standard tikun in use today insofar as it provides at the end various incantations: the three angels Sanoi, Sansanoi, and Samangelif (which some hang over a baby’s crib for protection against Lilith)(11b), and a lachash or incantation from Zohar to prevent nocturnal pollution (12b).