MENASSEH BEN ISRAEL

AUCTION 23 | Tuesday, March 30th, 2004 at 1:00
Hebrew Printed Books & Manuscripts from The Rare Book Room of the Jews College Library, London The Third Portion

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Lot 178

MENASSEH BEN ISRAEL

Mikveh Yisrael. Title within typographical border. ff. 66, [Vinograd, Amsterdam 660; Fuks, Amsterdam 527; Silva Rosa 57-d]. Amsterdam, Asher Anshel & Partners, 1698. * BENJAMIN OF TUDELA. Masa’oth shel Rabi Benyamin [travel]. ff. 27. [Vinograd, Amsterdam 659; Fuks, Amsterdam 553]. Amsterdam, Caspar Steen, 1698 Stained in places, with owner’s signature of Shlomo Dubna, the bibliophile, grammarian and editor of Mendelson’s commentary on parts of the Pentateuch. Title page of first work torn not affecting text. Contemporary vellum-backed boards. 16mo

Amsterdam: v.p. 1698

Est: $1,000 - $1,500
PRICE REALIZED $1,800
FIRST HEBREW EDITION of Mikveh Yisrael, Menasseh ben Israel’s treatise on the Lost Ten Tribes and the related revelations of Antonio Montesinos (Aaron Levi). An important work that laid the groundwork toward the re-Admission of the Jews to England in 1656. While travelling in South America, Montesinos had met a race of Brazilian tribesmen who recited the Shema, practiced Jewish ritual and claimed to be the lost tribe of Reuben. Capitalizing on the the Puritan belief that the discovery of these exotic people was a confirmation of the prophecy that the Millennium would come when the Jews dispersed to all the ends of the earth, Menasseh ben Israel included Antonio Montesinos revelations in his land-mark treatise addressed to the English Parliament in 1650. Montesinos’ affidavit to Menasseh ben Israel was similarly taken as conclusive by Thomas Thorowgood in his work, Jewes in America . See J.H. Coppenhagen no. 640 and L. M. Friedman, Jewish Pioneers and Patriots (1942) pp. 156-7