Sepher ha-Mispar [Treatise on Algebra]

AUCTION 29 | Monday, June 20th, 2005 at 1:00
Superior Hebrew Printed Books: Singular Selections from Two Distingushed Private Collections with American-Judaica.

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Lot 47
MIZRACHI, ELIJAH

Sepher ha-Mispar [Treatise on Algebra]

FIRST EDITION. Title within historiated border including centaur-archer and hare. Initial letters of text within floriated vignettes ff. 108 (of 110), final 2 leaves supplied in Aschkenazi hand, light stains. Mottled calf. 4to Vinograd, Const. 150; Yaari, Const. 116

Constantinople: Gershom Soncino 1533-1534

Est: $8,000 - $10,000
PRICE REALIZED $10,000
Elijah Mizrachi (c.1450-1526), a native of Constantinople, was a member of the old Romaniot community that preceded the influx of exiles from Spain. In 1498 he became the foremost rabbinical authority not only in Constantinople but effectively throughout the entire Ottoman Empire. He has achieved literary fame due to his Responsa, but perhaps even more so thanks to his supercommentary on Rashi, known simply as “The Mizrachi” (Venice, 1527). It was Mizrachi's third son, Israel, who published both the supercommentary and the present mathematical treatise. Though today few recall Mizrachi's mathematical ability, in its day Sepher HaMispar was highly regarded and even translated into Latin. See EJ, Vol. XII, cols. 182-4