Hebrew, Ancient Greek and Ancient Syriac (in Hebrew characters). Chamishah Chumshei Torah [-end] / [Novum Testamentum Graece] / Diyathika Chadata

AUCTION 32 | Thursday, March 23rd, 2006 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Autographed Letters, Manuscripts, Graphics and Ceremonial Art

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Lot 48
(BIBLE

Hebrew, Ancient Greek and Ancient Syriac (in Hebrew characters). Chamishah Chumshei Torah [-end] / [Novum Testamentum Graece] / Diyathika Chadata

Three volumes bound in one: I: Unvocalized Hebrew text, printed in double columns. Title within architectural frame. Ruled in red throughout. Two blanks at front handwritten in Arabic, Coptic, and Syriac. Upper margin slightly charred. pp.389. II: Syriac in unvocalized Hebrew characters, printed in double columns. Issued without a title. pp.121, (3). III: Minute cursive Greek type, printed in double columns. Issued without a title or colophon. pp.208 (last page blank) Marbled endpapers. Blind-tooled crushed morocco, rubbed. 8vo Vinograd, Antwerp 18, 19; Adams B-1233; Darlow & Moule 8951(cf. 5102, 4638); unrecorded by Sorgeloos

Antwerp: Christopher Plantin 1573-74

Est: $1,200 - $1,800
PRICE REALIZED $1,400
These three Bible editions - the Old Testament in Hebrew, with the addition of the New Testament in Greek and Syriac - were printed by Plantin in order to present the whole Bible “in the original tongues.” Both the Hebrew and Syriac Bibles were printed in the same minute Hebrew type, and were edited by Plantin’s son-in-law Francis Rapheleng. “If of dubious utility for converting Jews to Christianity, Syriac in Hebrew characters was obviously a boon for the Biblical scholar who had mastered three Biblical languages and was perhaps contemplating a fourth.” See D.S. Berkowitz, In Remembrance of Creation: Evolution of Art and Scholarship in the Medieval and Renaissance Bible (1968), no.172. For a most thorough bibliographic examination of these three editions, see Mehlman nos.1899, 1883 and 31