Lev, Joseph ben David Ibn

AUCTION 41 | Thursday, September 18th, 2008 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts, & Graphic Art

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Lot 180

Lev, Joseph ben David Ibn

Shailoth Uteshuvoth MeHaR”I ibn Lev [responsa]. Volume I. FIRST EDITION. ff. (163); 4 (of 11) index-leaves. Mispaginated (as in all copies), staining and marginal worming, scattered marginalia. [Vinograd, Salonika 55; Mehlman 746; Ya’ari, Const. 162; not in Adams]. Salonika, Joseph ben Isaac Ya’avetz, 1558. * Volume II. FIRST EDITION (printed without a title page). ff. 2-172 (i.e. 171), complete text (lacking blank leaf 164). Wide margined copy. Marginal hole on first leaf, marginal staining. [Vinograd, Const. 220; Mehlman 747; Yaari Const. 173]. Constantinople, S. Ya’avetz, 1561-5. * Volume III. FIRST EDITION. ff. 120,133-175 (i.e. 174), (1), 187-190, (5). Some staining. [Vinograd, Const. 243; Mehlman 748; Ya’ari, Const. 182]. Constantinople, Solomon & Jacob Ya’avetz, 1573 Ex-library. Various bindings,various conditions. Sm. folio

Est: $5,000 - $7,000
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There is some confusion among bibliographers concerning the place and date of publication of Part I of this collection of responsa. Conventional wisdom places its printing to Constantinople in 1561, where the remaining parts of this multi-volumed responsa were published. However, Yudlov in his catalogue of the Mehlman Collection suggests that the first part was in fact published in Salonika in 1558. As proof for this assertion, he points out in Genuzoth Sepharim, p.106, no. 162 that the author himself makes reference to this in the second part of this collection. On this issue, see also the discussion by Hacker in Areshet vol. V, p. 485, no. 162. The author dedicated this work to the illustrious Dona Gracia Nasi, whose printing-press in her Palace at Belvedere outside Constantinople, kept Hebrew literary endeavors alive in the Ottoman Empire of the time. Indeed the printer of the present work states here his intention to undertake the printing of a new edition of the Talmud following the recent calamitous destruction of the Talmud in Italy The author was one of the greatest scholars of his generation. The Chid"a in his Shem HaGedolim states that three scholars of that generation (all coincidentally named Yoseph) were capable of penning a work of the magnitude of the Beith Yoseph: R. Yoseph Karo, R. Yoseph ibn Lev and R. Yoseph Taitatzak R. Chaim Yonah Teomim was a rekowned Gaon and author of Kuntres R. Chaim Yonah on Choshen Mishpat. He was the son in law of R. David Oppenheim of Prague. R. Akiva Eger was one of his disciples