Ben HaMelech VehaNazir [“The Prince and the Hermit”]

AUCTION 46 | Thursday, September 10th, 2009 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Hebrew Printed Books, Manuscripts, & Graphic Art

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Lot 151
IBN CHASDAI, ABRAHAM BEN SAMUEL

Ben HaMelech VehaNazir [“The Prince and the Hermit”]

Second Edition. Title within a woodcut architectural border. Opening letter of each chapter within a decorative woodcut vignette. Printer’s device on final leaf (Yaari, Hebrew Printers' Marks 19). Wide-margins. ff. 92. Variously stained, small area of margin on title frayed, previous owners' marks. Modern blind-tooled calf. 12mo Vinograd, Mantua 38; Mehlman 1272; not in Adams

Mantua: Joseph ben Jacob of Padua 1557

Est: $800 - $1,200
PRICE REALIZED $850
Based on a popular early tale entitled “Barlaam and Josaphat” (in the Latin version), Ben HaMelech VehaNazir originated in India and was translated into many languages. The evolution of the tale from Hindi origins to the Hebrew form given to it by ibn Chasdai via a now lost Arabic version, is literary complex and the subject of much scholarly speculation. “The Hebrew version is attractively written and the prose narrative is interspersed with versified aphorisms” (EJ Vol. IV, col. 519). Because of the ethical and moral lessons included in the work, many of the later Ba’alei Mussar were fond of citing from it, an example being the late Mashgiach of the Mirrer Yeshiva in Brooklyn, R. Tzvi Feldman.