De Arcanis Catholicae Veritatis

AUCTION 57 | Thursday, January 31st, 2013 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts Autograph Letters, Graphic & Ceremonial Art

Back to Catalogue Download Catalogue

Lot 84
GALATINUS, PETRUS COLUMNA.

De Arcanis Catholicae Veritatis

<<FIRST EDITION>> . <<A wide-margined copy.>> Latin interspersed with Hebrew, Greek, and Ethiopic. The title page and twelve additional pages contain frames from Decachordum Christianum (1507). Numerous initial letters historiated. Scattered Latin marginalia. The Signet Library copy. ff. 311, (1). Title lightly worn with previous owners’ inscription, small hole on f. 227. Later half-calf, rubbed. Folio. Adams C-2418; Heller, Sixteenth Century Hebrew Book, I, pp. 116-117 (incl. facs. of title).

Ortona: Gershom Soncino 1518

Est: $5,000 - $6,000
Pietro Columna Galatinus, an Italian theologian, Hebraist and Kabbalist, was a supporter of Johannes Reuchlin in his battles against Johannes Pfefferkorn, an apostate Jew who agitated for the confiscation of the Talmud and other Jewish books in the beginning of the 16th-century. De Arcanis, Galatinus’s most important work, was an attempt to use Jewish sources, including the Zohar, to prove the veracity of Catholicism. While it demonstrated the utility of Jewish sources for Christian needs and thus vindicated Reuchlin’s position, it nevertheless also attacked Judaism. The potential ramifications of the Reuchlin-Pfefferkorn controversy, and Galatinus’s stated desire in De Arcanis to see the Talmud printed (Bomberg had not as yet begun to publish his pioneering edition), may have been what caused its Jewish printer Gershom Socinco to overlook the book’s anti-Jewish content when agreeing to produce it. De Arcanis is one of just four books that Gershom Soncino printed during his short sojourn in Ortona. The Latin text of De Arcanis contains many Hebrew quotes. Indeed it was the first book printed in Ortona with Hebrew type - as well as Ethiopic and Greek types. << A SOURCE BOOK FOR CHRISTIAN HEBRAISTS AND KABBALISTS THROUGHOUT THE 16TH-CENTURY.>>