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Avodah Tammah, R. Joshua Raphael ben Israel Benveniste, Jerusalem 1903

עבודה תמה - Liturgy

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Details
  • Lot Number 47376
  • Title (English) Avodah Tammah
  • Title (Hebrew) עבודה תמה
  • Note Liturgy
  • Author R. Joshua Raphael ben Israel Benveniste
  • City Jerusalem
  • Publisher Loewe
  • Publication Date 1903
  • Estimated Price - Low 200
  • Estimated Price - High 500

  • Item # 1365377
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

Physical Description

[4], 40, 10 ff. octavo 195:110 mm., nice margins, light age staining. A very good copy bound in contemporary boards, rubbed.

 

Detail Description

An exposition of the Avodah in the Day of Atonement liturgy, and a clarification of the variant readings by the Sephardic sage, R. Joshua Raphael ben Israel Benveniste. First printed in Constantinople (1691–95), this is, after several hundred years, only the second printing of this work. It is according to the nusach customary among the Sephardim. The verso of the title page has a depicition of a menorah with entries in each of its branches of kabbalistic significance. The text is comprised of the Sefer ha-Avodah in the center of the page and Avodah Tammah, the commentary on it, in the margins. At the end is Lavush Malkhus.

R. Joshua Raphael ben Israel Benveniste (1590?–1665?) was a Turkish rabbi, physician, grammarian, and poet; brother of R. Ḥayyim Benveniste . Joshua was born in Constantinople and was a disciple of R. Joseph b. Moses Trani and R. Abraham Alegre . He studied grammar under R. Isaac Uzziel, and medicine under Isaac Caro, the physician. While serving as rabbi in Constantinople, he accepted the rabbinate of Sophia, after the community had agreed to all of his conditions, but the Constantinople community objected and prevailed upon him to remain. For some years Joshua was rabbi of Bursa. Many communities, even Karaites, addressed their problems to him, and responsa written by him, as early as 1610, are extant. Benveniste was a versatile author and many of his works are still regarded as basic in their fields. He devoted himself particularly to the Jerusalem Talmud, which was largely neglected in his day. His commentary on it, Sedeh Yehoshu'a, was published with the text. Joshua's method was first to explain all difficult words according to the Babylonian Talmud, the Arukh, etc., and then to explain the passage, comparing it with the parallel passage in the Babylonian Talmud or explaining it according to the context where no such parallel exists. Where the halakhah differs in the two Talmuds he decided according to the Babylonian, "since it is the essential one." He also collected explanations which he found in works of rishonim and halakhists and added his own. He deals only with the halakhic portions, ignoring the aggadah. His language is very prolix. This may explain why the commentary did not become widespread among the scholars of Eastern and Western Europe. His commentary to the following tractates was published: Berakhot, Pe'ah, Orlah, Ḥallah, and Bikkurim of the order Zera'im (Constantinople, 1662); a number of tractates of Mo'ed, Nashim, and Nezikin (Constantinople, 1749). The commentary has frequently been reprinted together with the text. His Seder ha-Get and Seder Ḥaliẓah were published in Get Pashut (Constantinople, 1719) of Moses ibn Ḥabib. According to R. Ḥayyim Joseph David Azulai , his four volumes of responsa, Sha'ar Yehoshu'a, were destroyed by fire after 1677. Some of his 97 responsa on Ḥoshen Mishpat, which have remained in manuscript (Jewish Institute, Warsaw, no. 13), were published in Husiatin in 1904 and many of his responsa were published in the books of his contemporaries. His other published works are Oznei Yehoshu'a (Constantinople, 1677), and sermons.The following remain in manuscript: Mishmeret ha-Mitzvot (JTS, Ms. 0347), a poetic arrangement of the commandments in accordance with the enumeration of Maimonides; Levush Malkhut, describing the greatness of the Creator as evinced in the human anatomy, written in the style of the Keter Malkhut of Solomon ibn Gabirol; Perek be-Shir (Montefiore Ms. 377), on prosody and meter; and a treatise on medicine.

 

Hebrew Description:

אתה כוננת עולם מראש ... כולל סדר עבודת יום הכפורים והוא סדר אתה כוננת המורגל בין הספרדים, מוגה ... מפי סופרים ומפי ספרים ... ועל שפתו מסביב באור הענינים והמלות ... חובר והוגה בשנת השע"ו ... על יד איש צעיר יהושע רפאל בן ... אדוני אבי ... ר' ישראל

בנבנשת זלה"ה ... בקושטאנדינה ...

סדר העבודה "אתה כוננת עולם מראש" הוא מאת פייטן בלתי נודע, ומיוחס ליוסי בן יוסי. עיין: אוצר השירה והפיוט, א, עמ' 399 מס' 8816.

הספר יצא לראשונה בקוצטאנטינה [תנ"א-תנ"ה]. נדפס כאן מכתב-יד, עם הרשות לסדר העבודה לר' שלמה אבן-גבירול והפירוש שעליה, ובתוספת הקדמת המחבר.

דף [3]: הקדמת המו"ל, יצחק גאגין. כותב בין השאר: "ס[פר]... הזה אשר היה גנוז בבית ישיבתי... בית אל ... עמדתי בכל כוחי ואוני להביאו לבדה"ד [צ"ל: לבית הדפוס]... ולהגיהו ולנקותו מכל מין שגיאה וטעות".

דף [4]: "שיר... על שתיית הטוטון מיוסד מהרה"ג ח[יים] מודעי ז"ל". פותח: אחוה דעי בחידתי, מול עושים כמנהגי וכמדתי. אוצר השירה והפיוט, א, עמ' 115, מס' 2438.

דף לט,ב-מ: "שיר ... מהרה"ג כמהר"ר ר' אליעזר ן' שאנג'י". פותח: ה' את קולך שמעתי ואירא. יום משפטיך איום ונורא. שם, א, עמ' 38, מס' 768.

נדפס עמו ספרו של ר' יהושע בנבנישתי, לבוש מלכות.

 

Reference

BE alef 16; EJ; CD-NLI 0177015