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Zizim u-Prahim, R. Jacob Emden, Altona 1768
ציצים ופרחים - Only Edition - Kabbalah
- Final Bid Price: $1,200.00 Reserve Price Not Met
- 6 Bid(s)
Details
- Lot Number 49802
- Title (English) Zizim u-Prahim
- Title (Hebrew) ציצים ופרחים
- Note Only Edition - Kabbalah
- Author R. Jacob ben Zevi Hirsch Emden
- City Altona
- Publisher The Author
- Publication Date 1768
- Estimated Price - Low 4,000
- Estimated Price - High 6,000
- Item # 1576519
- End Date
- Start Date
Description
Physical Description
Only edition. 20, [1] ff., 210:170 mm., extra wide margins, light age staining. A very good copy bound in modern leather over boards.
Detail Description
Kabbalah, arranged alphabetically, by R. Jacob Emden (pen name Yavez; derived from Ya'akov Ben Zevi; 1697–1776), rabbi, halakhic authority, kabbalist, and anti-Shabbatean polemicist. Yavez was regarded as one of the
outstanding scholars of his generation. Yavez's teacher was his father R. Zevi Hirsch Ashkenazi (Hakham Zevi). He inherited his father's interest in secular studies, his dissociation from the Ashkenazi method of study (pilpul) and customs, his stormy, independent,
and uncompromising character, and his devotion to the campaign against the Shabbateans and their sympathizers. In addition, he possessed a fine literary talent, a critical tendency and a knowledge unusual for his age of general non-halakhic Jewish literature.
He was also familiar with sciences and languages (German, Dutch, Latin). Despite his distinguished descent and his remarkable talmudic attainments, R. Emden occupied no official position, with the exception of a few years as rabbi of Emden (1728–1733). This
made it possible for him to be exceptionally critical toward the society and the tradition of his time. He was more on guard about anything that he considered hillul ha-Shem (bringing the name of the Jew into disrepute) than for the good name of the rabbinate
and of the community. He made extensive use of the private printing press he founded in Altona to disseminate his views. As a result, because of his views on a number of issues, both personal and communal, he became a figure of contention. His important halakhic
works are: Lehem Shamayim, on the Mishnah (pt. 1, 1728; pt. 2, 1768); a letter of criticism against R. Ezekiel Katzenellenbogen, rabbi of Altona (1736); responsa, She'elat Yavez (2 pts. 1738–59), Mor u-Kezi'ah, on the Shulhan Arukh, OH, (2 pts., 1761–68).
In addition, he published an important edition of the prayer book (whose parts had different names) with a valuable commentary (1745–48). This prayer book was reprinted several times. His main historical importance lies in his campaigns against the Shabbateans
to which he dedicated many years. He relentlessly examined and investigated every suspicious phenomenon pertaining to the sect. He called upon the contemporary rabbis to publish excommunications and mercilessly attacked anyone suspected of supporting or showing
sympathy to the Shabbateans. The Shabbateans were accustomed to introduce hints of their secret doctrine into their literary works, particularly in the field of Kabbalah. Consequently, R. Emden became an expert in uncovering such allusions and hidden meanings,
and developed an extraordinarily sharp critical faculty by which he could recognize any suggestion of the Shabbatean heresy. Many books in which no one saw anything to which objection could be taken, were condemned by him as heretical. Though at times he was
at fault and suspected the innocent without cause, his judgment in general was sound.
Hebrew Description
ונקרא גם לקט אורות מחק"ל ת"ק [תפוחין קדישין], בהיותו לקט שכחה ופאה אשר הניח בעל מאורי אור [ר' מאיר פאפרש] לעני כמוני יעקב ישראל... שנת אז ת'צ'ל'ח'
"דפוס המחבר". שמות, גימטריאות ומושגים בקבלה בסדר א"ב, בעקבות ס' מאורי אור לר' מאיר פאפרש.
References
Bibliography of the Hebrew Book 1470-1960 #000155876; M. A. Wagenaar, Toledot Yavez (1868); Y. Raphael, in Aresheth, 3 (1961), 231–76