Auction 44 - Judaica: Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters
Tractate Yoma - Dvash Tamar Glosses in the Handwriting of Rabbi David ben Shlomo Teitelbaum of Mezritch - 1894
Opening: $400
Unsold
Tractate Yoma, of the Babylonian Talmud. Chernivtsi, 1847.
Handwritten scholarly glosses.
The title page has a printed list of 13 special additions of commentaries printed in this edition. Added to this list is a handwritten addition of the author of the book Dvash Tamar: "(14) glosses Dvash Tamar, 18th of Shvat until the 19th of Adar Sheni 1884".
These glosses were written by Rabbi David ben Shlomo Teitelbaum, an outstanding Torah sage, one of the elder Torah scholars of the city of Mezritch, Lithuania who printed most of these glosses in his book Dvash Tamar (Warsaw, 1897). The name of the book Dvash Tamar is an acronym of "David ben Shlomo" and hints to his family name "Teitelbaum" which is a date palm, a "tamar" in Hebrew.
88, 137-152 leaves. 41 cm. Fair condition, wear and stains. Worm damages. New binding.
Handwritten scholarly glosses.
The title page has a printed list of 13 special additions of commentaries printed in this edition. Added to this list is a handwritten addition of the author of the book Dvash Tamar: "(14) glosses Dvash Tamar, 18th of Shvat until the 19th of Adar Sheni 1884".
These glosses were written by Rabbi David ben Shlomo Teitelbaum, an outstanding Torah sage, one of the elder Torah scholars of the city of Mezritch, Lithuania who printed most of these glosses in his book Dvash Tamar (Warsaw, 1897). The name of the book Dvash Tamar is an acronym of "David ben Shlomo" and hints to his family name "Teitelbaum" which is a date palm, a "tamar" in Hebrew.
88, 137-152 leaves. 41 cm. Fair condition, wear and stains. Worm damages. New binding.
Handwritten Glosses
Handwritten Glosses