× Bidding has ended on this item.
Ended

Amudei Golah (Sefer Mitzvot Katan (Se-Ma-K), R. Isaac of Corbeil, Kopys 1820

עמודי גולה - Hasidic

Listing Image
Payment Options
Seller Accepts Credit Cards

Payment Instructions
You will be emailed an invoice with payment instructions upon completion of the auction.
Details
  • Lot Number 52351
  • Title (English) Amudei Golah (Sefer Mitzvot Katan (Se-Ma-K)
  • Title (Hebrew) עמודי גולה
  • Note Hasidic
  • Author R. Isaac of Corbeil
  • City Kopys
  • Publisher Israel Jaffa
  • Publication Date 1820
  • Estimated Price - Low 500
  • Estimated Price - High 1,000

  • Item # 2160325
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

Physical Description

[4], [1 marked 2], 4-6, 93, 51, 39-58 ff., 211:165 mm., light age and damp staining, wide margins, heavy worming mainly in margins, bound in later boards, rubbed. Printed on blue paper

 

Detail Description

Sefer Mitzvot Katan (Se-Ma-K), "Small" Book of Commandments, for which the Author is mainly known. In this work, he provided the masses with a compendium of contemporary halakhah, interspersed with ethical homilies, parables, and aggadot. He divided the precepts into seven "Pillars," corresponding to the seven days of the week, apparently intending that the work be read through every week. In his enumeration of the precepts and their details, though not in his division of the work, R. Isaac was guided by the Sefer Mitzvot Gadol of R. Moses of Coucy, but he omitted the extensive halakhic discussions of that work. The Semak achieved wide popularity, receiving recognition from outstanding scholars of France and Germany and even being included by some early authorities in the prayer book "so that the precepts could be recited daily... in place of supplications (see Tehinnah) and the reading of psalms." R. Meir b. Baruch of Rothenburg's encomium gained wide circulation for the book in Germany and it soon became an accepted source for the posekim ("codifiers"), particularly R. Aaron ha-Kohen of Lunel and Joseph Colon. In the course of time many annotations (the best known being those of R. Perez b. Elijah of Corbeil) were added; in later editions, these were sometimes merged with the original text and printed as one. The glosses of R. Moses of Zurich were known (but never published) as "The Semak of Zurich;" this consists of a selection from the works of German and French scholars which were added to the Sefer Mitzvot Katan. Sefer Mitzvot Katan was first published in Constantinople (1510) and many times later. Many manuscripts still exist, evidence of its wide popularity.

R. Isaac b. Joseph of Corbeil (known as Semak after his main work; d. 1280), one of the great French codifiers of the 13th century; son-in-law of R. Jehiel of Paris. R. Isaac was renowned for his piety which is reflected in his Sefer Mitzvot Katan. His tosafot to several tractates are also referred to in rabbinic literature. R. Isaac's other writings include his "decisions," collated by one of his disciples from his responsa.

Printed by Israel Jaffe, a disciple of R. Menahem Mendel of Vitebsk and R. Shneur Zalman of Lyady. Jaffe is known for his printing the first editions of many hasidic works of the Besht and the Ba'al ha-Tanya. His attempt to print and entire edition of the Talmud failed as the Slavuta edition appeared at the same time and offered a nicer copy with more commentaries, eventually resulting in the bankruptcy of the Jaffe printing house.

 

Hebrew Description:

... אשר נקרא בשם ספר מצות קטן ... ובדורותינו אלה הי' כספר החתום עד שהאיר ה' אורו של ... ר' יהושע צייטלעש משקלאב ועשה חיבור ... בביאורו לדברי הגאונים ... בשם הגהות חדשות ...

נייר כחול. דף [2]: הקדמה מאת ר' צבי הירש ב"ר א"ל [אריה ליב] הלוי איש הורוויץ , תלמידו וחתנו של ר' יהושע צייטלעש [צייטלין]. דומה לדפוס לאדי תקס"ה, בתוספת "הגהות חדשות" שנדפסו בשולי העמודים. הגהות רבינו פרץ נדפסו כאן בשם "הגהות הר"ף".

הסכמות: ר' אהרן ב"ר יקותיאל ור' נתן נטע ב"ר שמואל, שקלאב, כא מרחשון תק"ף; ר' משה ב"ר ישראל, קאפוסט, כו מרחשוון תק"ף.

 

References:

Bibliography of the Hebrew Book 1470-1960 #000136774; EJ; JE; Waxman, Literature, v. 2 (1960) 128 f.