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Zohar Hadash, R. Abraham ha-Levi Berukhim, Berdichev 1815

זהר חדש - Kabbalah - Inscribed Copy

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Details
  • Lot Number 54534
  • Title (English) Zohar Hadash
  • Title (Hebrew) זהר חדש
  • Note Kabbalah
  • Author R. Abraham ha-Levi Berukhim
  • City Berdichev
  • Publisher Israel Bak
  • Publication Date 1815
  • Estimated Price - Low 200
  • Estimated Price - High 500

  • Item # 2634381
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

Physical Description

Quarto, 241 ff., 200:155 mm., wormed with losses, age and damp staining, bound in modern cloth over boards.

With inscription on title by R. Shaul HaKohen (c. 1770-1848) was the rabbi of Djerba, Tunisia. He authored Lechem Bikurim on grammar (Livorno, 1870).

 

Detail Description

The fifth volume of the Zohar, a collection of sayings and texts found in the manuscripts of the Safed kabbalists after the printing of the Zohar and assembled by R. Abraham b. Eliezer ha-Levi Berukhim.

The printer, Israel b. Abraham Bak (1797–1874) was born in Berdichev, Ukraine, into a family of printers. Later he owned a Jewish press in Berdichev, printing about 30 books between 1815 and 1821 when the press closed down. In 1831, after various unsuccessful efforts to reopen the works, he emigrated to Palestine and settled in Safed. There he renewed the tradition of printing Hebrew works, which had come to an end in the last third of the 17th century. During the peasant revolt against Muhammad Ali in 1834 his printing press was destroyed and he was wounded. Later he reopened his press, and also began to work the land on Mount Yarmak (Meron), overlooking Safed. His was the first Jewish farm in Erez Israel in modern times. After the Safed earthquake in 1837 and the Druze revolt in 1838, during which his farm and printing press were destroyed, he moved to Jerusalem. In 1841 he established the first, and for 22 years, the only, Jewish printing press in Jerusalem. One hundred and thirty books were printed on it, making it an important cultural factor in Jerusalem. Bak also published and edited the second Hebrew newspaper in Erez Israel, Havazzelet (1863).

Hebrew Description

 

 

Reference

Vinograd, Berdichev #25