Provenance InformationOwnership note (at the head of the manuscript): "ืืฉื ืืื"ื ... ืฉืืื ื"ืฅ ืืืืจืื".
OwnerMoses son of Solomon Katz of Orav (former owner)
OwnerThe Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford (current owner)
Provenance PlacesOxford (England)
Physical Description
MaterialPaper ๐Refers generally to all types of thin matted or felted sheets or webs of fiber formed and dried on a fine screen from a pulpy water suspension. The fibers may be animal, such as hair, silk or wool, or mineral, such as asbestos, or synthetic. However most paper is made from cellulosic plant fiber, such as from wood pulp, grass, cotton, linen, and straw. ๐๏ธSearch for Ilanot with this Material
SummaryThis mid-seventeenth-century Great Tree is preserved as a paper foldout in the front matter of an Ashkenazi kabbalistic miscellany. The ilan precedes Jacob แบemaแธฅโs commentary on the Idra Rabba. It belongs to a subset of approximately twenty percent of Great Trees that feature แบemaแธฅโs visualization of the enrobings (the Z14 module) without the accompaniment of Moses Zacutoโs Arikh diagram (Z13). The practice of including such ambitious diagrams as foldouts at the beginning or end of a codex likely took inspiration from the precedent set by แธคayyim Vital, who incorporated complex opening diagrams into his own works.
Further Information
Research LiteratureAdolf Neubauer, Catalogue of the Hebrew Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1886). J. H. Chajes, The Kabbalistic Tree (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2022), 93โ95, 383, 400.
Provenance InformationOwnership note (at the head of the manuscript): "ืืฉื ืืื"ื ... ืฉืืื ื"ืฅ ืืืืจืื".
OwnerMoses son of Solomon Katz of Orav (former owner)
OwnerThe Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford (current owner)
Provenance PlacesOxford (England)
Physical Description
MaterialPaper ๐Refers generally to all types of thin matted or felted sheets or webs of fiber formed and dried on a fine screen from a pulpy water suspension. The fibers may be animal, such as hair, silk or wool, or mineral, such as asbestos, or synthetic. However most paper is made from cellulosic plant fiber, such as from wood pulp, grass, cotton, linen, and straw. ๐๏ธSearch for Ilanot with this Material
SummaryThis mid-seventeenth-century Great Tree is preserved as a paper foldout in the front matter of an Ashkenazi kabbalistic miscellany. The ilan precedes Jacob แบemaแธฅโs commentary on the Idra Rabba. It belongs to a subset of approximately twenty percent of Great Trees that feature แบemaแธฅโs visualization of the enrobings (the Z14 module) without the accompaniment of Moses Zacutoโs Arikh diagram (Z13). The practice of including such ambitious diagrams as foldouts at the beginning or end of a codex likely took inspiration from the precedent set by แธคayyim Vital, who incorporated complex opening diagrams into his own works.
Further Information
Research LiteratureAdolf Neubauer, Catalogue of the Hebrew Manuscripts in the Bodleian Library (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1886). J. H. Chajes, The Kabbalistic Tree (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2022), 93โ95, 383, 400.