AMPLE Catalogue of
Ilan Diagrams

London (England), The British Library: Or. 6465

About the Diagram

TextGrid URI of the Edition3whgb
FamiliesMagnificent Parchment (Classical)
(click here to search for other diagrams in the same family)

Surfaces of the Diagram

Recto


About the Manuscript

Identifiers and Titles

IdentifierLondon (England), The British Library: Or. 6465
Alternative IdentifiersLondon (England), Catalogue Margoliouth: 829
London (England), The British Library: Or. 9807
Primary Manuscript TitlesThe Magnificent Parchment
Alternative Manuscript TitlesLondon, BL, Ms. Or. 6465

Manuscript History

Origin
ContributorsDavid Ben Moshe Darshan (Scribe)
Date Information1556
Creation PlacesModena (Italy)
Provenance
Provenance PlacesLondon (England)

Physical Description

MaterialParchment
FormRotulus
Dimensions Description200 × 57.2
Hand DescriptionAshkenazic

Languages Used

Main LanguageRabbinic Hebrewhttps://ilanot.org/voc/languages/he-x-rabbinic
Additional LanguagesRabbinic Hebrewhttps://ilanot.org/voc/languages/he-x-rabbinic

Content Description

SummaryThis is a well-preserved witness of the family of large manuscript rotuli ("ilanot") to which we have given the name "The Magnificent Parchment." It was copied by the Polish kabbalist David Darshan (ca. 1527–late sixteenth century) during his time in Modena in 1556. Unlike some luxury copies of the Magnificent Parchment that display rich colors and gold leaf, the Darshan copy was almost certainly made for the copyist's personal use. Unlike some of the commissioned luxury rotuli, however, Darshan was an erudite kabbalist and copied (and perhaps even corrected) the texts of the Magnificent Parchment with a precision that sets it apart from other witnesses.
Colophon"דוד בן הגאון הקדוש מוהר"ר משה דרשן מקראקא בק"ק מודינא שנת ו'י'ש' תקוה לאחריתך" [=שט"ז].

Further Information

Research LiteratureG. Margoliouth, Catalogue of the Hebrew and Samaritan Manuscripts in the British Museum, 4 vols. (London, 1899–1935), 829.
J. H. Chajes, The Kabbalistic Tree (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2022), 65–66, 375.

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London (England), The British Library: Or. 6465

About the Diagram

TextGrid URI of the Edition3whgb
FamiliesMagnificent Parchment (Classical)
(click here to search for other diagrams in the same family)

Surfaces of the Diagram

Recto


About the Manuscript

Identifiers and Titles

IdentifierLondon (England), The British Library: Or. 6465
Alternative IdentifiersLondon (England), Catalogue Margoliouth: 829
London (England), The British Library: Or. 9807
Primary Manuscript TitlesThe Magnificent Parchment
Alternative Manuscript TitlesLondon, BL, Ms. Or. 6465

Manuscript History

Origin
ContributorsDavid Ben Moshe Darshan (Scribe)
Date Information1556
Creation PlacesModena (Italy)
Provenance
Provenance PlacesLondon (England)

Physical Description

MaterialParchment
FormRotulus
Dimensions Description200 × 57.2
Hand DescriptionAshkenazic

Languages Used

Main LanguageRabbinic Hebrewhttps://ilanot.org/voc/languages/he-x-rabbinic
Additional LanguagesRabbinic Hebrewhttps://ilanot.org/voc/languages/he-x-rabbinic

Content Description

SummaryThis is a well-preserved witness of the family of large manuscript rotuli ("ilanot") to which we have given the name "The Magnificent Parchment." It was copied by the Polish kabbalist David Darshan (ca. 1527–late sixteenth century) during his time in Modena in 1556. Unlike some luxury copies of the Magnificent Parchment that display rich colors and gold leaf, the Darshan copy was almost certainly made for the copyist's personal use. Unlike some of the commissioned luxury rotuli, however, Darshan was an erudite kabbalist and copied (and perhaps even corrected) the texts of the Magnificent Parchment with a precision that sets it apart from other witnesses.
Colophon"דוד בן הגאון הקדוש מוהר"ר משה דרשן מקראקא בק"ק מודינא שנת ו'י'ש' תקוה לאחריתך" [=שט"ז].

Further Information

Research LiteratureG. Margoliouth, Catalogue of the Hebrew and Samaritan Manuscripts in the British Museum, 4 vols. (London, 1899–1935), 829.
J. H. Chajes, The Kabbalistic Tree (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2022), 65–66, 375.