The first work is a copy of novellae on Babylonian Talmud tractates Bava Kamma, Bava Mezia and Sanhedrin by Abraham ben Saul Broda. It was copied by Joseph Afinazar in the 18th century from the Offenbach 1725 edition. On folios 44v-45v some novellae on tractate Pesahim have been added by a different hand.
The second is a modern copy of the responsa of the Geonim penned by Jacob Musafia in Spoleto (Split), with his own additions and corrections. The responsa were copied from a manuscript that originally included other texts. Y. Tabori, in Alei Sefer, 3 (1977), discussed whether the original manuscript may have been the “Vivanti manuscript,” now in the Lehmann collection in Silver Spring, ms. NL 48.
ProvenanceVol. 2: Samuel David Luzzatto — Solomon Halberstam (shelf no. 16)
Physical DescriptionVol. 1: 45 leaves on paper, 8 3/8 x 6 ½ inches; 213 x 167 mm, written in brown ink in an Oriental-Sephardic semi-cursive script, catchwords, modern foliation in pencil; first and final leaves laid down, fol. 22 with tissue repair to large area of ink corrosion, a few other scattered instances of ink corrosion, occasional fraying, repair, and worming throughout, chiefly marginal, library stamp on first page. Black library buckram.
Vol. 2: 35 leaves on paper, 5 7/8 x 4 1/8 inches; 150 x 105 mm, written in black ink in Sephardic semi-cursive script, modern foliation in pencil; a number of leaves extended or reinforced at inner margins, a bit soiled and a few stains throughout, especially fol. 24, small repair to final leaf, library stamp to last page. Contemporary blue boards; worn, rebacked and recornered in cloth.
LiteratureVol. 1: Hirschfeld (ms. no. 87)Vol. 2: Hirschfeld (ms. no. 99); published from this manuscript as Teshuvot ha-Geonim (Lyck 1864)
The first work is a copy of novellae on Babylonian Talmud tractates Bava Kamma, Bava Mezia and Sanhedrin by Abraham ben Saul Broda. It was copied by Joseph Afinazar in the 18th century from the Offenbach 1725 edition. On folios 44v-45v some novellae on tractate Pesahim have been added by a different hand.
The second is a modern copy of the responsa of the Geonim penned by Jacob Musafia in Spoleto (Split), with his own additions and corrections. The responsa were copied from a manuscript that originally included other texts. Y. Tabori, in Alei Sefer, 3 (1977), discussed whether the original manuscript may have been the “Vivanti manuscript,” now in the Lehmann collection in Silver Spring, ms. NL 48.
ProvenanceVol. 2: Samuel David Luzzatto — Solomon Halberstam (shelf no. 16)
Physical DescriptionVol. 1: 45 leaves on paper, 8 3/8 x 6 ½ inches; 213 x 167 mm, written in brown ink in an Oriental-Sephardic semi-cursive script, catchwords, modern foliation in pencil; first and final leaves laid down, fol. 22 with tissue repair to large area of ink corrosion, a few other scattered instances of ink corrosion, occasional fraying, repair, and worming throughout, chiefly marginal, library stamp on first page. Black library buckram.
Vol. 2: 35 leaves on paper, 5 7/8 x 4 1/8 inches; 150 x 105 mm, written in black ink in Sephardic semi-cursive script, modern foliation in pencil; a number of leaves extended or reinforced at inner margins, a bit soiled and a few stains throughout, especially fol. 24, small repair to final leaf, library stamp to last page. Contemporary blue boards; worn, rebacked and recornered in cloth.
LiteratureVol. 1: Hirschfeld (ms. no. 87)Vol. 2: Hirschfeld (ms. no. 99); published from this manuscript as Teshuvot ha-Geonim (Lyck 1864)
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