- 111
Sefer ha-Shorashim (Book of Roots), David Kimhi [Spain: ca. 1400]
Description
- paper, ink
Catalogue Note
an important early manuscript of david kimhi's grammatical magnum opus
This work by Rabbi David Kimhi (1160–1135), the greatest Hebrew grammarian of the medieval period, was originally part of a longer grammatical treatise, called Mikhlol. The first section, Helek ha-Dikduk (grammar) retained that title, while the second section, Helek ha-Inyan (lexicon), would become known as Sefer ha-Shorashim, a glossary of Hebrew and Aramaic words. The title derives from the layout of the text, where the root letters of individual words are written in large bold letters followed by philological explanations and biblical citations. It was due to the popularity of both Mikhlol and Sefer ha-Shorashim that most of the works of Kimhi's predecessors fell into disuse
In addition to the characteristic Sephardic script in which this manuscript is written, an examination of Briquet's Les Filigranes reveals that the watermarks embedded within the paper most closely resemble those found in a series of papers produced between 1353-1390 (Lettre. N.; no. 8427). The present manuscript contains text not found in the 1490 Naples edition.
PROVENANCE:
Said ibn Daud ibn Yitzhak Rahim Gershom al-Kohen- his inscription on f. 270v.; Yosef ibn Moshe ibn Yitzhak-his signature and inscription on ff. 1r, 2r and 270v.