Auction 70 Judaica - Books, Manuscripts, Rabbinical Letters, Ceremonial Art
Mar 31, 2020
Israel
 8 Ramban St, Jerusalem.

Please note!

In compliance with the instructions of the Ministry of Health, the preview will take place only by previous appointment. Please contact our office by phone 077-5140223 or be email office@kedemltd.com to coordinate a viewing.

We will be happy to be at your service for any question or request. We are especially equipped to provide many images or a short film of the condition of the items by request.

The auction has ended

LOT 29:

Tehillim with the Chazeh Tzion Commentary, by Kabbalist Rabbi Immanuel Chai Ricchi - Livorno, 1742-1743 - Author ...

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 
Lot was removed from auction
Start price:
$ 300
Auction house commission: 23%
VAT: 17% On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
tags:

Tehillim with the Chazeh Tzion Commentary, by Kabbalist Rabbi Immanuel Chai Ricchi - Livorno, 1742-1743 - Author Killed Sanctifying G-d's Name in the Course of the Printing
Chazeh Tzion, Tehillim with multifaceted (Pardes) commentary, by Kabbalist R. Immanuel Chai Ricchi, author of Mishnat Chassidim. Livorno, [1742-1743]. First edition.
In the course of the printing of this book, the author was murdered in sanctification of G-d's Name. On the title page, his name appears as among the living, however, at the end of the book, the author's son tells of his murder. A lamentation for him, by R. Shlomo Yosef son of R. Natan Carpi, was also added to the book‏.
R. Immanuel Chai Ricchi (1688-1743) was a leading Italian kabbalist, author of Mishnat Chassidim and other compositions. He traversed many countries, reached Eretz Israel and established a yeshiva in Jerusalem (one of the students of this yeshiva was the Or HaChaim). In 1742, he visited Italian communities to collect funds for his yeshiva. At that time, he began printing this book in Livorno. On Rosh Chodesh Adar 1743, on his way from Modena to Bologna, foreign soldiers arrested him and tried to force him to eat pork. Upon his adamant refusal, they strangled him to death with his tefillin straps and looted all the charity funds which he had collected. His cousin, R. Immanuel son of R. Yitzchak Ben Tzion Ricchi, writes in his lamentation: "His blood was spilled because he did not want to defile his pure soul". R. Yaakov Londin writes about the murder of R. Immanuel Ricchi in his introduction to the book Shiva Einayim (Livorno, 1745): "He was murdered in sanctification of G-d's Name on the same day that I returned on that route… He was captured by three soldiers, who spilled his blood and looted him of a great sum of money, for the sake of G-d's holy Name not to defile himself with their food, to put pork into his mouth…".
At the beginning of the book is a long autobiography of the author, including descriptions concerning his compositions, wanderings and experiences. In his epilogue to the book, the author's son, R. Avraham Shmuel Ricchi, provides further details about the author and describes his murder: "Upon his departure from Modena to travel through Bologna… he met wicked evildoers… with swords girding their loins… and they looted him and attacked him…". He then describes how the Jews of Modena gave R. Immanuel a Jewish burial, after being informed of his murder: "I will not be ungrateful… to the residents of Modena… for they respected him in his death, and immediately upon hearing the bad tidings, the city notables took to travel… They removed him from his grave on the river bank and brought him to the Jewish graveyard in Cento…". At the end of his epilogue, R. Avraham Shmuel copies an unnerving notation found in R. Immanuel's personal siddur, written in his own handwriting - a documentation of a dream he had in which he was informed that he is the soul of Rabbi Yehuda ben Bava, one of the ten martyrs, and that he would die in sanctification of G-d's Name: "I hereby write the dream letter by letter, word for word, as it appears in his handwriting in his siddur… A memoir, that in Jerusalem in the year 1740, I dreamt… one night, I and another person were being killed sanctifying G-d's Name, and afterward, that same year on Friday night… I was told in a dream that the soul of my son… is the soul of a Tanna… and I inquired about myself… They told me, 'And you are R. Yehuda ben Bava'…".
Interestingly, the author concludes this composition in the last lines of his commentary with the topic of the ten martyrs, with specific mention of R. Yehuda ben Bava.
In the center of the title page: the crest of the author's family, featuring a lion holding a stalk of wheat in its mouth and a Hebrew inscription.
138, [2] leaves. 32 cm. Most leaves are in good condition. Stains. Minor wear and signs of usage to first and last leaves. Marginal tears to title page and several other leaves, almost without loss. New binding.

catalog
  Previous item
Next item