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| | | | OR HACHAYIM: Commentary on the Torah, 5 vols. Or Hachayim is considered a classic commentary.It is this translator's fond hope that he made a contribution to the study of the Or Hachayim commentary by a wider public as a result of having translated it into English.
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| | | BIBLIA RABBINICA THE "MIKRAOT GEDOLOT" BIBLE
A Reprint of the 1525 Venice Edition | | | BIBLIA RABBINICA THE "MIKRAOT GEDOLOT" BIBLE A Reprint of the 1525 Venice Edition This famous edition of the Hebrew bible, more than any other, determined the history of all subsequent printed Bibles down to the present day. Both the text and the additional commentaries chosen by later publishers closely follow the first "Mikraot Gedolot", and the similarity exists even with regards to the format. |
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| CODEX CAIRO OF THE BIBLE
From the Karaite Synagoge at Abbasiya | | | CODEX CAIRO OF THE BIBLE From the Karaite Synagoge at Abbasiya The Cairo manuscript of the Prophets is considered the earliest extant Hebrew manuscript. The Cairo Ms. of the Prophets was written, according to the colophon, in Tiberias in the year 895, by Moses ben Asher. |
| | THE PENTATEUCH CODEX HILLELY | | | HE PENTATEUCH CODEX HILLELY Early Spanish Manuscript from the collection of the J.T.S. New York Manuscript from the collection of The Jewish Theological Seminary, New York . An early Spanish manuscript which originally contained the whole Bible. The sections on Prophets and Writings have in the meanwhile been lost, and only the section on the Pentateuch survives, almost wholly intact. |
| | BIBLE -HAGIDGRAPHA Codex Berlin 680, New York 510 | | | BIBLE -HAGIDGRAPHA Codex Berlin 680, New York 510 One of the earliest Biblical manuscripts to survive to this day. Containing most of The Writings, its especial significance, lies in its text and vocalization which are of the ancient Babylonian type. The greater pert of the manuscript is in the possession of the Berlin National Library, while part of it in the Library of The Jewish Theological Seminary, New York . |
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| THE MASSORA MAGNA TO THE BIBLE | | | THE MASSORA MAGNA TO THE BIBLE Ochla ve-Ochla, Codex Paris A Limited Facsimile Edition of Codex Paris - Bibliotheque Nationale no. 148 |
| | TARGUM ONKELOS TO THE PENTATEUCH | | | A collection of fragments in the Library of the J.T.S of America New York Within the great collection of Biblical manuscripts to be found in the Library of The Jewish Theological Seminary, New York , there are four large fragments of the Targum Onkelos to the Pentateuch. Together these four fragments contain almost the whole text of the Pentateuch in its Aramaic translation, and with a classical Babylonian vocalization. |
| | THE PENTATEUCH A YEMENITE MANUSCRIPT | | | THE PENTATEUCH A YEMENITE MANUSCRIPT Facsimile edition of 390 copies of a manuscript of Pentateuch, In accordance with the Yemenite tradition, with the Targum,Tafsir of Sawadya Gaon and the Collecteana Of R. Yahya Siani Introdoctory Note On the Parasha-Tag tradition of Yemenite Jewry |
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| Hemdat Yamim A Facsimile Edition | | | Hemdat Yamim A Facsimile Edition of Istanbul (Kushta ) 1735 Author Unknown Derashot for Shabbath and Holidays A reprint of the Livorna Edition
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| | MIDRASH LEVITICUS RABBA
SIFRE NUMBERS DEUTORONOMY | | | a | MIDRASH LEVITICUS RABBA SIFRE NUMBERS DEUTORONOMY CODEX VATICAN 32 ( Vat. Ebr. 32 ) A Limited Facsimile Edition of 160 Copies, By Special Permission of the Vatican Library With an Introduction and Page Index.
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| | | | SEFER TA'AMEI HA-MIKRA - INSTRUCTIONS to the READER of the BIBLE Author Unknown An early Biblical grammatical treatise originating in the Tiberian circle, which gives instructions for the correct reading of the Biblical text according to the Tiberian tradition. A Reprint of the Paris edition printed by J. Merkerus with a new introduction.
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| Tur on the Torah | | | | Commentary on the Torah by Rabbi Yaakov Ben Rabeinu Asher (Ro"sh); Includes condensed version of Ramban"s commentary; translated into English and annotated |
| | | Haketav Vehakabbalah | | | Haketav Vehakabbah Translator: Eliyahu Munk
Torah Commentary by Rabbi Tzevi Mecklenburg, demonstrating the indivisibility of the writen and oral Torah; translated into English |
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