British Library Or. 16091

From Seven Sages of Rome
Revision as of 17:23, 30 October 2024 by Bonsall (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Manuscript |Has Reference Number=Heb8 |Has Location=London, British Library |Has Siglum=Oriental Manuscripts 16091 (formerly MS Halberstamm-Montefiore no. 113; Hirschfield catalogue no. 500) |Has Standardised Title Of Narrative=משלי סנדבר (Mishle Sendebar) |Has Siglum Of The Version Of The Seven Sages=Mishle Sendebar |Has Language Group Within Version=Hebrew Mishle Sendebar |Has Narrative Or Scholarly Group Within Version=Hebrew Group A |Has Source For Informa...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Manuscript
Reference Number Heb8
Location London, British Library
Siglum/Shelfmark Oriental Manuscripts 16091 (formerly MS Halberstamm-Montefiore no. 113; Hirschfield catalogue no. 500)
Page/Folio range
Standardised title of narrative משלי סנדבר (Mishle Sendebar)
Incipit or textual title
Version (siglum) Mishle Sendebar
Language Group within Version Hebrew Mishle Sendebar
Narrative/Scholarly Group within Version Hebrew Group A
Further scholarly subgroup (1)
Further scholarly subgroup (2)
Translated/adapted from (Version/Text)
Source for information on textual relationship to broader tradition Epstein (1967)
Scribe
Author
Place of Manuscript Production Germany
Date of Manuscript Production 1775 - 1825
Source of date Manuscript Production Epstein (1967)
Material Paper
Language of Manuscript Hebrew
Regional or specific Language of Manuscript
Source for regional or specific Language of Manuscript
Prose or Verse Prose
Other texts in the Manuscript
Total pages/folios in Manuscript
Height 98.5
Width 140
Illustrations No
Digitisation https://www.nli.org.il/en/manuscripts/NNL_ALEPH990001870770205171/NLI#$FL79428358
Modern Editions
Catalogue https://www.nli.org.il/en/manuscripts/NNL_ALEPH990001870770205171/NLI#$FL79428358Hirschfield, Descriptive catalogue of the Hebrew MSS. of the Montefiore Library (1904)
Modern Research Literature Epstein (1967)
General Notes (Internal)

Note

Hirschfield (p. 155) has again confused the title of this work, calling it 'the travels of Sindbad'.

As this text is a direct copy of one of the early printed versions, Epstein calls this manuscript 'totally uninmportant', remarkable only in that 'anyone should wish to copy [it] by hand so late', something which shows both 'the popularity of Mishle Sendebar and the scarcity of printed copies' (p. 347).