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Img. ID: 439055

© Gross Family Collection, Photographer: Bar Hama, Ardon, -

The following description was prepared by William Gross:

Kabbalistic diagrams resembling Porphyrian trees have been known at least since the sixteenth century as “Ilanot” [Heb. pl. Arborae; sing. "Ilan"]. [First such reference known to me is in the work of Guillaume Postel, who refers to "Ilanoth" as a genre of rabbinic literature.] Ilanot constitute visual representations of kabbalistic cosmologies from the relatively simpler forms of the thirteenth century to the far more complex and ramified systems in Lurianic Kabbalah from the sixteenth century onward. The increasing complexity of cosmic trees between the thirteenth and eighteenth centuries directly reflects the exponential ramification of kabbalistic theosophy that took place over those centuries. Given the overwhelmingly visio-spacial conceptions of the divine in its evolutionary “becoming” in these mystical traditions, Ilanot could serve as cosmic maps. This divine cartography aspired to capture the syncronic interrelations between the various facets of the godhead and creation as well as their diachronic, evolving emergence.

What’s an Ilan? Any synoptic diagrammatic presentation of kabbalistic cosmology. The basic graphical forms could range from the arboreal to the boldly anthropomorphic. Lurianic Ilanot, in their lengthy and complex presentations, often feature both, as well as spreadsheet-like tables. The iconic decadal tree is an Ilan, as is the intricately Baroque Hammerschlag Ilan. Diagrams expressing particular concepts within a larger framework, such as the illustrations that frequently accompany certain cosmogonic discussions in the Lurianic corpus, would doubtfully have been called ilanot by anyone. However simple or complex the pictorial-diagrammatic features of an Ilan, extensive textual material is frequently embedded in and around the geometrical forms. The texts may be paraphrastic chapter headings, original compositions, or the study notes of a student. Their connection to the pictorial features alongside which they appear is usually clear, with the text providing a verbal key to the quality or process depicted graphically. That said, in complex Ilanot, simple keying gives way to more complex and even inscrutable connections. Indeed, these manuscripts demand to be treated as “integrated systems of communication” that raise “questions about how verbal and visual patterns of meaning were constructed, combined, and modified.”

The Ilan Aroch is a scroll that was prepared by some scholars of the kabbalah, apparently as a sort of guide to their studies of the discipline.  These scrolls are exceedingly rare in a large size. But, toward the end of the 19th century, these scrolls were prepared in miniature as well. But they were used not as a scholarly guide, but as practical kabbalah - an amulet. These scrolls, often put into a silver case, lost their original meaning and became simply a means of warding off evil. Such amuletic scrolls were prepared from a common form and are almost always nearly identical, even if with a few features of the larger form. This particular example is wider than most and more elaborate in the details of the ilan portrayed. This scroll was written in Morocco on goat skin in four sections that are partly glued and partly sewn together.

Name/Title
| Unknown
Object
Object Detail
Settings
Unknown
Date
circa 1900
Synagogue active dates
Reconstruction dates
Artist/ Maker
Unknown (Unknown)
Origin
Historical Origin
Unknown
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Unknown |
Congregation
Unknown
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Unknown |
Site
Unknown
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Unknown|
Period
Unknown
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Collection
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Unknown
Material / Technique
Parchment, Ink, Written, Illustrated
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Material Decoration
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Material Cloth
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Length: 104.6 cm, Width: 7.8 cm
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0
Ornamentation
Custom
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Codicology
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Ruling
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Façade (main)
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Direction Toward Jerusalem
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Author of description
William Gross |
Architectural Drawings
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Computer Reconstruction
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Negative/Photo. No.
Gross_028.012.021_001.jpg