Obj. ID: 39471
Jewish printed books Shefa' Tal by Shabbtai Sheftel ben Akiva Horowitz, Warsaw, circa 1875
This text was prepared by William Gross:
A late edition of this classic and popular Kabbalistic work, which is organized as a commentary on the Iggeret ha-Te’amim of R. Aaron Abraham ben Barukh Simeon ha-Levy (16th C). Shefa is a brief commentary that explains allusions. Tal is a detailed explication of esoteric and concealed concepts.
Shabbtai Sheftel Horowitz (1565–1619) was a Kabbalistic author born in Prague, who flourished in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. A physician by profession, he was a was a strong advocate of Kabbalah, and sought to make this esoteric wisdom available to others who might not otherwise have access to it. His work was one of the first on kabbalah printed in Western Europe, and included many approbations by leading Torah scholars, including: Rabbi Shlomo Efraim Luntshitz, Rabbi of Prague, author of Kli Yakar and Rabbi Yeshaya Horowitz author of Shnei Luchot Ha-Brit (Shla).
On the lower part of the title page is printed the city name Hanau, yet it is clear the book was not printed there but in some place in Eastern Europe.