Johann Buxtorf, Impresario of Hebrew and Jewish Books

Anthony Grafton and Joanna Weinberg

Studies and Texts 239; Judaism in the Medieval and Early Modern World 5 • xii, 276 pp. • ISBN 978-0-88844-239-0 • Cloth • $125

Johann Buxtorf (1564–1629) pursued the study of Hebrew and Aramaic and the writings and rituals of Jewish tradition through a long and productive life as a professor at the University of Basel and an impresario of Jewish texts. The focus of this work is on Buxtorf’s scholarly practices – for example, the ways in which he read and made excerpts from a wide variety of Jewish texts, recycled them in his polemical Jüden schul (1603), a treatise on the customs and ceremonies of Ashkenazic Jews, and surveyed them in pioneering if incomplete bibliographies.

Using a wide variety of unpublished sources, including letters to Buxtorf from Jewish print professionals, this study follows him into the Basel printing houses that produced books in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Yiddish, and reconstructs how he worked there as both an editor and a censor – even rewriting certain Jewish prayers to eliminate anti-Christian sentiments. Buxtorf took a special interest in the textual history of the Hebrew Bible: he argued that the vowel points and accents had entered its text at a very early stage.

This study shows that Buxtorf developed his views in dialogue – and debate – with both Jewish and Christian scholars. He often expressed contempt for both the Jews whose texts he read and those whom he occasionally met in Basel, Frankfurt, or elsewhere, yet his passion for Jewish literature of every kind never faltered.

Authors

Anthony Grafton is the Henry Putnam University Professor of History at Princeton University. His many books include Inky Fingers: The Making of Books in Early Modern Europe (2020), The Culture of Correction in Renaissance Europe (2011), and studies of Joseph Scaliger, Henricus Glareanus, Leon Battista Alberti, and Girolamo Cardano. He is co-editor, with Glenn W. Most, of Canonical Texts and Scholarly Practices: A Global Comparative Approach (2016) and, with Geri Della Rocca de Candal and Paolo Sachet, of Printing and Misprinting: A Companion to Mistakes and In-House Corrections in Renaissance Europe (1450–1650) (2023), among other books.

Joanna Weinberg is Professor Emerita of Early Modern Jewish History and Rabbinics at the University of Oxford and Fellow Emerita at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies. Lecturer in Hebrew at Exeter College, Oxford, she is also Honorary Fellow of the Bodleian Centre for the History of the Book. She is co-author, with Anthony Grafton, of “I have always loved the holy tongue”: Isaac Casaubon, the Jews, and a Forgotten Chapter in Renaissance Scholarship (2011) and co-editor, with Piet van Boxel and Kirsten Macfarlane, of The Mishnaic Moment: Jewish Law among Jews and Christians in Early Modern Europe (2022).

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