Page:Eight chapters of Maimonides on ethics.djvu/51

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INTRODUCTION
31

Editions of the Shemonah Peraḳim

The Peraḳim are found in all editions of the Mishnah and Talmud which contain the Commentary of Maimonides.[1] The text of the Peraḳim contained in the first edition of the Mishnah agrees substantially with that found in the Commentary on Abot which has been collated by the editor, and designated by So. Both were printed by Soncino.[2] The Peraḳim in the first edition of the Talmud are practically in accord with these.

The Commentary on Abot with the Peraḳim was incorporated into the Italian ritual (1484) and also into the Greek ritual (since 1520).[3] They may also be found in the Maḥzorim of the Soncino Brothers, Soncino, 1485 (finished, Casal Maggiore, 1486),[4] and Rimini, 1521, and in the Bologna edition of the Maḥzor, 1540–1541.[5]

Editions of Abot With the Shemonah Peraḳim

  1. Abot with commentary of Maimonides, including the Shemonah Peraḳim, Soncino, 1484; described on page 25.
  2. פרקי אבות עם פי׳ הרמבם ופי׳ דון יצחק אברבנאל בן דון יהודה אברבנאל וקרא בשם המאמר הזה נחלת אבות, 1545. וויניציאה ש״ה.[6] 4°.
  3. פרקי אבות, with commentary of Maimonides, London, 5532 (1772).[6] 12°.

Separate Editions

  1. Hurwitz, Abraham.[7] . . . ספר חסד אברהם שאזן מ׳ אברהם בר שבתי הורוויץ על שמונה פרקים. Lublin, Kalonymos ben Mordechai Jafe und sein Sohn Chojyim. 1574.
  2. ש׳פ . . . אינס דייטש איבערזעצט.[8] Vienna, 1798. 8°.
  1. See Fürst, Bibliotheca Judaica, vol. II, p. 309.
  2. See supra, p. 25.
  3. HUb., pp. 437–438. Catal. Bodl., 1890, 2483.
  4. See Antonucci, Catalogo, etc., p. 115. HUb., p. 438, n. 477.
  5. Rosin, Ethik, p. 31, n. 2.
  6. 6.0 6.1 See Catalogue of the Cohen Library, Baltimore, Md.
  7. Other editions of the same are Lublin, 1616; ib., 1622; Krakau, 1577; ib., 1602. See Fürst, loc. cit. Hurwitz was a pupil of R. Moses Isserles; see Monatsch. für Gesch. und Wissenschaft des Judenthum (1903), vol. XI, p. 163, n. 1.
  8. According to the preface, it follows a Latin text, presumably that of Pococke, but its text is hardly different from that of the other editions.