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110:" (1485), who, on page 45, parodied Isa. ii. 3 thus: "Out of Zion shall go forth the Law, and the word of the Lord from Soncino" (). Abraham b. Hayyim's name appears in the Bible edition as type-setter, and the correctors included Solomon b. Perez Bonfoi ("Mibhar ha-Peninim"), Gabriel Strassburg (Berakot), David b. Elijah Levi and Mordecai b. Reuben Baselea (Hullin), and Eliezer b. Samuel ("Yad").
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The most important member of the family; born probably at
Soncino; died at Constantinople 1534. He claims to have been of great assistance to the exiles from Spain, and especially to those from Portugal; and he made journeys to France in order to collect manuscripts for the works to be printed. He
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circa 1557. It is obvious that the mere transfer of their workshop must have had a good deal to do with the development of the printing art among the Jews, both in Italy and in Turkey. While they devoted their main attention to Hebrew books, they published also a considerable number of works in
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The
Soncino prints, though not the earliest, excelled all the others in their perfection of type and their correctness. The Soncino house is distinguished also by the fact that the first Hebrew Bible was printed there. An allusion to the forthcoming publication of this edition was made by the
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makes a pun upon his name by printing it as two words, "Ger Sham," referring to his many travels. In dedicating his edition of
Petrarch (Fano, 1503) to Cæsar Borgia, he mentions that he had had Latin, Greek, and Hebrew types cut out by
54:, of the middle of the fourteenth century. The first of the family engaged in printing was Israel Nathan b. Samuel, the father of Joshua Moses and the grandfather of Gershon. He set up his Hebrew printing-press in Soncino in the year
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Printer between 1534 and 1547. He completed "Miklol" (finished in 1534), the publication of which had been begun by his father, and published "Meleket ha-Mispar," in 1547; and Isaac b. Sheshet's responsa, likewise in 1547.
58:, and published his first work, the tractate Berakot, Dec. 19, 1483. The press was moved about considerably during its existence. It can be traced at Soncino in 1483-86; Casalmaggiore, 1486; Soncino again, 1488–90;
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adopted the format created by Joshua
Solomon Soncino, with the Talmud text in the middle of the page and the commentaries of Rashi and Tosfot surrounding it. Published with the approval of
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Printer at
Soncino from 1483 to 1488, at Naples from 1490 to 1492. He was the uncle of Gershon Soncino. It would appear that he had most to do with starting the printing of the Talmud.
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Died at
Brescia, probably in 1492. He wrote the Epilogue for the Mahzor of 1486. It was at his suggestion that his son Joshua Soncino took up the work of printing.
151:. It is curious that Aldus, for his introduction to a Hebrew grammar (Venice, 1501), used the same types that had been employed by Soncino in 1492.
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circa 1550, where he established the first printing press of the Middle East. His activities are known solely from two fragments discovered in the
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The last of the
Soncinos was Gershom b. Eliezer, a grandson of Gershom b. Moses, who established the first printing press of the Middle East in
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Printer at
Salonica in 1526 and 1527; assisted in the printing of the Catalonian Mahzor and of the first part of the Yalkut.
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139:(in Italian works, Jeronimo Girolima Soncino; in Latin works, Hieronymus Soncino):
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Judaic
Treasures of the Library of Congress: Gershom Soncino’s First Book
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general literature, and even religious works with
Christian symbols.
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Daniel Bomberg's Publication of the Babylonian Talmud (1519-23)
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between 1530 and 1533, and had a branch establishment at
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family of printers, deriving its name from the town of
94:in 1532-33. Their printers' mark was a tower.
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269:"THE BEGINNINGS OF HEBREW PRINTING IN EGYPT"
42:. It traces its descent through a Moses of
86:, 1521-26. Members of the family were at
119:Israel Nathan b. Samuel b. Moses Soncino
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127:Joshua Solomon b. Israel Nathan Soncino
188:List of books printed by the Soncinos
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16:For the present-day publishers, see
238:Early editions of the Hebrew Bible
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339:. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.
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363:Jewish printing and publishing
27:(משפחת שונצינו) is an Italian
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267:ROWLAND-SMITH, DIANA (1989).
50:, back to a certain Moses of
273:The British Library Journal
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164:Gershom b. Eliezer Soncino
155:Eliezar b. Gershon Soncino
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135:Gershon b. Moses Soncino
336:The Jewish Encyclopedia
358:Printers of incunabula
333:; et al. (eds.).
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327:"Soncino"
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215:July 2010
168:Moved to
82:, 1519);
29:Ashkenazi
227:See also
92:Salonica
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38:in the
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84:Rimini
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76:Pesaro
60:Naples
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