From Here 
CROSSING BORDERS
- 8 Dec 2009 – 3 May 2010
- Exhibition  Room, Bodleian Library
- Opening Hours: 
9.00am - 5.00pm (Mon - Fri) 
9.00am -  4.30pm (Sat) 
11.00am - 5.00pm (Sun) 
- Admission free
The Bodleian Library’s winter exhibition tells the story of how  together Jews, Christians and Muslims have contributed to the  development of the book. Crossing Borders: Hebrew Manuscripts as a  Meeting-place of Cultures draws on the Bodleian’s Hebrew holdings,  one of the largest and most important collections of Hebrew manuscripts  in the world. 
Covering a time span of 300 years between the  thirteenth century and fifteenth century, the exhibition brings to light  different aspects of Jewish life in a non-Jewish medieval society. 
The social and cultural interaction between Jews and non-Jews in  both the Muslim and Christian world is mirrored in the blending of the  inherent elements of the manuscript such as decorative patterns, writing  styles, script types and text genres. As a result Hebrew manuscripts  produced in different geo-cultural regions look quite different, showing  greater similarities to the non-Hebrew books produced in the same  region than to each other. 
By importing elements of the host  culture, the Hebrew manuscripts are proof of coexistence and cultural  affinity, as well as practical cooperation between Jews and their  non-Jewish neighbours in the Middle Ages.  The assortment of manuscripts  is not restricted to religious text, but expend to literary and  scientific works as well. 
Highlights of the exhibition include: 
- The Kennicott Bible, undoubtedly the most beautifully and extensively illustrated manuscript among the Spanish Bibles of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The illuminations reveal cross-cultural influences from Spanish Bible illustrations and popular European art to Islamic non-figurative carpet and vegetal decorations. The most striking illuminations will be shown in a ‘Turning the pages’ digital form;
- Fragment from the Cairo Genziah (storage place of Hebrew texts) of Maimonides’ draft of his legal code Mishneh Torah. The autograph with many corrections made by Maimonides himself shows the development of his thoughts while writing his code.
- The Michael Mahzor: the earliest illuminated Jewish prayer book for the Festivals, produced in Germany in 1258. The prayer book was illuminated by a Christian, who - not familiar with the Hebrew script- painted the first illustration upside down.
- The largest fragment of uninterrupted text of the book of Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus) in Hebrew, found at the Genizah of the synagogue in Fustat (Old Cairo). No Hebrew text was preserved thus far. Dated 10th century it is one of the earliest examples of a Hebrew codex.
Piet van Boxel,  Hebraica and Judaica Curator, Bodleian Library said: ‘As the exhibition  title suggests, Crossing Borders recounts the history of  medieval culture at the intersection between Jewish, Christian and  Muslim communities. It is a largely unfamiliar story which needs to be  told and can help us to understand better the relationship between these  communities even in our contemporary times.’
The Bodleian’s  Hebraica collection dates from the earliest years of the Library’s  history and the accession of several key collections in the 19th  century, such as the Oppenheimer Library and fragments from the Cairo  Genizah, has rendered it one of the most important collections of Hebrew  manuscripts in the world, alongside an extraordinarily rich collection  of early Hebrew and Yiddish printed books. All fields of traditional  Hebrew scholarship are represented in the collection. The Library  continues to select and acquire the latest books in the various fields  that support the University’s programmes in Hebrew and Jewish Studies,  and Eastern Christianity.
A book which accompanies the exhibition  is also available for purchase. Crossing Borders: Hebrew Manuscripts  as a Meeting-place of Cultures, edited by Piet van Boxel and Sabine  Arndt, paperback, 128 pp, 70 colour images, £24.99, ISBN:  978 1 85124  313 6

 
 
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