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Let the music play for Seder night

A page from a medieval haggadah tells us a lot about the world of the man who commissioned it, says Eli Abt

March 25, 2021 10:18
Barcelona Haggadah
Illuminated page from 'Prayers for the celebration of the Passover',Prayers for the celebration of the Passover; in Hebrew. On vellum, written in the 14th century, with many miniatures and ornaments of singular design and execution. Quarto.
4 min read

The more varied the talk about leaving Egypt the better” says the Haggadah. Perhaps it’s the Seder nights that honed the skills of our best storytellers, our Sholem Aleichems and Howard Jacobsons.

Here’s a Seder story told 700 years ago by one anonymous but clearly knowledgeable Spanish Jew. Happily able to afford the services of an expert scribe and an accomplished artist, he decided “a picture paints a thousand words” and asked his team to help depict his world on a single leaf of his own new Haggadah.

They chose Rabban Gamaliel’s three Seder symbols (Mishnah Pesachim 10:5) for what we know as the matzah page in the British Library’s spectacular Barcelona Haggadah, one of the most precious mediaeval Hebrew illuminated manuscripts still in existence.

What do we see here? On either side of the man brandishing two matzot, Gamaliel’s words “Matzah Zu” at the top identify, in gleaming burnished gold, the composition’s matzah centrepiece, embellished as discussed in the Talmud (BT Pesachim 37a), an attractive Pesach custom we seem sadly to have neglected.