Prato Haggadah 8v
Prato Haggadah 8v
A Haggadah is the script for the seder ritual on the first nights of Passover. The word means “telling,” and the seder is a ritual for the telling of the Passover story—the Exodus from Egypt—in a particular rabbinic fashion.
This Haggadah, produced in ca. 1300 in the Catalan region of Spain by an unknown scribe and artist, is an exceptional sample of a decorated Haggadah manuscript in the local tradition; it may be compared with the famous Sarajevo Haggadah, with which it shares a liturgical and artistic tradition. Its fine decorations and illustrations are a testament to the wealth of its patron and his concern for beautifying the tradition. Notably, the manuscript is unfinished (for unknown reasons), allowing us to view the process by which such manuscripts were created.
The page before you simply shows the magnificence of this manuscript on its finished pages—the milky, soft parchment, the vivid colors of the decorations, and the gold leaf; all resemble decoration found in other contemporaneous Haggadot such as the Sarajevo Haggadah.