We are delighted to announce that The National Library of Israel's online 
catalogue now includes more than 4000 linked records to freely available 
digitized Hebrew manuscripts online (post-dating the Dead Sea Scrolls) from 
institutions around the world, including 1000 on the NLI website itself. These 
represent many more Judaica records than are currently available through either 
the Digital Scriptorium   
<http://app.cul.columbia.edu:8080/exist/scriptorium/index.xml> or the Catalogue 
of Digitized Medieval 
Manuscripts<http://manuscripts.cmrs.ucla.edu/Manuscripts_list.php?goto=1>   or 
similar digitized manuscript aggregators.  As we continue to add links, we aim 
to serve as the global access portal for Hebrew digitized manuscripts.

Most of the scans are full color; only a minority are in black and white - 
namely, digitizations of microfilms rather than scans from the original 
manuscript. Usually, these represent full codices, but sometimes single pages 
serve as samples of a larger work, or alternatively represent the complete 
extant fragment.

We do not link items accessed for a fee or via subscription (thus, Cairo 
Genizah items available via the Friedberg Genizah Project or similar projects 
are not included). Also, as we don't catalog individual Genizah fragments, 
digitized items available at the Princeton University Genizah Project (The 
Princeton Geniza Project<http://gravitas.princeton.edu/tg/tt/> ) are not 
included in our database. We are aware of, and are working to include, the 
digitized microfilms of JTS and HUC mss and the Chaim Reich collection 
facsimiles, now being uploaded at Hebrew Books.org<http://hebrewbooks.org/>  
and its affiliate  Hebrew Manuscripts.org<http://hebrewmanuscripts.org/> . 
Finally, we realize that many online items are not yet included in our 
collection of microfilmed manuscripts and thus do not appear in our catalogue. 
Please be patient as we work to rectify the situation.

For items that may be in error, or incomplete, or refer to unstable links, or 
were completely missed, we encourage you to inform us so we may correct and add 
to our growing collection. Institutions that upload Judaica manuscripts are 
urged to let us know so we may add links from/to our catalog records as soon as 
possible.


1.      Search for Digitized Hebrew Manuscripts
The National Library of Israel's home page is The National Library of 
Israel<http://web.nli.org.il/sites/nli/hebrew/Pages/default.aspx> ; from there, 
click on the Library's "Online Catalogue," and then to "Manuscripts" in the 
drop down menu of "libraries." (Or go directly to IMHM Online 
Catalogue<http://aleph.nli.org.il/F?func=file&file_name=find-b&local_base=nnlmss>
 )

To locate all records with links to digitized manuscripts online, search in our 
online catalogue "Basic search [חיפוש בסיסי]:" under "subject[נושאים] " field, 
type  "digitized manuscripts[כתב יד. סריקה] ". To limit the search to a 
specific subject, search under "Advanced search [חיפוש מתקדם] " with items 
"digitized [סריקה]"  and the relevant subject (e.g. מקרא for all biblical 
related mss). To sort the results by location, click on "source/title [מקור ]" 
in the upper section of the screen. Results may appear in either "table" or 
"brief" formats.


2.      Browse Digitized Hebrew Manuscripts
To simply browse through all digitized manuscripts on the NLI digital website 
itself (at this point, about 1000 items, including but not limited to 250 from 
the Rosenthaliana collection in Amsterdam; 100 from Columbia University in NY; 
50 from the Braginsky collection in Zurich; as well as nearly 400 of NLI's own 
collection), click Digital Collections at The National Library of 
Israel<http://dlib.nli.org.il/R/?func=collections&collection_id=7312> .



3.      Rabbinics Mss Online
The old Talmud Mss Online<http://jnul.huji.ac.il/dl/talmud/> website is in the 
process of being dismantled. In its place, we are happy to refer readers to the 
new and more comprehensive  Rabbinics Manuscripts 
Online<http://web.nli.org.il/sites/nli/Hebrew/collections/jewish-collection/Talmud/Pages/default.aspx>
 (still in beta mode but to be updated significantly on a consistent basis).



We must clarify a legal point: just because we link to, or feature on our 
website, fully digitized manuscripts, either owned by The National Library or 
other institutions, this does not represent permission for use from either The 
National Library or those other institutions, for any use exceeding the Fair 
Use provisions defined by law, which include private research. Only explicit 
permission in writing from the institutional owners of the manuscripts 
themselves and the copyright holders may grant authorization for additional use.


Department of Manuscripts &
The Institute of Microfilmed Hebrew Manuscripts
The National Library of Israel
Jerusalem, Israel

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