Hi Everyone –  fyi:  
https://katz.sas.upenn.edu/resources/blog/jews-giraffes-and-italian-renaissance

The Penn Libraries Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies-Herbert D. Katz 
Center for Advanced Judaic Studies is an ongoing partnership that annually 
invites a distinguished scholar to study a rare Judaica manuscript in our 
collection, present a public lecture, and create a mini-MOOC.  For more 
information about the program, as well as past lectures and MOOCS available to 
view online, see below:

https://schoenberginstitute.org/sims-herbert-d-katz-center-distinguished-fellow-in-jewish-manuscript-studies/
The fellowship, funded in part by the David Ruderman Distinguished Scholar 
fund, pairs a prominent scholar in any field of Jewish studies with a 
manuscript in one of our collections. Our goal is to bring distinguished 
scholars to the Penn Libraries to research the university’s rich holdings in 
Judaic manuscript material. Fellows will share their discoveries and expertise 
at a public lecture sponsored by the Jewish Studies Program at Penn and by 
offering a mini-course through edX.org<https://www.edX.org> (PennX-Datz1.1.x).
Fellows:
2019-2020: Fabrizio Lelli, University of Salento (Lecce, Italy)
Fabrizio Lelli is Associate Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature at the 
University of  Salento (Lecce, Italy). His research focuses mainly on the 
philosophical and mystical literature of late Medieval and Early Modern Italian 
Jewish authors and on the intellectual relations between Jewish and Christian 
scholars in the Italian Renaissance. For the fellowship, he will examine the 
fascinating manuscript of Abraham Abraham ben Mordecai Farissol’s 16th century 
geographical treatise, Iggeret orhot ʻolam (LJS 499; 
1524<http://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017/d/medren/9958289873503681>) the first 
modern Hebrew work on geography with a special interest in the Jewish 
dispersion, and also the first Hebrew writing that mentions the New World.
Public Lecture: Changing Minds: Geographic Discoveries and New Worlds
through the Eyes of a Renaissance Jewish Scholar. Held Tuesday, September 10, 
2019, in the Class of 1978 Pavilion in the Kislak Center for Special 
Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts. Recording available 
here<https://youtu.be/bGIY9fiy9_k>.
2018-2019: Elisabeth Hollender, Goethe University Frankfurt
Elisabeth Hollender is professor of Jewish Studies at the Goethe Institute in 
Frankfurt, Germany. Her primary area of study is medieval Hebrew literature 
with a special emphasis on liturgical poetry, liturgy, and commentarial 
literature. For the fellowship, she will turn her attention to CAJS Rar MS 
382<http://openn.library.upenn.edu/Data/0002/html/cajs_rarms382.html>, a 
thirteenth-century Mahzor, to reveal how this seemingly ordinary manuscript can 
shed new insight into the understanding of medieval Jewish liturgy.
Public Lecture: A Mahzor is a Mahzor is a Mahzor? Studying UPenn Rare MS 382. 
Held Tuesday, March 19, 2019, in the Class of 1978 Pavilion in the Kislak 
Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts. Recording available 
here<https://youtu.be/Xh0o_QA0u_U>.
2017-2018: Judith Olszowy-Schlanger, École Pratique des Hautes Études (Sorbonne)
Judith Olszowy-Schlanger is professor of medieval Hebrew palaeography at the 
École Pratique des Hautes Études (Sorbonne), Paris. Her main research interests 
include Hebrew manuscripts, the Cairo Geniza, Karaite studies, Hebrew 
grammatical traditions and legal traditions in the Middle Ages. She will 
examine the paleographic features of a selection of manuscripts in Penn 
Libraries.
Public Lecture: Genizah Scribes at Work, held Wednesday, April 25, 2018, in the 
Class of 1978 Pavilion in the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books 
and Manuscripts. Recording available here<https://youtu.be/yVyGL6FLrB0>.
MOOC: Coming soon!
2016-2017: Alessandro Guetta Institut national des langues et civilisations 
orientales (INALCO)
Alessandro Guetta is a professor of Jewish intellectual history at INALCO in 
Paris.  His publications include monographs on Niccol Machiavelli (Invito alla 
lettura di Machiavelli, 1991) and philosopher and Kabbalist Elijah Benamozegh 
(Philosophy and Kabbalah: Elijah Benamozegh and the Reconciliation of Western 
Thought and Jewish Esotericism, 2009). Professor Guetta will devote his study 
to Malkiel Aschkenazi’s Tavnith ha-mishkan and Hanukath ha-bayith (now CAJS Rar 
Ms 460), produced in Mantua in the early seventeenth century.
Public lecture: “No Longer Alien Residents”: Italian Jewish Texts in the Late 
Renaissance, Tuesday, February 27, 2018, in the Class of 1978 Pavilion in the 
Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts. Recording 
available here<https://youtu.be/M6pwRWVISHQ>.
MOOC: The Tabernacle in Word & Image: An Italian Jewish Manuscript Revealed. 
Available 
here<https://www.edx.org/course/the-tabernacle-in-word-image-an-italian-jewish-manuscript-revealed-0>.
2015-2016:  Y. Tzvi Langermann, Professor of Arabic, Bar-Ilan University
Professor Langerman is an internationally recognized authority on Hebrew and 
Arabic medicine and the study of scientific manuscripts, will be in residence 
in the summer of 2015 to research and catalog a 15th-century Sicilian medical 
miscellany containing texts and notes written in Judeo-Arabic, Hebrew, and 
Arabic. The manuscript is a recent addition to the Penn Libraries’ extensive 
collection of medieval and early modern scientific manuscripts.
Public lecture: Tales of Three Texts: The Judaeo-Arabic and Hebrew Medical 
Texts in UPenn MS Codex 1649. Held Thursday, September 3, 2015, in the Class of 
1978 Pavilion in the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and 
Manuscripts. Recording available 
here<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f7wMngoheKU>.
MOOC: The History of Medieval Medicine Through Jewish Manuscripts. Available 
here<https://www.edx.org/course/history-medieval-medicine-through-jewish-pennx-katz1-1x>.


Arthur Kiron, Ph.D.
Schottenstein-Jesselson Curator of Judaica Collections
University of Pennsylvania Libraries
3420 Walnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6206
Tel: (215) 573-7431
Fax: (215) 898-0559
Web: http://www.library.upenn.edu/collections/judaica/

Wednesdays and Fridays at:

Library at the Hebert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies
420 Walnut St.
Philadelphia, PA 19106
Tel: (215) 746-1290
Web: https://www.library.upenn.edu/lkcajs

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