Centuries of mystery unmasked in rare Megillos that tell more than just the Purim story
While megillos are written by sofrim on parchment, following many of the halachos of writing a sefer Torah, up until the 18th century sofrim actually included pictures on the scrolls, something you would never find in a sefer Torah. (The halachos are complicated, but today, most wouldn’t use an illustrated megillah for Purim readings.)
The magnificent, illustrated Ferrara Megillah is a case in point. Written and illustrated by Moshe ben Avraham Peshkarol in 1616, it measures almost a foot in height, and unrolled completely, it’s over 14 feet in length.
Beyond its age and size, the megillah’s illustrations make it unique. Each column of text is framed by vertical lines, with a flower growing, vine-like, out of an ornate planter. At the top of the frame sits an odd, beturbaned figure. Above every column, the illustrator has crafted a vivid and colorful scene reflecting the unfolding action described in the text — a Purim shpiel in pictures!
We don’t know much about the sofer, Moshe ben Avraham Peshkarol. At the very end of the scroll, he signs his work: “Made by young Moshe, son of our honored teacher, Rabbi Avraham, here in the city of Ferrara, 1616.”
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