Birds' Head Haggadah

Birds' Head Haggadah
Israel Museum
Manuscript pages showing text of Haggadah with illustrations of bird-headed Jews baking matzo for Passover
TypeIlluminated manuscript
Datec. 1300
Place of originSouthern Germany
Language(s)Hebrew
Scribe(s)Menahem
MaterialDark brown ink and tempera on parchment
Size27 by 18.2 centimetres (10.6 in × 7.2 in); 50 pages (originally)
ScriptBlock calligraphy
ContentsHaggadah for Passover, with accompanying illustrations
Previously keptOwned by Ludwig Marum until 1933
DiscoveredPurchased by Israel Museum in 1946

The Birds' Head Haggadah (c. 1300) is the oldest surviving illuminated Ashkenazi Passover Haggadah. The manuscript, produced in the Upper Rhine region of Southern Germany in the early 14th century, contains the full Hebrew text of the Haggadah, a ritual text recounting the story of Passover – the liberation of the Israelites from slavery in ancient Egypt – which is recited by participants at a Passover Seder. The text is executed in block calligraphy and accompanied by colorful illustrations of Jews performing the Seder practices and reenacting Jewish historical events.

The Birds' Head Haggadah is so called because all Jewish men, women, and children depicted in the manuscript have human bodies with the faces and beaks of birds. Non-Jewish human faces and non-human faces (such as those of angels, the sun, and the moon) are blank or blurred. Numerous theories have been advanced to explain the unusual iconography, usually tied to Jewish aniconism. The Haggadah is in the possession of the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, where it is on permanent exhibition.