Today in 1482, Abraham ben Hayyim dei Tintori [The Dyer] printed in Bologna, Italy, a Pentateuch with Targum Onkelos and Rashi's commentary, probably the first printed book with vocalization and cantillation.
In the colophon, the proofreader Joseph Ḥayyim praised Abraham as "unequaled in the realm of Hebrew printing and celebrated everywhere."
According to Encyclopedia.com, Israel Nathan Soncino and his son Joshua Solomon secured Abraham's services for the work on the first printed Hebrew Bible – with vocalization and cantillation – which left the press at Soncino in February 1488.
According to History of Information, On April 30, 2014 Christie's in Paris auctioned a fine complete copy printed on vellum in an eighteenth century binding. It sold for €2,785,000.