A History of Judaism - Martin Goodman

(Jacob Rumans) #1

566 notes to pp. 378–91


see E. Fram, My Dear Daughter: Rabbi Benjamin Slonik and the Education of
Jewish Women in Sixteenth‑ Century Poland (Cincinnati, 2007); on tehinnot, see
C. Weissler, Voices of the Matriarchs: Listening to the Prayers of Early Modern
Jewish Women (Boston, 1998); on Me’am Loez, see M. Molho, Le Meam‑ Loez:
Encyclopédie populaire du sephardisme levantin (Salonica, 1945).


Chapter 15: New Certainties and New Mysticism



  1. Shulhan Arukh, YD, 335: 1 - 4, 9 2. Maggid Meysharim, p. 57b; J. Karo, Sefer
    Maggid Meysharim (Jerusalem, 1990), 23 (p. 403), translated in R.  J.  Z.  Wer-
    blowsky, Joseph Karo: Lawyer and Mystic (Philadelphia, 1977), 260. 3. On the
    production and reception of the Shulhan Arukh, see I.  Twersky, ‘The Shulhan
    ʿArukh: Enduring Code of Jewish Law’, Judaism 16 (Philadelphia, 1967), 141 -



    1. Shulhan Arukh, Hoshen Mishpat 26.4; on Isserles, see A. Siev, HaRama:
      Rabbi Moshe Isserles (Jerusalem, 1956) (Heb.). 5. On Hayyim b. Betsalel and
      the attack on Karo and Isserles, see E.  Reiner, ‘The Rise of an Urban Commu-
      nity: Some Insights on the Transition from the Medieval Ashkenazi to the 16th
      Century Jewish Community in Poland’, KHZ ̇ 207 (2003), 363 - 72. 6. Shulhan
      Arukh, OH 3:2 (trans. Jacobs) (on privy); on Maharam, see S. M. Chones, Sefer
      Toledot haPosekim (New York, 1945– 6), 366 - 71; on Isserles’ recognition of local
      custom, see L. Jacobs, A Tree of Life: Diversity, Flexibility, and Creativity in Jew‑
      ish Law, 2nd edn (London and Portland, Oreg., 2000), 211 - 15. 7. Responses to
      changed conditions for workmen: b. Ber. 16a; Shulhan Arukh, OH 191:2; cf.
      Jacobs, Tree of Life, 150; on Hanukkah lights: m. B.K 6:6; Shulhan Arukh, OH
      671:7; on homosexuality: Bah to Tur. EH 24; cf. Jacobs, Tree of Life, 136 - 7.



  2. Isserles, YD 376:4 (trans. Denburg) in Laws of Mourning, 242 - 6. 9. On
    yahrzeit, see M.  Lamm, The Jewish Way in Death and Mourning (New York,
    1988); on Yizkor, see A. Z. Idelsohn, Jewish Liturgy and its Development (New
    York, 1967), 230f., 293. 10. On kitniot, see I. M. Ta- Shma, Minhag Ashkenaz
    haKadmon: Heker veIyun (Jerusalem, 1992), 271– 82. 11. On the spread of
    yeshivot in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, see E. Fram, Ideals Face Real‑
    ity: Jewish Law and Life in Poland, 1550 ‑ 1655 (Cincinnati, 1997), 5 - 6. 12. The
    example is excerpted and adapted from the article on pilpul by Alexander Kisch
    in I.  Singer, ed., The Jewish Encyclopaedia, 12 vols. (New York, 1901– 6),
    10:42. 13. b. B.B 14b (term pilpul ). 14. On the Vilna Gaon, see E. Stern, The
    Genius: Elijah of Vilna and the Making of Modern Judaism (New Haven,
    2014). 15. I. Cohen, History of Jews in Vilna (Philadelphia, 1943). 16. A.
    David, In Zion and Jerusalem: The Itinerary of Rabbi Moses Basola (1521‑ 1523)
    (Jerusalem, 1999); Zohar, Devarim 296b in I. Tishby, The Wisdom of the Zohar,
    3 vols. (Oxford, 1989), 1: 164 - 5; on Jewish settlement in Safed, see A.  David,
    ‘Demographic Changes in the Safed Jewish Community in the Sixteenth Cen-
    tury’, in R. Dan, ed., Occident and Orient: A Tribute to the Memory of A. Scheiber
    (Leiden, 1988); A.  Cohen and B.  Lewis, Population and Revenue in the Towns
    of Palestine in the Sixteenth Century (Princeton, 1978). 17. L. Fine, Physician

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