何去何从?一位意大利拉比如何理解阿什肯纳兹,约 1600 年

IF 0.2 2区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Edward Fram
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究的重点是 1600 年前后意大利北部二级拉比精英中的一员,拉比雅各布-海尔布隆(卒于 1625 年)。文章基于对海尔布隆在他编写的一篇答辩状和一本犹太-德意志犹太法手册中引用的法律资料的研究,认为海尔布隆将德意志或阿什肯纳兹犹太人的概念理解为一种独立于地理的文化建构。他感兴趣的是代代相传的特定法律传统,无论它迁移到哪里,而不是生活在德意志土地上的犹太人的习俗。因此,海尔布隆接受克拉科夫的拉比摩西-伊瑟勒斯(卒于 1572 年)作为阿什肯纳兹习俗的权威代言人。研究指出,在拉比约瑟夫-卡罗的法典《Shulḥan 'Arukh》于 1565 年出版到威尼斯重新出版(1593 年)并附有伊瑟勒斯的注释之间的几年里,以及此后的几年里,海尔布隆一直依赖卡罗的《Shulḥan 'Arukh》,尽管它经常代表的是塞法尔传统。然而,一旦海尔布隆有机会接触到波兰的法律著作,他不仅在自己的法律思想中采用了这些著作,还通过白话化的方式对其进行了改编,以供他人使用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Where to Turn? How One Italian Rabbi Understood Ashkenaz, ca. 1600

This study focuses on a member of the secondary rabbinic elite in northern Italy around the year 1600, Rabbi Jacob Heilbronn (d. 1625). Based on an examination of legal sources cited by Heilbronn in a responsum and a Judeo-German handbook of Jewish law that he prepared, the article argues that Heilbronn understood the notion of German, or Ashkenazic Jewry as a cultural construct that was independent of geography. He was interested in a specific legal tradition handed down from generation to generation, wherever it may have migrated to, not the practices of Jews living in the German lands. Thus, Heilbronn accepted Rabbi Moses Isserles (d. 1572) of Kraków as an authoritative voice of Ashkenazic practice. The study notes that in the years between the publication of Rabbi Joseph Caro’s legal code, Shulḥan ‘Arukh, in 1565 and its republication with Isserles’s glosses in Venice (1593), and probably for a few years thereafter, Heilbronn relied on Caro’s Shulḥan ‘Arukh even though it often represented Sephardic traditions. However, once Heilbronn had access to legal works from Poland, he not only adopted them in his own legal thinking but adapted them for the use of others through vernacularization.

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来源期刊
Jewish History
Jewish History HISTORY-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
33.30%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The purpose of Jewish History, the sole English-language publication devoted exclusively to history and the Jews, is to broaden the limits of historical writing on the Jews. Jewish History publishes contributions in the field of history, but also in the ancillary fields of art, literature, sociology, and anthropology, where these fields and history proper cross paths. The diverse personal and professional backgrounds of Jewish History''s contributors, a truly international meeting of minds, have enriched the journal and offered readers innovative essays as well as special issues on topics proposed by guest editors: women and Jewish inheritance, the Jews of Latin America, and Jewish self-imaging, to name but a few in a long list.
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