Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
- Publication Year
Articles 91 - 93 of 93
Full-Text Articles in Cultural History
Close Quarters Privacy And Jewish House Space In Early Modern Polish Cities, Adam Teller
Close Quarters Privacy And Jewish House Space In Early Modern Polish Cities, Adam Teller
Early Modern Workshop: Resources in Jewish History
The following texts were chosen in order to illustrate the implications of the growth in Jewish population in Poland's larger towns during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries when the number of Jews grew faster than the non-Jewish authorities would allow the Jewish quarters to expand. This led to an increasing degree of crowding in the Jewish quarter as a whole as well as in individual houses. To illustrate this, some demographic data on the situation in the Jewish quarter of Poznan may be seen in the presentation.
This presentation is for the following text(s):
- Cracow Community Ordinance of 5355 (1595) …
Question Of The Eruv In Early Modern Europe, David Katz
Question Of The Eruv In Early Modern Europe, David Katz
Early Modern Workshop: Resources in Jewish History
Both the responsum of Rabbi Aboab and that of Hakham Zvi Ashkenazi reflect a feature of pre-modern kehillah life almost never dealt with in scholarly literature, namely, the urban eruv, a physical boundary delineating space in which one is permitted to carry items on Sabbath, erected by the kehillah.
This presentation is for the following text(s), available in the PDF file:
- Samuel Aboab's Responsum 257
- Hakham Zvi Ashkenazi's Responsum, She'elot u'Teshuvot Hakham Zvi no. 6 (1699)
Early Modern Jewries, Emw 2004
Early Modern Jewries, Emw 2004
Early Modern Workshop: Resources in Jewish History
The 2004 workshop’s goal was to look broadly at the early modern period, and develop a number of themes that might be pursued at subsequent workshops. At the workshop, a number of scholars worked together for three days trying to define the parameters of this chronological period in Jewish history. Participants have covered a broad, if still necessarily limited, range of geographic, thematic, and disciplinary topics, resulting in the first collection of impressive texts on early modern Jewish history. They include privileges granted by monarchs and lords to Jews (privileges granted to Jews of Great Poland in 1453, to a …