Abstract
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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Acknowledgements
This is an expanded version of a paper presented at the annual conference of the Department of Talmud and Oral Law, Bar-Ilan University, in June 2023, in honor of Professor Jeffrey Woolf. Research for this study was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant 3149/21). My thanks to Adam Teller for sharing his thoughts on the definition of Ashkenaz over a long cup of coffee.
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Fram, E. Where to Turn? How One Italian Rabbi Understood Ashkenaz, ca. 1600. JEW HIST 37, 173–208 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10835-023-09458-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10835-023-09458-6