Academic Studies Press
The Jews in Italy
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Edited by:
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About this book
Based on lectures given at the conference “The Jews in Italy: Their Contribution to the Development and Diffusion of Jewish Heritage”, this collection offers the reader a wide range of subjects reflecting various scholarly perspectives such as history; Christian-Jewish relations; Kabbalah; commentary on the Bible and Talmud; language, grammar, and translation; literature; philosophy; gastronomy; art; culture; folklore; and education.
Author / Editor information
Yaron Harel is Full Professor at the department of Jewish History at Bar Ilan University. He is the vice-chairman of the Israeli Historical Society, and incumbent of the Yekutiel and Hannah Klein Chair in the History the Rabbinate during the Modern Period, Bar Ilan University. His research deals with political, social, and cultural history of the Jews in the Middle East in modern times. He published twelve books and several peer-reviewed articles.Perani Mauro :
Mauro Perani is Full Professor of Hebrew at the University of Bologna, Department of Cultural Heritage. President of the European Association for Jewish Studies in 2006-2010, he is currently President of the Italian Association for Jewish Studies (AISG). In 2013, he discovered the oldest complete Sefer Torah, in the University of Bologna library. In the same year, he received a PhD honoris causa from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem for his research on thousands of medieval Hebrew manuscripts reused in Italian archives as bindings in the 16th-18th centuries. Director and Editor of Materia Giudaica, journal of the AISG, he also founded the series Corpus Epitaphiorum Hebraicorum Italiae. He has worked on the “Italian Genizah Project” for thirty-five years, and is currently partaking in the “Books within Books” initiative as a Member of the Scientific Board. He is the author of a dozen volumes and more than four hundred articles.
Mauro Perani is Full Professor of Hebrew at the University of Bologna, Department of Cultural Heritage. President of the European Association for Jewish Studies in 2006-2010, he is currently President of the Italian Association for Jewish Studies (AISG). In 2013, he discovered the oldest complete Sefer Torah, in the University of Bologna library. In the same year, he received a PhD honoris causa from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem for his research on thousands of medieval Hebrew manuscripts reused in Italian archives as bindings in the 16th-18th centuries. Director and Editor of Materia Giudaica, journal of the AISG, he also founded the series Corpus Epitaphiorum Hebraicorum Italiae. He has worked on the “Italian Genizah Project” for thirty-five years, and is currently partaking in the “Books within Books” initiative as a Member of the Scientific Board. He is the author of a dozen volumes and more than four hundred articles.
Yaron Harel is Full Professor at the department of Jewish History at Bar Ilan University. He is the vice-chairman of the Israeli Historical Society, and incumbent of the Yekutiel and Hannah Klein Chair in the History the Rabbinate during the Modern Period, Bar-Ilan University. His research deals with political, social, and cultural history of the Jews in the Middle East in modern times. He published twelve books and several peer-reviewed articles.
Reviews
“Individually and collectively [the articles] provide valuable information and analysis about the current state of research of Italian Jewry in particular and in the context of Jewish studies in general. ... The Jews in Italy: Their Contribution to the Development and Diffusion of Jewish Heritage highlights how at the communal level Italian Jewish culture embodies Italian, and indeed global, culture.”
—Howard Adelman, H-Judaic
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Preface
viii - Part One. The Roman Period
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Chapter 1. Roman Attitudes to Jews and Judaism in the First Century BCE: Between Hellenistic Traditions and Local Realities
1 - Part Two. The Middle Ages and the Renaissance
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Chapter 2. The Oldest Complete Extant Sefer Torah Rediscovered at the Bologna University Library: Codicological, Textual, and Paleographic Features of an Ancient Eastern Tradition
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Chapter 3. Palestinian and Babylonian Traditions in Italy at the Outset of the Middle Ages: The Yerushalmi in the Writings of R. Isaiah di Trani (the Rid)
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Chapter 4. Abraham de Balmes’s Miqneh Abram: An Adaptation of Modistic Concepts by a Hebrew Grammarian of the Renaissance
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Chapter 5. The Anonymous Hebrew Translation of Giordano Ruffo’s De medicina equorum and Its Language
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Chapter 6. Between the Book of Jossipon and the Book of Jasher
127 -
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Chapter 7. Italian Jewry and Kabbalistic Rites
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Chapter 8. Ladino Translations from Italy: The Bible, Pirke Avot, the Passover Haggadah, and the Siddur
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Chapter 9. The Jews of France and Italy during the Later Middle Ages and the Renaissance
188 -
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Chapter 10. Torah and Nature in the Writings of Some Italian Jewish Thinkers of the Renaissance
199 -
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Chapter 11. Prenuptial Agreements in Ketubot from Italy
214 - Part Three. The Modern Period
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Chapter 12. Jewish Ashkenazi Gastronomy in Northern Italy in the Early Modern Period: The Testimony of the Book Mitzvot Hanashim
228 -
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Chapter 13. The Depiction of Jesus’s Circumcision and Presentation in the Temple in Early Modern Paintings in Venice: Some Questions on Jesus’s Identity
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Chapter 14. Freemasonry and Saint-Simonism as Carriers of Enlightenment Values in David Levi’s Weltanschauung
268 -
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Chapter 15. The Unique Characteristics of Dybbuk Exorcisms in Rabbinic Documents from Eighteenth-Century Italy
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Chapter 16. Rabbinic Ties between Italy and Aleppo in the Eighteenth Century
312 - Part Four. The Contemporary Period
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Chapter 17. Jewish Solidarity: The Actions and Support of the Union of Italian Israelite Communities for the Jews of Libya and Ethiopia in the 1930s
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Chapter 18. The Dispute between Italy and France in Tunisia: The Role of Language and the Position of Italian Jewry
344 -
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Chapter 19. Jews as Promoters of Italian Civilization in Libya
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Chapter 20. The Relations of the Holy See with the Jewish People after the 1993 Fundamental Agreement between the Holy See and the State of Israel: Divergence between the Interreligious Dialogue with the Jews of Rome and the Diplomatic Dialogue with Israel
371 -
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Chapter 21. Primo Levi: Chemist/Writer, Italian/Jew
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Chapter 22. Jewish Educational Proposals in Nineteenthand Twentieth-Century Florence
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Index
417