Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages

Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages
Author: Paul E. Szarmach
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1438421699

These are the papers and discussions of the eighth annual conference of the Center for Medieval and Early Renaissance Studies at the State University of New York, Binghamton. The topics discussed were the relationship between Jewish and medieval studies, the patristic basis for Christian attitudes on the Jews, the Hispanic literary tradition, Jewish Spain, problems in Jewish art, and myth criticism and medieval studies.

Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages

Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages
Author: University Of The State Of New York (Albany, N.Y.). Center for Medieval and early Renaissance studies (Binghamton). Conference (8°. 1974. Binghamton, Utah)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1979
Genre:
ISBN: 9780873951654

Jewish Life in the Middle Ages

Jewish Life in the Middle Ages
Author: Israel Abrahams
Publisher: Jewish Publication Society
Total Pages: 479
Release: 1993
Genre: History
ISBN: 0827605420

This classic work of scholarship illustrates the richness, complexity, and fullness of medieval Jewish life. Readers will discover how much was hidden from the inquisitive and often hostile gaze of Christian Europe. Israel Abrahams vividly details the customs, manners, and mores, and delves into the social culture of Jewish life at this time.

Jewish Life in the Middle Ages

Jewish Life in the Middle Ages
Author: Thérèse Metzger
Publisher: New York : Alpine Fine Arts Collection
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1982
Genre: Art
ISBN:

The miniatures which enhance medieval Hebrew manuscripts, whether in prayerbooks, ceremonials for feast days, ritual, legal or philosophical treatises, clearly reflect various aspects of Jewish life during the period. In addition to religious and ceremonial practices, the many facets of everyday life in the family, in cities and in the countryside are treated, as are social and economic activities at all levels and in all professions. Drawing upon the surviving miniatures in illuminated Hebrew manuscripts as primary source material, Thérèse and Mendel Metzger have reconstructed a detailed and exhaustive account of Jewish life in Europe during the Middle Ages. The volume is divided into five sections which encompass historic and geographic background, everyday surroundings, family life and education, social and economic life, and religious activity.--From publisher description.

Rituals of Childhood

Rituals of Childhood
Author: Ivan G. Marcus
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 271
Release: 2015-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 030015674X

In medieval times, when a Jewish boy of five began religious schooling, he was carried from home to a teacher and placed on the teacher's lap. He was then asked to recite the Hebrew alphabet and lick honey from the slate on which it was written, to eat magically inscribed cooked peeled eggs and cakes, to recite an incantation against a demon of forgetfulness, and then to go down to the riverbank with the teacher, where he was told that his future study of the Torah, like the rushing river, would never end. This book--Ivan Marcus's erudite and novel interpretation of this rite of passage--presents a new anthropological historical approach to Jewish culture and acculturation in medieval Christian Europe. Marcus traces ancient Jewish and Greco-Roman elements in the rite and then analyzes it from different perspectives, making use of narrative, legal, poetic, ethnographic, and pictorial sources, as well as firsthand accounts. He then describes contemporary medieval Christian images and initiation rites--including the eucharist and the Madonna and child--as contexts within which to understand the ceremony. He is the first to investigate how medieval Jews were aware of, drew upon, and polemically transformed Christian religious symbols into Jewish counterimages in order to affirm the truth of Judaism and to make sense of living as Jews in an intensely Christian culture.

Biblical Women and Jewish Daily Life in the Middle Ages

Biblical Women and Jewish Daily Life in the Middle Ages
Author: Elisheva Baumgarten
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2022-06-07
Genre: History
ISBN: 0812297520

In Biblical Women and Jewish Daily Life in the Middle Ages, Elisheva Baumgarten examines how medieval Jewish engagement with the Bible--especially in the tellings, retellings, and illustrations of stories of women--offers a window onto aspects of the daily lives and cultural mentalités of Ashkenazic Jews in the High Middle Ages.

Jewish Culture and Society in Medieval France and Germany

Jewish Culture and Society in Medieval France and Germany
Author: Ivan G. Marcus
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2023-04-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000948862

These studies explore the history of the Jewish minority of Ashkenaz (northern France and the German Empire) during the High Middle Ages. Although the Jews in medieval Europe are usually thought to have been isolated from the Christian majority, they actually were part of a 'Jewish-Christian symbiosis.' A number of studies in the collection focus on Jewish-Christian cultural and social interactions, the foundations of the community ascribed to Charlemagne, and especially on the fashioning of a martyrological collective identity in 1096. Even when Jews resisted Christian pressures they often did so by internalizing Christian motifs and turning them on their heads to argue for the truth of Judaism alone. This may be seen especially in the formation of Jews as martyrs, a trope that places Jews as collective Christ figures whose suffering brings about vicarious atonement. The remainder of the studies delve into the lives and writings of a group of Jewish ascetic pietists, Hasidei Ashkenaz, which shaped the religious culture of most European Jews before modernity. In Sefer Hasidim (Book of the Pietists), attributed to Rabbi Judah the Pietist of Regensburg (d. 1217), one finds a mirror of everyday Jewish-Christian interactions even while the author advances a radical view of Jewish religious pietism.