Unknown Regulations in Ladino from Salonika (ca. 1740): Ethos, Ideal, Reality

Autores/as

  • Yaron Ben-Naeh Jewish History Department, the Hebrew University, Jerusalem

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30827/meahhebreo.v65i0.936

Palabras clave:

Ottoan Jewry, Salonica, regulations, community, religion, traditional society, culture, islam

Resumen

In the mid-1930s, Viennese bookseller David Fränkel described a booklet containing regulations in Ladino. Its whereabouts were unknown until it recently appeared in a public auction in Jerusalem. Though Fränkel attributed it to Istanbul, his description leaves no room for doubt that this is the same text, but internal evidence points to Salonika. The four-page booklet is unsigned and undated; one can only conjecture that it was printed in the mid-1740s upon the initiative of the rabbinical and communal leadership in Salonika. It contains two groups of regulations…

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Biografía del autor/a

Yaron Ben-Naeh, Jewish History Department, the Hebrew University, Jerusalem

Jewish History Department

Publicado

2016-12-28

Cómo citar

Ben-Naeh, Y. (2016). Unknown Regulations in Ladino from Salonika (ca. 1740): Ethos, Ideal, Reality. Miscelánea De Estudios Árabes Y Hebraicos. Sección Hebreo, 65, 137–149. https://doi.org/10.30827/meahhebreo.v65i0.936

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