Sefer Asufot

Sefer ha-Asuppot[lower-alpha 1] (Hebrew: ספר האסופות; lit. "Book of the collections")[lower-alpha 2] is the name of a compilation of medieval German Jewish Halakha and Minhagim, the manuscript of which is privately held by David H. Feinberg of New York[lower-alpha 3][1] (fragments from the text are also found in MSS Paris 1408[2] and Girona 11.17[3]). The work includes a large number of teachings, minhagim, descriptions of popular costumes, halachic rulings, and collected stories from numerous authors, displaying the ordinary life of Rhineland Jews in during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The manuscript is endowed with vowel-signs almost throughout, which makes it the only non-liturgical and non-Biblical text of its kind, and the vowels follow the Spanish pronunciation.[4] The manuscript is the work of several scribes, containing multiple hands and multiple inks.[5] One scribe was probably named Meir.[6]

Original titleספר האסופות
CountryRhineland, Germany
LanguageHebrew
Publication date
13th-14th century

Authorship is now generally attributed to Elijah b. Isaac Lattes of Carcassonne,[lower-alpha 4] but many scholars dissent. The main author was Ashkenazi and a student of Eleazar of Worms (d. 1238),[lower-alpha 5] but some content is from a later period, including a model writ of divorce dated 1307.[7][5][8] Aptowitzer attributed at least part of the text to a grandson of Eliezer b. Joel HaLevi, suggesting Eliezer's great-grandson Abraham b. Eliezer haLevi, a student of Meir of Rothenburg (d. 1293),[9] but Dziubas disagrees.[10]

Samuel David Luzzatto published some excerpts from the book in 1846.[11] Eliakim Carmoly publicly appealed for the manuscript's publication in 1867.[12] Jacob Glassberg published some excerpts on circumcision in 1892.[13] Moses Gaster published some excerpts on Passover in his Montefiore Report 1893.[7] Aptowitzer included sections which he attributed to Eliezer b. Joel HaLevi's grandson in Mavo l'Sefer RAbYH (1938).[9] Abraham Isaac Dziubas published a two-volume edition of the Asuppot's section on forbidden foods in 1942.[5] Simha Assaf republished the excerpt on education in 1948.[14] Excerpts were republished by Samuel Eliezer Stern in Moriah 173 (1987) and Tzfunot 1 (1989).[6] Alexander Jungerman included excerpts on idolatry in Qovetz Shitot Qamai: A"Z (2006).[15]

Contents

The contest of the work mostly deal with the laws relating to divorce, Rosh Hashanah, tefillin, the ritual slaughtering of animals, the observance of Shabbat and the observance of Passover, with a description of the ritual of the Seder. The work also discuses medical prescriptions, charms, marriage ceremonies, numerous commercial and religious contracts, various forms of excommunication, and mourning and burial customs. Lastly, at the end of the work is a summary of all material discussed. The vocalization of the work has been studied by scholars, who have concluded that medieval German Ashkenazi vocalization was much akin to contemporary Sephardic vocalization.[4][16]

Character

The author of Asuppot compiles several rich literary resources, which displays more interest in every branch of religious life than the majority of similar compilers. Particularly, the author often mentions local customs and even superstitions. Additionally, the accuracy with which he indicates the sources of his information is far beyond his contemporaries. From a philological point of view, the book possesses considerable interest, from the fact that numerous German glosses are found in the text that explain difficult or obscure terms, and some that show, incidentally, the intimate knowledge of German possessed by the Jews of that time.[4][16][17]

References

  1. "ספר האסופות". www.nli.org.il. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  2. "לקוטים מהתלמוד ופרוש עליהם PARIS BN 1408". www.nli.org.il. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  3. "ספר האסופות (הלכות יין נסך, קטע) | כתב יד NNL_ALEPH997009165665305171 | הספרייה הלאומית". www.nli.org.il (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  4. "ASUFOT - JewishEncyclopedia.com". www.jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-06-18.
  5. "HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: ספר האסופות -- אליהו בן יצחק, מקרקשונה מיחס לו". hebrewbooks.org. Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  6. "SEFER HA'ASSUFOT, MANUSCRIPT ON PARCHMENT [14th century]". Sotheby's. 2004. (N.b. this source refers to Samuel Eliezer Stern as "S. A. Stern").
  7. Montefiore, Claude Goldsmid (1894). The Jewish Quarterly Review. Macmillan.
  8. Compact Memory / Magazin für die Wissenschaft des Judenthums : Vol. 10 (1883). BerlinBerlinBerlin. 1883.
  9. Aptowitzer, Victor (1938). מבוא לספר ראבי״ה (in Hebrew). מקיצי נרדמים. (This book is available on Otzar as מבוא לראבי"ה)
  10. Dziubas, Abraham Isaac (1939). Gaguine, Shem Tob (ed.). "ספר האסופות". יהודית. 1 (1): 16–24.
  11. Luzzatto, Samuel David (1846). הליכות קדם (in Hebrew). בדפוס דוד בן יעקב פרופס כ״ץ. pp. 40–70.
  12. "⁨UNKNOWN⁩ | ⁨הלבנון⁩ | 24 מאי 1867 | אוסף העיתונות | הספרייה הלאומית". www.nli.org.il (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  13. "HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: זכרון ברית לראשונים -- יעקב, הגוזר". hebrewbooks.org. Retrieved 2023-02-16.
  14. "HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: מקורות לתולדות החינוך בישראל - חלק ד -- אסף, שמחה, 1889-1953". hebrewbooks.org. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  15. "HebrewBooks.org Sefer Detail: קובץ שיטות קמאי - עבודה זרה - חלק א, דף ב עד מא -- יונגרמן, שלום מאיר בן יחיאל מיכאל". hebrewbooks.org. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  16. Fine, Lawrence (2001-11-18). Judaism in Practice: From the Middle Ages Through the Early Modern Period. Princeton University Press. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-691-05787-3.
  17. Marcus, Ivan G. (1998). Rituals of Childhood: Jewish Acculturation in Medieval Europe. Yale University Press. pp. 29–31. ISBN 978-0-300-07658-5.
  1. Also: Asufot, Assufot, Asupot.
  2. The manuscript itself does not give a title; a later hand has written האסופות כ"י The collections, a manuscript at its head. Modern writers generally refer to the book as ספר האסופות, "Book of the collections". The first generation of 19th-century authors to discuss this MS (Luzzatto, Zunz) initially called it ספר דינים, "Book of laws".
  3. Previously MS Halberstam 115 and MS Montefiore 134. The first known owner is Isaac Raphael Finzi, (1728-1813), rabbi of Padua and vice-president of the 1806 Grand Sanhedrin. On Finzi's death it passed to Mordecai Ghirondi, who lent it to Samuel David Luzzatto. Montefiore College sold the manuscript at auction in 2004.
  4. First proposed by Samuel David Luzzatto in 1846. The manuscript was then owned by Mordecai Ghirondi.
  5. Heinrich Gross doubted the quality of this evidence, but it is accepted by Glassberg, Dziubas, and Stern.


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