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Jonathan Eybeschutz

Jonathan Eybeschutz (רבי יהונתן אייבשיץ) (also Eibeschutz or Eibeschitz; 1690  – 1764) was a Talmudist, Halachist, Kabbalist, holding positions as Dayan of Prague, and later as Rabbi of the "Three Communities": Altona, Hamburg and Wandsbek. He is well known for his conflict with Jacob Emden in the Emden–Eybeschutz Controversy.

Biography Edit

Eybeschutz's father Nosson Nota[1] was the rabbi in Ivančice (German: Eibenschütz, sometimes Eibeschutz), Habsburg Moravia. Born in Kraków, Eybeschutz was a child prodigy in Talmud; on his father's death, he studied in the yeshiva of Meir Eisenstadt in Prostějov (Prossnitz), and then later in Holešov (Holleschau). He also lived in Vienna for a short time. He married Elkele Spira, daughter of Rabbi Isaac Spira, and they lived in Hamburg for two years with Mordecai ha-Kohen, Elkele's maternal grandfather.

At the age of eighteen, Eybeschutz was appointed rabbi of Bolesławiec, where he stayed for three years, afterward settling in Prague in 1700 and becoming head of the yeshivah and a famous preacher. The people of Prague held Eybeschutz in high esteem and he was considered second there only to Chief Rabbi David Oppenheim.

In Prague, Eybeschutz received permission to print the Talmud—but with the omission of all passages contradicting the principles of Christianity in consultation with Chief Rabbi David Oppenheim. Legends and rumors seeking to discredit the event said that he did this without the consultation of the Rabbis of Prague, and they revoked the printing license.

In 1724, in Prague, he was suspected of being a Sabbatean. Despite denouncing the Sabbatean movement on Yom Kippur the accusations continued.[2] Therefore, In 1736, Eybeschutz was only appointed dayan of Prague and not chief rabbi. He became rabbi of Metz in 1741, and in 1750, was elected rabbi of the "Three Communities:" Altona, Hamburg, and Wandsbek.

In July 1725, the Ashkenazic beit din of Amsterdam issued a ban of excommunication on the entire Sabbatian sect (kat ha-ma’aminim). Writings of Sabbatian nature found by the beit Din at that time were attributed to Eybeschutz [3] In early September, similar excommunication proclamations were issued by the batei din of Frankfurt and the triple community of Altona, Hamburg, and Wandsbeck. The three bans were printed and circulated in other Jewish communities throughout Europe.[4] Rabbi Ezekiel Katzenellenbogen, the chief rabbi of the Triple Community [5] was unwilling to attack Eybeschutz publicly, mentioning that ‘greater than him have fallen and crumbled’ and that ‘there is nothing we can do to him’ [5] However, Rabbi Katzenelenbogen stated that one of the texts found by the Amsterdam beit din "Va-Avo ha-Yom el ha-Ayyin” was authored by Jonathan Eybeschutz and declared that the all copies of the work that were in circulation should be immediately burned.[6] As a result of Eybeschutz and other rabbis in Prague formulating a new (and different) ban against Sabbatianism shortly after the other bans were published, his reputation was restored and Eybeschutz was regarded as having been totally vindicated.[7] The issue was to arise again, albeit tangentially, in the 1751 dispute between Emden and Eybeschutz.

He was "an acknowledged genius" in at least three separate areas of Jewish religious creativity: Talmud and Jewish law (halakhah); homiletics (derush) and popular preaching; and Kabbalah. "He was a man of erudition, but he owed his fame chiefly to his personality. Few men of the period so profoundly impressed their mark on Jewish life."[8]

Sabbatian controversy Edit

Eybeschutz was again accused of secret Sabbatean beliefs following a suspicion that he had issued amulets recognising the Messianic claims of Sabbatai Zevi.[8] The controversy started when Yaakov Emden found connections between the Kabbalistic and homiletic writings of Eybeschutz with those of the Sabbatean Judah Leib Prossnitz, whom Eybeschutz knew from his days in Prossnitz.[2] Rabbi Jacob Emden accused him of heresy.[8] The majority of the rabbis in Poland, Moravia, and Bohemia, as well as the leaders of the Three Communities supported Eybeschutz: the accusation was "utterly incredible"—in 1725, Eybeschutz was among the Prague rabbis who excommunicated the Sabbateans. Others suggest that the Rabbis issued this ruling because they feared the repercussions if their leading figure, Eybeschutz, was found to be a Sabbatean. Jacob Emden suggests that the rabbis decided against attacking Eybeschutz out of a reluctance to offend his powerful family and a fear of rich supporters of his living in their communities [9] The recent discovery of notarial copies of the actual amulets found in Metz and copying the amulets written by Eybeschutz support Emden's view that these are Sabbatean writings.[10]

In 1752, the controversy between Emden and Eybeschutz raged. Clashes between opposing supporters occurred in the streets drawing the attention of the secular authorities.[11] Emden fled. The controversy was heard by both the Senate of Hamburg and by the Royal Court of Denmark. The Hamburg Senate quickly found in favour of Eybeschutz.[12] The King of Denmark asked Eybeschutz to answer a number of questions about the amulets. Conflicting testimony was put forward and the matter remained officially unresolved[13] although the court imposed fines on both parties for civil unrest and ordered that Emden be allowed to return to Altona.[14] At this point Eybeschutz was defended by Carl Anton, a convert to Christianity, but a former disciple of Eybeschutz.[15] Emden refused to accept the outcome and sent out vicious pamphlets attacking Eybeschutz.[16] Eybeschutz was re-elected as Chief Rabbi. In December of that year, the Hamburg Senate rejected both the King's decision and the election result. The Senate of Hamburg started an intricate process to determine the powers of Eybeschutz, and many members of that congregation demanded that he should submit his case to rabbinical authorities.

The controversy was a momentous incident in Jewish history of the period—involving both Yechezkel Landau and the Vilna Gaon. Eybeschutz approached the young Gaon to examine and appraise the amulets. The Gaon replied in a letter that while he had sympathy with Eybeschutz he did not believe that the words of a young man would assist in the dispute. Some time after the dispute Landau, who at that time was a relatively unknown rabbi from Yampol, attempted to resolve the dispute offering both parties a dignified exit. His proposal was accepted by Eybeschutz but vehemently rejected by Emden, who continued to publish attacks on Eybeschutz.[16] Only after Emden's death did the halachic decision of Landau bring an end to the personal dispute. Some believe that Emden may be credited with having crushed the lingering belief in Sabbatai current even in some Orthodox circles.[8] However, it is only recently that the notarised copies of all of the amulets have been rediscovered, clearly Sabbatean in nature.[17] and the debate of 1725 has been located in the archives.[18]

In 1760, the quarrel broke out once more when some Sabbatean elements were discovered among the students of Eybeschutz' yeshivah. At the same time his younger son, Wolf Jonas Eybeschutz, presented himself as a Sabbatean prophet, and was close to several Frankists, with the result that the yeshivah was closed.[19]

Descendants Edit

Jonathan Eybeschutz's grandson was rumored to be Baron Thomas von Schoenfeld, an apostate Jew who inherited his grandfather's collection of Sabbatean kabbalistic works. He eventually left the Sabbatean movement and founded a Masonic lodge called the Asiatic Brethren [de], one of four Illuminati lodges in Vienna. After his uncle's death on August 10, 1791, he was offered the leadership of the Frankist movement which he refused. Katz disputes this claim however, saying that Schoenfeld was a member of the Dobruschka family of Brno and was in no way related, either by blood or marriage, to Eybeschutz. According to Gershom Scholem, the ideology of the Asiatic Brethren mixed Kabbalistic and Sabbatean ideas jumbled together with Christian theosophic doctrines.[20]

Some of Eybeschutz's descendants are the Yiddish novelist and Holocaust survivor Chava Rosenfarb (1923–2011),[21] Chaim Kreiswirth (1918-2001) of Antwerp, Belgium, and Shmuel Wosner (1913–2015), a prominent Haredi rabbi and posek ('decisor of Jewish law') who lived in Bnei Brak, Israel.[citation needed] His granddaughter was the Breslau poet and intellectual Lucie Domeier [de], born Esther Gad.

Works Edit

Thirty of his works in the area of Halakha (Jewish law) have been published. In addition, several of his works on homiletics, teaching methodology, and Kabbalah are currently in print. Only one of his works was published in his lifetime. The posthumous printing of so many of his works is testimony to his influence on his contemporaries through his oral teachings and his personality.

Eybeschutz also wrote Luchoth Edut (Tablets of Testimony), in which he describes the whole dispute and attempts to refute the charges against him. It includes also the letters of recommendation which he had received from leading rabbis who came to his defense. In January 2014, Maggid Books, a division of Koren Publishers Jerusalem published "Derash Yehonatan: Around the Year with Yehonatan Eybeshitz" by Rabbi Shalom Hammer. This work is one of the first English translations of Eybeshütz's writings.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Rabbi Jonathan Eybeschutz - (5450-5524); 1690-1764".
  2. ^ a b Moshe Arie Perlmutter, R.Yehonatan Aibeshits ve-yahaso el ha-Shabtaut : hakirot hadashot 'al yesod ketav ha-yad shel s.va-avo ha-yom el ha-'ayin
  3. ^ Emden, Beit Yehonatan ha-Sofer, fol. 4.
  4. ^ Excerpts from the testimonies were printed by Emden in his Beit Yehonatan ha-Sofer, Altona 1762, fol. 4v; the full text of the testimonies, letters, and proclamations pertaining to the investigation can be found in [Josef Prager], Gahalei Esh, Oxford, Bodleian Library. Ms. 2186, Vol. I, fols. 70r -129
  5. ^ a b Gahalei Esh, Vol. I, fol. 54
  6. ^ Prager, Gahalei Esh, Vol. I, fol. 54v.
  7. ^ [Prager], Gahalei Esh, fol.112r
  8. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainAbrahams, Israel (1911). "Eybeschutz, Jonathan". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 10 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 90.
  9. ^ Emden, Sefer Hitabbkut, fos. 1v-2r
  10. ^ Sid Leiman/Simon Schwarzfuchs, New Evidence on the Emden-Eybeschutz Controversy. The Amulets from Metz, in: Revue des Etudes Juives 165 (2006). The Plate of the amulets appear at page 248,
  11. ^ Kuryer Polski 16 June 1751
  12. ^ Grunwald Hamburgs deutsche Juden 103-105
  13. ^ Grunwald Hamburgs deutsche Juden 107
  14. ^ Emden Edut be Ya'akov 10r 63r
  15. ^ "Kurze Nachricht von dem Falschen Messias Sabbathai Zebhi," etc. (Wolfenbüttel, 1752)
  16. ^ a b Emden Sefer Shimush Amsterdam 1759 4r-v
  17. ^ Sid Leiman/Simon Schwarzfuchs, New Evidence on the Emden-Eybeschutz Controversy. The Amulets from Metz, in: Revue des Etudes Juives 165 (2006)
  18. ^ Paweł Maciejko Coitus interruptus in And I Came this Day unto the Fountain
  19. ^ Carmilly-Weinberger, Moshe. Wolf Jonas Eybeschutz - An "Enlightened" Sabbatean in Transylvania. In: Studia Judaica, 6 (1997) 7-26
  20. ^ Katz, Jacob (1970). Jews and Freemasons in Europe 1723–1939. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-47480-5.
  21. ^ "Sefer Luhot 'Edut". Jewish Public Library. Retrieved 2022-02-21.

Sources Edit

  • Moshe Perlmutter, R.Yehonatan Aibeshits ve-yahaso el ha-Shabtaut : hakirot hadashot 'al yesod ketav ha-yad shel s.va-avo ha-yom el ha-'ayin (Tel Aviv:1947 )
  • Carl Anton, Period documents concerning the Emden/Eibeschuetz controversy. (Reprint 1992)
  • Elisheva Carlebach, The pursuit of heresy : Rabbi Moses Hagiz and the Sabbatian controversies (Columbia 1990)
  • Gershom Scholem, Meḥḳere Shabtaʼut (1991)
  • Sid Leiman/Simon Schwarzfuchs, New Evidence on the Emden-Eibeschiitz Controversy. The Amulets from Metz, Revue des Etudes Juives 165 (2006),
  • Sid Z. Leiman, "When a Rabbi Is Accused of Heresy: R. Ezekiel Landau's Attitude toward R. Jonathan Eibeschuetz in the Emden- Eibeschuetz Controversy in FROM ANCIENT ISRAEL TO MODERN JUDAISM Edited by Jacob Neusner
  • Leiman, Sid (Shnayer) Z. When a rabbi is accused of heresy : the stance of the Gaon of Vilna in the Emden-Eibeschuetz controversy in Me'ah She'arim (2001) 251-263
  • Leiman, Sid (Shnayer) Z. When a rabbi is accused of heresy : the stance of Jacob Joshua Falk in the Emden-Eibeschuetz controversy. Rabbinic Culture and Its Critics (2008) 435-456
  • Moshe Carmilly-Weinberger, Wolf Jonas Eybeschutz - an "Enlightened" Sabbatean in Transylvania Studia Judaica, 6 (1997) 7-26
  • Yehuda Liebes "A Messianic Treatise by R. Wolf the son of R. Jonathan Eibeschutz." Qiryat Sefer 57 (1982/2)148-178.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Jonathan Eybeschutz at Wikimedia Commons
  • Eybeschutz, Jonathan, jewishencyclopedia.com
  • Jonathan Eybeschutz, chabad.org
  • Jonathan Eibeschutz, jewishvirtuallibrary.org
  • detailed Hebrew article by Hayyim Rabinovitz in Sinai 1964

jonathan, eybeschutz, רבי, יהונתן, אייבשיץ, also, eibeschutz, eibeschitz, 1690, 1764, talmudist, halachist, kabbalist, holding, positions, dayan, prague, later, rabbi, three, communities, altona, hamburg, wandsbek, well, known, conflict, with, jacob, emden, em. Jonathan Eybeschutz רבי יהונתן אייבשיץ also Eibeschutz or Eibeschitz 1690 1764 was a Talmudist Halachist Kabbalist holding positions as Dayan of Prague and later as Rabbi of the Three Communities Altona Hamburg and Wandsbek He is well known for his conflict with Jacob Emden in the Emden Eybeschutz Controversy Contents 1 Biography 2 Sabbatian controversy 3 Descendants 4 Works 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksBiography EditEybeschutz s father Nosson Nota 1 was the rabbi in Ivancice German Eibenschutz sometimes Eibeschutz Habsburg Moravia Born in Krakow Eybeschutz was a child prodigy in Talmud on his father s death he studied in the yeshiva of Meir Eisenstadt in Prostejov Prossnitz and then later in Holesov Holleschau He also lived in Vienna for a short time He married Elkele Spira daughter of Rabbi Isaac Spira and they lived in Hamburg for two years with Mordecai ha Kohen Elkele s maternal grandfather At the age of eighteen Eybeschutz was appointed rabbi of Boleslawiec where he stayed for three years afterward settling in Prague in 1700 and becoming head of the yeshivah and a famous preacher The people of Prague held Eybeschutz in high esteem and he was considered second there only to Chief Rabbi David Oppenheim In Prague Eybeschutz received permission to print the Talmud but with the omission of all passages contradicting the principles of Christianity in consultation with Chief Rabbi David Oppenheim Legends and rumors seeking to discredit the event said that he did this without the consultation of the Rabbis of Prague and they revoked the printing license In 1724 in Prague he was suspected of being a Sabbatean Despite denouncing the Sabbatean movement on Yom Kippur the accusations continued 2 Therefore In 1736 Eybeschutz was only appointed dayan of Prague and not chief rabbi He became rabbi of Metz in 1741 and in 1750 was elected rabbi of the Three Communities Altona Hamburg and Wandsbek In July 1725 the Ashkenazic beit din of Amsterdam issued a ban of excommunication on the entire Sabbatian sect kat ha ma aminim Writings of Sabbatian nature found by the beit Din at that time were attributed to Eybeschutz 3 In early September similar excommunication proclamations were issued by the batei din of Frankfurt and the triple community of Altona Hamburg and Wandsbeck The three bans were printed and circulated in other Jewish communities throughout Europe 4 Rabbi Ezekiel Katzenellenbogen the chief rabbi of the Triple Community 5 was unwilling to attack Eybeschutz publicly mentioning that greater than him have fallen and crumbled and that there is nothing we can do to him 5 However Rabbi Katzenelenbogen stated that one of the texts found by the Amsterdam beit din Va Avo ha Yom el ha Ayyin was authored by Jonathan Eybeschutz and declared that the all copies of the work that were in circulation should be immediately burned 6 As a result of Eybeschutz and other rabbis in Prague formulating a new and different ban against Sabbatianism shortly after the other bans were published his reputation was restored and Eybeschutz was regarded as having been totally vindicated 7 The issue was to arise again albeit tangentially in the 1751 dispute between Emden and Eybeschutz He was an acknowledged genius in at least three separate areas of Jewish religious creativity Talmud and Jewish law halakhah homiletics derush and popular preaching and Kabbalah He was a man of erudition but he owed his fame chiefly to his personality Few men of the period so profoundly impressed their mark on Jewish life 8 Sabbatian controversy EditMain article Jacob Emden Sabbatean controversy Eybeschutz was again accused of secret Sabbatean beliefs following a suspicion that he had issued amulets recognising the Messianic claims of Sabbatai Zevi 8 The controversy started when Yaakov Emden found connections between the Kabbalistic and homiletic writings of Eybeschutz with those of the Sabbatean Judah Leib Prossnitz whom Eybeschutz knew from his days in Prossnitz 2 Rabbi Jacob Emden accused him of heresy 8 The majority of the rabbis in Poland Moravia and Bohemia as well as the leaders of the Three Communities supported Eybeschutz the accusation was utterly incredible in 1725 Eybeschutz was among the Prague rabbis who excommunicated the Sabbateans Others suggest that the Rabbis issued this ruling because they feared the repercussions if their leading figure Eybeschutz was found to be a Sabbatean Jacob Emden suggests that the rabbis decided against attacking Eybeschutz out of a reluctance to offend his powerful family and a fear of rich supporters of his living in their communities 9 The recent discovery of notarial copies of the actual amulets found in Metz and copying the amulets written by Eybeschutz support Emden s view that these are Sabbatean writings 10 In 1752 the controversy between Emden and Eybeschutz raged Clashes between opposing supporters occurred in the streets drawing the attention of the secular authorities 11 Emden fled The controversy was heard by both the Senate of Hamburg and by the Royal Court of Denmark The Hamburg Senate quickly found in favour of Eybeschutz 12 The King of Denmark asked Eybeschutz to answer a number of questions about the amulets Conflicting testimony was put forward and the matter remained officially unresolved 13 although the court imposed fines on both parties for civil unrest and ordered that Emden be allowed to return to Altona 14 At this point Eybeschutz was defended by Carl Anton a convert to Christianity but a former disciple of Eybeschutz 15 Emden refused to accept the outcome and sent out vicious pamphlets attacking Eybeschutz 16 Eybeschutz was re elected as Chief Rabbi In December of that year the Hamburg Senate rejected both the King s decision and the election result The Senate of Hamburg started an intricate process to determine the powers of Eybeschutz and many members of that congregation demanded that he should submit his case to rabbinical authorities The controversy was a momentous incident in Jewish history of the period involving both Yechezkel Landau and the Vilna Gaon Eybeschutz approached the young Gaon to examine and appraise the amulets The Gaon replied in a letter that while he had sympathy with Eybeschutz he did not believe that the words of a young man would assist in the dispute Some time after the dispute Landau who at that time was a relatively unknown rabbi from Yampol attempted to resolve the dispute offering both parties a dignified exit His proposal was accepted by Eybeschutz but vehemently rejected by Emden who continued to publish attacks on Eybeschutz 16 Only after Emden s death did the halachic decision of Landau bring an end to the personal dispute Some believe that Emden may be credited with having crushed the lingering belief in Sabbatai current even in some Orthodox circles 8 However it is only recently that the notarised copies of all of the amulets have been rediscovered clearly Sabbatean in nature 17 and the debate of 1725 has been located in the archives 18 In 1760 the quarrel broke out once more when some Sabbatean elements were discovered among the students of Eybeschutz yeshivah At the same time his younger son Wolf Jonas Eybeschutz presented himself as a Sabbatean prophet and was close to several Frankists with the result that the yeshivah was closed 19 Descendants EditJonathan Eybeschutz s grandson was rumored to be Baron Thomas von Schoenfeld an apostate Jew who inherited his grandfather s collection of Sabbatean kabbalistic works He eventually left the Sabbatean movement and founded a Masonic lodge called the Asiatic Brethren de one of four Illuminati lodges in Vienna After his uncle s death on August 10 1791 he was offered the leadership of the Frankist movement which he refused Katz disputes this claim however saying that Schoenfeld was a member of the Dobruschka family of Brno and was in no way related either by blood or marriage to Eybeschutz According to Gershom Scholem the ideology of the Asiatic Brethren mixed Kabbalistic and Sabbatean ideas jumbled together with Christian theosophic doctrines 20 Some of Eybeschutz s descendants are the Yiddish novelist and Holocaust survivor Chava Rosenfarb 1923 2011 21 Chaim Kreiswirth 1918 2001 of Antwerp Belgium and Shmuel Wosner 1913 2015 a prominent Haredi rabbi and posek decisor of Jewish law who lived in Bnei Brak Israel citation needed His granddaughter was the Breslau poet and intellectual Lucie Domeier de born Esther Gad Works EditThirty of his works in the area of Halakha Jewish law have been published In addition several of his works on homiletics teaching methodology and Kabbalah are currently in print Only one of his works was published in his lifetime The posthumous printing of so many of his works is testimony to his influence on his contemporaries through his oral teachings and his personality Homiletics derush and popular preaching citation needed Ya arot Devash a frequently quoted collection of the sermons of Eybeschutz Tiferet Yehonatan on the weekly Torah portion Midrash Yehonatan on the weekly Torah portion Ahavat Yehonatan on the weekly Haftarah Shirei Mitzvot the 613 commandments in rhymed acrostics Notes on the Passover Haggadah as well as Perush al Piska Had Gadya on the poem Had Gadya On Talmud and halakhah citation needed Chasdei Yehonatan Pilpulim on assorted Sugyas of Talmud and halakhah Novellae to Shulchan Aruch Urim ve Tummim on Choshen Mishpat Kereti u Peleti on Yoreh De ah Sar ha Alef on Orach Chayim Notes on Maimonides Mishneh Torah Binah la Ittim and Chiddushim al Hilkot Yom Tov both dealing with the holy days and both published by his students based on notes taken from his lectures Bene Ahuvah on the matrimonial laws Tiferet Yisrael notes on the rabbinical laws of niddah regarding menstruation with additions by the editor his grandson Israel Matuk MidVash notes on the rabbinical laws of shabbos On Kabbalah citation needed Shem Olam a collection of letters on the KabbalahEybeschutz also wrote Luchoth Edut Tablets of Testimony in which he describes the whole dispute and attempts to refute the charges against him It includes also the letters of recommendation which he had received from leading rabbis who came to his defense In January 2014 Maggid Books a division of Koren Publishers Jerusalem published Derash Yehonatan Around the Year with Yehonatan Eybeshitz by Rabbi Shalom Hammer This work is one of the first English translations of Eybeshutz s writings References Edit Rabbi Jonathan Eybeschutz 5450 5524 1690 1764 a b Moshe Arie Perlmutter R Yehonatan Aibeshits ve yahaso el ha Shabtaut hakirot hadashot al yesod ketav ha yad shel s va avo ha yom el ha ayin Emden Beit Yehonatan ha Sofer fol 4 Excerpts from the testimonies were printed by Emden in his Beit Yehonatan ha Sofer Altona 1762 fol 4v the full text of the testimonies letters and proclamations pertaining to the investigation can be found in Josef Prager Gahalei Esh Oxford Bodleian Library Ms 2186 Vol I fols 70r 129 a b Gahalei Esh Vol I fol 54 Prager Gahalei Esh Vol I fol 54v Prager Gahalei Esh fol 112r a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Abrahams Israel 1911 Eybeschutz Jonathan In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 90 Emden Sefer Hitabbkut fos 1v 2r Sid Leiman Simon Schwarzfuchs New Evidence on the Emden Eybeschutz Controversy The Amulets from Metz in Revue des Etudes Juives 165 2006 The Plate of the amulets appear at page 248 Kuryer Polski 16 June 1751 Grunwald Hamburgs deutsche Juden 103 105 Grunwald Hamburgs deutsche Juden 107 Emden Edut be Ya akov 10r 63r Kurze Nachricht von dem Falschen Messias Sabbathai Zebhi etc Wolfenbuttel 1752 a b Emden Sefer Shimush Amsterdam 1759 4r v Sid Leiman Simon Schwarzfuchs New Evidence on the Emden Eybeschutz Controversy The Amulets from Metz in Revue des Etudes Juives 165 2006 Pawel Maciejko Coitus interruptus in And I Came this Day unto the Fountain Carmilly Weinberger Moshe Wolf Jonas Eybeschutz An Enlightened Sabbatean in Transylvania In Studia Judaica 6 1997 7 26 Katz Jacob 1970 Jews and Freemasons in Europe 1723 1939 Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 47480 5 Sefer Luhot Edut Jewish Public Library Retrieved 2022 02 21 Sources EditMoshe Perlmutter R Yehonatan Aibeshits ve yahaso el ha Shabtaut hakirot hadashot al yesod ketav ha yad shel s va avo ha yom el ha ayin Tel Aviv 1947 Carl Anton Period documents concerning the Emden Eibeschuetz controversy Reprint 1992 Elisheva Carlebach The pursuit of heresy Rabbi Moses Hagiz and the Sabbatian controversies Columbia 1990 Gershom Scholem Meḥḳere Shabtaʼut 1991 Sid Leiman Simon Schwarzfuchs New Evidence on the Emden Eibeschiitz Controversy The Amulets from Metz Revue des Etudes Juives 165 2006 Sid Z Leiman When a Rabbi Is Accused of Heresy R Ezekiel Landau s Attitude toward R Jonathan Eibeschuetz in the Emden Eibeschuetz Controversy in FROM ANCIENT ISRAEL TO MODERN JUDAISM Edited by Jacob Neusner Leiman Sid Shnayer Z When a rabbi is accused of heresy the stance of the Gaon of Vilna in the Emden Eibeschuetz controversy in Me ah She arim 2001 251 263 Leiman Sid Shnayer Z When a rabbi is accused of heresy the stance of Jacob Joshua Falk in the Emden Eibeschuetz controversy Rabbinic Culture and Its Critics 2008 435 456 Moshe Carmilly Weinberger Wolf Jonas Eybeschutz an Enlightened Sabbatean in Transylvania Studia Judaica 6 1997 7 26 Yehuda Liebes A Messianic Treatise by R Wolf the son of R Jonathan Eibeschutz Qiryat Sefer 57 1982 2 148 178 External links Edit Media related to Jonathan Eybeschutz at Wikimedia Commons Eybeschutz Jonathan jewishencyclopedia com Jonathan Eybeschutz chabad org Jonathan Eibeschutz jewishvirtuallibrary org detailed Hebrew article by Hayyim Rabinovitz in Sinai 1964 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jonathan Eybeschutz amp oldid 1167844579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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