This volume brings together a group of scholars from different fields within Jewish studies who deal with Jewish medical knowledge in ancient and medieval time from a comparative perspective. Based on various methodological and theoretical questions, they address strategies of interaction with earlier Jewish traditions and with other fields of rabbinic discourse (e.g. law, theology, ethics), while exploring the complex interplay between literary forms and the knowledge conveyed. The studies trace the ways of transmission, transformation, rejection, modification and invention of pertinent knowledge in Jewish traditions and beyond by examining broader contexts and points of contact with medical ideas and practices in surrounding cultures (Anc...
ABSTRACT THE ORGANIZATION OF HALAKHIC KNOWLEDGE IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF A SCHO...
Far from being abstract and immaterial, knowledge is impacted in myriad ways by non-intellectual fac...
Jews were excluded from most professions in medieval, predominantly Christian Europe. Bigotry was wi...
It is difficult to speak about Jewish involvement in the medicine and science during the Renaissance...
This dissertation explores how rabbinic texts produced between the first and sixth century CE relate...
Jewish interest in medicine has a religious motivation with the preservation of health and life as r...
This thematic section unearths several ways professionals from a variety of religious communities in...
This paper investigates the compilatory processes that led to the creation of the Talmud Yerushalmi ...
This dissertation examines the attitudes towards the use of medicine in Jewish traditions of the thi...
The contributions in this volume address developments in the emergence of a Jewish scholarship movem...
The Hebrew text referred to as Sefer refu’ot (“Book of Remedies”) or Sefer Asaf (“Book of Asaf”) is ...
This presentation will provide initial insights into the first comprehensive study of the networks o...
With a clear comparative approach, this volume brings together for the first time contributions that...
This presentation explores cultural connections between Jews and Christians in sixteenth-century Ita...
Many studies related to medieval Europe clearly show that the practice of medicine by the Jews was a...
ABSTRACT THE ORGANIZATION OF HALAKHIC KNOWLEDGE IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF A SCHO...
Far from being abstract and immaterial, knowledge is impacted in myriad ways by non-intellectual fac...
Jews were excluded from most professions in medieval, predominantly Christian Europe. Bigotry was wi...
It is difficult to speak about Jewish involvement in the medicine and science during the Renaissance...
This dissertation explores how rabbinic texts produced between the first and sixth century CE relate...
Jewish interest in medicine has a religious motivation with the preservation of health and life as r...
This thematic section unearths several ways professionals from a variety of religious communities in...
This paper investigates the compilatory processes that led to the creation of the Talmud Yerushalmi ...
This dissertation examines the attitudes towards the use of medicine in Jewish traditions of the thi...
The contributions in this volume address developments in the emergence of a Jewish scholarship movem...
The Hebrew text referred to as Sefer refu’ot (“Book of Remedies”) or Sefer Asaf (“Book of Asaf”) is ...
This presentation will provide initial insights into the first comprehensive study of the networks o...
With a clear comparative approach, this volume brings together for the first time contributions that...
This presentation explores cultural connections between Jews and Christians in sixteenth-century Ita...
Many studies related to medieval Europe clearly show that the practice of medicine by the Jews was a...
ABSTRACT THE ORGANIZATION OF HALAKHIC KNOWLEDGE IN EARLY MODERN EUROPE: THE TRANSFORMATION OF A SCHO...
Far from being abstract and immaterial, knowledge is impacted in myriad ways by non-intellectual fac...
Jews were excluded from most professions in medieval, predominantly Christian Europe. Bigotry was wi...