VOLUME SEVEN HISTORY OF JUDAISM THE CAMBRIDGE · 2017. 10. 19. · OREEN, Independent Scholar 40 Toleration, Integration, Regeneration, and Reform: Rethinking the Roots and Routes
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Cambridge University Press978-0-521-88904-9 — The Cambridge History of JudaismEdited by Jonathan Karp , Adam Sutcliffe FrontmatterMore Information
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Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data(Revised for volume 7)Main entry under title:
The Cambridge History of Judaism / Edited by W. D. Davies and Louis Finkelsteinisbn 978-0-521-21880-1 (hardback)
I. Judaism – HistoryI. Davies, W.D. II. Finkelstein, Louis
296'.09'01 BM165
isbn 978-0-521-88904-9 Hardback
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JONATHAN KARP, History and Judaic Studies Departments,Binghamton University, State University of New YorkADAM SUTCLIFFE, Department of History, King’s College London
part i the world of early modern jewry, c .1500–1650 13
1 The Catholic Church and the Jews 15
KENNETH STOW, Emeritus, Department of Jewish History,University of Haifa
2 Judaism and Protestantism 50
R. PO-CHIA HSIA, Department of History, Pennsylvania State University
3 The Rise of Ottoman Jewry 77
JOSEPH R. HACKER, Emeritus, Department of Jewish History,The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
4 The Shifting Legal and Political Status of Early Modern Jewries 113
ANDREAS GOTZMANN, Department of Religious Studies, Universityof Erfurt
5 Jews and the Early Modern Economy 139
FRANCESCA TRIVELLATO, Department of History, Yale University
6 The Early Modern Jewish Community and its Institutions 168
ELISHEVA CARLEBACH, Department of History, Columbia University
part ii themes and trends in early modern jewish life 199
7 Iberia and Beyond: Judeoconversos and the Iberian Inquisitions 201
DAVID GRAIZBORD, Arizona Center for Judaic Studies,The University of Arizona
Map A Europe in 1559. Merry E. Wiesner Hanks, Early ModernEurope, 1450–1789 (Cambridge, 2006), map 5
page xiii
Map B Europe after the Peace of Westphalia, 1648. Merry E. WiesnerHanks, Early Modern Europe, 1450–1789 (Cambridge, 2006),map 10
xiv
Map C The Ottomans in the Mediterranean world, c. 1600. Adapted fromPalmira Brummett, Mapping the Ottomans (Cambridge, 2015),p. xviii
xv
Map D Jewish centers in early modern Europe. Adapted from JudithR. Baskin and Kenneth Seeskin (eds.), The Cambridge Guide toJewish History, Religion and Culture (Cambridge, 2010), map 6.1
11.1 Siddur [Daily Prayers], printed decorated border with handwrittentext. Vienna, Aryeh ben Judah Leib of Trebitsch, 1712–14.New York, Library of the Jewish Theological Seminary, MS 9340.
303
11.2 Perek Shirah [Chapter of Song]. Vienna, Meshullam Zimmel benMoses of Polna (Bohemia), 1719. Zurich, Braginsky Collection,BCB 257.
304
11.3 Esther scroll, printed decorated border designed by FrancescoGriselini, with handwritten text. Venice, 1746. Zurich, BraginskyCollection, BCS 13.
306
11.4 Otot ha-‘Ahavah [Signs of Love], Hebrew manuscript on paper.Amsterdam, 1748. Amsterdam, Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana, SpecialCollections, University of Amsterdam, Otot 1748042.
307
11.5 Bah˙ya ben Asher, Kad ha-Kemah
˙[Jar of Flour], with five different
censors’ signatures: Camillo Jaghel, Luigi da Bologna 1600,Laurentius Franguellus, Renato daModena 1626, and Girolamo daDurazzano 1640. Constantinople, no printer, 1515. Amsterdam,Bibliotheca Rosenthaliana, Special Collections, University ofAmsterdam, ROG A-611.
29.1 The Jews of theHabsburg Empire: late eighteenth century. EvyatarFriesel, Atlas of Modern Jewish History (New York, 1990), [34–5.]Map composed by Michael K. Silber.
36.1 African slavery in the Americas, c. 1770. Adapted from ThomasBenjamin, The Atlantic World: Europeans, Africans, Indians andTheir Shared History, 1400–1900 (Cambridge, 2009), [map 8.1]