The Jews of Pinsk

Titel: The Jews of Pinsk : 1506 to 1880 / Mordechai Nadav ; ed. by Mark Jay Mirsky and Moshe Rosman ; translated by Moshe Rosman and Faigie Tropper
Verfasser:
Veröffentlicht: Stanford, Calif. : Stanford Univ. Press, 2007
Umfang: XLVIII, 606 S.
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch; Mehrsprachig
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
ISBN: 080474159X ; 9780804741590

The Jews of Pinsk, 1506-1880 is the first part of a major scholarly project about a small city in Eastern Europe where Jews were a majority of the population from the end of the eighteenth century. Pinsk boasted both traditional rabbinic scholars and famous Hasidic figures, and over time became an international trade emporium, a center of the Jewish Enlightenment, a cradle of Zionism and the Jewish Labor movement, and a place where Orthodoxy struggled vigorously with modernity.

The two volumes of Pinsk history were originally part of a literature created by Jews who survived the Holocaust and were determined to keep in memory a vital world that flourished for half a millennium. In this case, the results are extraordinary: no town of Eastern Europe has been described in such fascinating detail, invaluable to Jewish and non-Jewish historians alike.

For the second volume of this two-volume collection, see The Jews of Pinsk, 1881-1941 .