Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer
The first of two known to us aggadic collections of midrashim the primary purpose of which is not homiletic, but ethical (the other one Tanna Debbe Eliahu is available in similarly excellent English translation from eBookShuk.com as well).

Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer, or P.R.E., contains midrashim on Genesis, part of Exodus, and a few sentences of Numbers. Ascribed to R. Eliezer b. Hyrcanus, (late 1st-early 2nd century CE, Israel), the most important student of Rabban Yohanan Ben Zakkai and head of the Academy in Lod, it was composed probably in Italy shortly after 833. The author seems to have been from Eretz Israel: customs to which he refers are known to have existed only there.

In the printed texts there are fifty-four chapters, whereas in the MS. used by Friedlander there are only fifty-three chapters, due to the fact that the last two are combined into one. Friedlander's translation is based on hitherto unpublished manuscripts, with variant readings provided in the extensive footnotes. The translator's 45-page Introduction is an exhaustive study of the relationship of P.R.E. to the Talmud, Midrashim, Targumim, Apocryphal Literature and the Liturgy, and of its influence on Jewish and Christian literature.

Besides lessons in ethical behavior, the book contains a good deal of extraneous matters, such as chapters on astronomy, Jewish calendar, kabbalistic traditions, and other things. The author's aim is to show the great ethical value of many bibilical episodes, reveal their beauty and meaning in daily life. The book abounds with legends and stories, and although composed late, the tradition it draws upon is quite old.

The book is composed possibly of three parts. The object of one of these parts is to describe in detail the "ten descents" from heaven to earth, which God is said in Holy Scripture to have made in the past. Another section incorporated in our present work professed to give a detailed account of Rabbinic mysticism, more particularly the ancient mysteries of the Creation (Ma'aseh Bereshith), the Divine Chariot (Ma'aseh Merkabah), as well as the secret of the Calendar (Sod Ha-'Ibbur) and the secret of the Redemption (Sod Ge'ullah).

The book is written in excellent taanitic Hebrew in style, which borders at times on poetry; especially when it deals with the days of Moshiach, to which subject many passages are devoted.

In Varda Books' edition P.R.E. has been completely reset anew and fully hyper linked.
1013171740
Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer
The first of two known to us aggadic collections of midrashim the primary purpose of which is not homiletic, but ethical (the other one Tanna Debbe Eliahu is available in similarly excellent English translation from eBookShuk.com as well).

Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer, or P.R.E., contains midrashim on Genesis, part of Exodus, and a few sentences of Numbers. Ascribed to R. Eliezer b. Hyrcanus, (late 1st-early 2nd century CE, Israel), the most important student of Rabban Yohanan Ben Zakkai and head of the Academy in Lod, it was composed probably in Italy shortly after 833. The author seems to have been from Eretz Israel: customs to which he refers are known to have existed only there.

In the printed texts there are fifty-four chapters, whereas in the MS. used by Friedlander there are only fifty-three chapters, due to the fact that the last two are combined into one. Friedlander's translation is based on hitherto unpublished manuscripts, with variant readings provided in the extensive footnotes. The translator's 45-page Introduction is an exhaustive study of the relationship of P.R.E. to the Talmud, Midrashim, Targumim, Apocryphal Literature and the Liturgy, and of its influence on Jewish and Christian literature.

Besides lessons in ethical behavior, the book contains a good deal of extraneous matters, such as chapters on astronomy, Jewish calendar, kabbalistic traditions, and other things. The author's aim is to show the great ethical value of many bibilical episodes, reveal their beauty and meaning in daily life. The book abounds with legends and stories, and although composed late, the tradition it draws upon is quite old.

The book is composed possibly of three parts. The object of one of these parts is to describe in detail the "ten descents" from heaven to earth, which God is said in Holy Scripture to have made in the past. Another section incorporated in our present work professed to give a detailed account of Rabbinic mysticism, more particularly the ancient mysteries of the Creation (Ma'aseh Bereshith), the Divine Chariot (Ma'aseh Merkabah), as well as the secret of the Calendar (Sod Ha-'Ibbur) and the secret of the Redemption (Sod Ge'ullah).

The book is written in excellent taanitic Hebrew in style, which borders at times on poetry; especially when it deals with the days of Moshiach, to which subject many passages are devoted.

In Varda Books' edition P.R.E. has been completely reset anew and fully hyper linked.
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Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer

Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer

Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer

Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer

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Overview

The first of two known to us aggadic collections of midrashim the primary purpose of which is not homiletic, but ethical (the other one Tanna Debbe Eliahu is available in similarly excellent English translation from eBookShuk.com as well).

Pirke de Rabbi Eliezer, or P.R.E., contains midrashim on Genesis, part of Exodus, and a few sentences of Numbers. Ascribed to R. Eliezer b. Hyrcanus, (late 1st-early 2nd century CE, Israel), the most important student of Rabban Yohanan Ben Zakkai and head of the Academy in Lod, it was composed probably in Italy shortly after 833. The author seems to have been from Eretz Israel: customs to which he refers are known to have existed only there.

In the printed texts there are fifty-four chapters, whereas in the MS. used by Friedlander there are only fifty-three chapters, due to the fact that the last two are combined into one. Friedlander's translation is based on hitherto unpublished manuscripts, with variant readings provided in the extensive footnotes. The translator's 45-page Introduction is an exhaustive study of the relationship of P.R.E. to the Talmud, Midrashim, Targumim, Apocryphal Literature and the Liturgy, and of its influence on Jewish and Christian literature.

Besides lessons in ethical behavior, the book contains a good deal of extraneous matters, such as chapters on astronomy, Jewish calendar, kabbalistic traditions, and other things. The author's aim is to show the great ethical value of many bibilical episodes, reveal their beauty and meaning in daily life. The book abounds with legends and stories, and although composed late, the tradition it draws upon is quite old.

The book is composed possibly of three parts. The object of one of these parts is to describe in detail the "ten descents" from heaven to earth, which God is said in Holy Scripture to have made in the past. Another section incorporated in our present work professed to give a detailed account of Rabbinic mysticism, more particularly the ancient mysteries of the Creation (Ma'aseh Bereshith), the Divine Chariot (Ma'aseh Merkabah), as well as the secret of the Calendar (Sod Ha-'Ibbur) and the secret of the Redemption (Sod Ge'ullah).

The book is written in excellent taanitic Hebrew in style, which borders at times on poetry; especially when it deals with the days of Moshiach, to which subject many passages are devoted.

In Varda Books' edition P.R.E. has been completely reset anew and fully hyper linked.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940150776265
Publisher: Varda Books
Publication date: 09/09/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 4 MB
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