- Eliezer ben Nathan
Eliezer ben Nathan (
Hebrew : אליעזר בן נתן) ofMayence (1090-1170), Ra'aven (ראב"ן), was ahalakist and liturgical poet. As an early Rishon, he was a contemporary of theRashbam andRabbeinu Tam , and one of the earliest of theTosafists . He was the son-in-law of RabbiEliakim b. Joseph of Mayence, a fellow student ofRashi . Through his four daughters Eliezer became the ancestor of several learned families which exerted a great influence upon religious life in the subsequent centuries. One of his great-grandsons was R.Asher b. Jehiel (ROSH), father of R. Jacob, author of the "Ṭurim "."Eben ha-'Ezer"
Eliezer proves himself conscientious and careful in his decisions. Unlike
R. Tam , he possessed little self-confidence, and in his humility and reverence for tradition he is inclined to extremely rigid interpretations of the Law. Solomon's injunction (Prov. i. 8), "Forsake not the teaching of thy mother," he interprets as meaning, "What the older rabbis have prohibited we must not permit" (No. 10). The chapters on civil law contain many an interesting document, and also a statement of commercial relations occasioned by various trials. They contain precise statements of the prices of goods and accurate information concerning commercial usages in theRhineland and in distant Slavic countries; e.g., concerning the gold trade inStrasburg andSpeyer (fol. 145b); the coinage of the time (Zunz , "Z. G." p. 5b); and the export trade with Galicia and southernRussia (No. 5). Slavic customs and character are also discussed in connection with ritual matters. Among the decisions are some containing interpretations ofBiblical andTalmudic sayings; one of them (No. 119) even presenting a connected commentary onProv. xxx. 1-6, in which R.Saadia 's view is cited—namely, that Ithiel and Ucal were the names of two men who addressed philosophical questions toAgur ben Jakeh .The work mentions the year 1152, and must therefore have been completed after that date. The year 1247, which occurs on two copies, may be credited to later transcribers. In the subsequent centuries Eliezer came to be regarded as a great authority, but his work was little known. Not until its importance had been specially urged by the most influential rabbis of Poland—
Mordecai Jafe ,Samuel Eliezer Edels (Maharsha),Solomon Ephraim Luntschitz , among others, in a formal appeal issued fromPosen in 1609—was its publication undertaken.As Liturgical Poet
Eliezer wrote numerous
yoẓerot ,seliḥot , and otherpiyyuṭim ; very few of them, however, have been incorporated in the German and Polish liturgy. The "Akapperah Pene Melek" in the seliḥot to the musaf of the Day of Atonement is an example. His poetical productions are valuable only as an index to his devout nature and to his estimate of the importance of the liturgy. They are distinguished for neither originality, elevation of thought, nor elegance of diction. With their allusions tohaggadic interpretations, their employment of payyeṭan phraseology, acrostics, rimes, and similar mechanical devices, they differ little from many other liturgical productions. Some of these poems he seems to have written on special occasions. Thus, one piyyuṭ composed for a circumcision occurring on the Sabbath bears at the close the cipher "ABN," and the words "Long live my child Eliakim." Altogether twenty-five piyyuṭim of his are known. One of his seliḥot depicts the persecutions of theFirst Crusade (1096); another, those of 1146.As Commentator
To Eliezer is attributed the commentary on the
Maḥzor published inOstroh in 1830. Some of Eliezer's expositions are mentioned in a commentary on the festal prayers called "Ḳorban Aharon." Mention is also made of a commentary onAbot , from whichJehiel Morawtschik , in his "Minḥah Ḥadashah," written in 1576 after a manuscript of the year 1145, makes quotations.As Chronicler: Persecution of 1096
Eliezer is also supposed to be the author of a history of the terrible events of 1096, the year of the German Crusade, part of the
First Crusade . It expressed great antipathy towards theChristian crusaders, and wrestled with the matter of whyGod would allow so manyJew s to be massacred. The persecutions of the Jewish communities in the towns along theRhine , the horrible butcheries that were perpetrated, are faithfully depicted here in chronological order.In this work various acrostic verses contain the name "Eliezer b. Nathan." In deference to a passage in
Joseph ha-Kohen 's "Emeḳ ha-Baka," p. 31, which makes a certain Eleazar ha-Levi the author, some writers (asLandshuth andH. Grätz ) have denied Eliezer's authorship of this chronicle. This view, however, was refuted around 1900. The chronicle was first edited byAdolph Jellinek ("Zur Geschichte der Kreuzzüge," Leipsic, 1854); and was republished as "Hebräische Berichte über die Judenverfolgungen Während der Kreuzzüge," byA. Neubauer and Stern, together with a German translation, in the "Quellen zur Geschichte der Juden in Deutschland," ii., Berlin, 1892.Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography
*
Leser Landshuth , 'Ammude ha-'Abodah, pp. 20-22;
*Michael, Or ha-Ḥayyim , pp. 211-215;
*Moritz Güdemann , Gesch. des Erziehunqswesen und der Cultur, i., passim;
*Zunz , Literaturgesch. pp. 259-262;
*Gross, in Monatsschrift, 1885, p. 310;
*H. Bresslau, in Neubauer and Stern, Quellen, ii., xv.-xvii.LExternal links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=233&letter=E Jewish Encyclopedia article for Eliezer ben Nathan] , by
Louis Ginzberg andA. Kaminka .
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