- Abraham ben Saul Broda
Abraham ben Saul Broda ( _he. ???; c. 1640,
Mladá Boleslav -April 11 ,1717 ,Frankfort/Main ) was aBohemian Talmudist ("Talmudforscher").Saul Broda sent his son to
Cracow to pursue his Talmudic studies with RabbiIsaac ben Ze'eb Ḥarif of that city, in order to withdraw him from what he considered the evil influences of Shabbethaism, at that time spreading throughout Bohemia. After receiving his rabbinical diploma, Broda returned to his native city, but was soon called asrabbi toLichtenstadt /Hroznětín , and thence toRaudnitz /Roudnice n.L.. Even then his reputation was so great thatShabbethai Bass asked for his approbation to a book that Bass had written. Hence, when the office of chief rabbi ofPrague became vacant about 1693, it was offered to Broda, who accepted it, although it was probably not very remunerative in consequence of the great fire of 1689, which impoverished many members of the congregation. This office, from which he had doubtless expected much pleasure, involved him, on the contrary, in many difficulties; for when a difference arose between Broda andẒebi Ashkenazi in regard to a ritual question, all the rabbis ofPrague took sides against the former.It was probably this that induced Broda, who disliked quarrels, to seek another position. He was called to
Metz . The documents available are conflicting as to the date of his entry into office; but the contract of the community of Metz with Broda, datedOctober 30 ,1708 , has been discovered byKaufmann , from which it is evident that Broda went to Metz in 1709, as claimed byEliakim Carmoly , and not in 1703, asCahen assumed. Here, as at Raudnitz and Prague, Broda's chief activity consisted in founding and directing a "yeshibah "; it is said that he had an excellent method of initiating into the style of the Talmud those who had never before pursued such study. His stay at Metz was of short duration; for in 1713 he was called toFrankfort-on-the-Main , where, also, he founded a "yeshibah." This had a large attendance, many of his pupils becoming eminent rabbis.Literary works
Broda's collected works appeared after his death. They include:
#"Ḥiddushe Geonim" (Offenbach, 1723), consisting of
scholia to the treatises "Baba Ḳamma ", "Baba Meẓi'a ", and "Sanhedrin ";
#"Ḥiddushe Halakot", on "Giṭṭin ", Wandsbeck, 1731;
#"Shema'ta Ḥadta", on "Ketubot " and Giṭṭin, Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1722;
#"Eshel Abraham", on "Pesaḥim ", "Ḥullin ", and "Baba Batra ", Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1747;
#"Toledot Abraham", on "Ḳiddushin " and Ketubot, Fürth, 1764;
#"Halikot 'Olam", theJewish laws in theGerman language , Budapest;Aside from these works written by him, many of his explanations of different questions are found in the works of other scholars, as in:
*Nathaniel Weil 's "Ḳorban Netanel", Carlsruhe, 1755;
*Ẓebi Ashkenazi 's "Ḥakam Ẓebi", "et seq";References
*::by
Louis Ginzberg and A. PeiginskyBibliography of Jewish Encyclopedia
* Ab. Cahen, in "Rev. Etudes Juives", viii.260;
*David Kaufmann , ib. xix.120;
** idem, "Die Memoiren der Glückel von Hameln", p. 267, Frankfort, 1896;
* Bernhard Friedberg, "Luḥot Zikkaron", p. 21, Drohobicz, 1897;
** idem, "Hashkafah Ab. Broda" (Hebrew biography), ib. 1892;
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