- Baraita of the Forty-nine Rules
The Baraita of the Forty-nine Rules (
Hebrew : ברייתא מ"ט מדות) is a work ofrabbinical literature which is no longer in existence except in references by later authorities.Rashi , theTosafists ,Abraham ibn Ezra ,Yalḳut , andAsher ben Jehiel mention a work, "Baraita of the Forty-nine Rules," and make citations from it (thus, Rashi, ed. Berliner, onEx. xxvi. 5;Yalḳ. ,Gen. 61, calls it "Midrash"; Rashi on Ex. xxvii. 6 calls it "Mishnah").Authorship and Character
Ibn Ezra ("Yesod Moreh," ed. Königsberg, 6a) mentions
R. Nathan as the author of the Baraita.Zunz showed, by referring to a number of passages in the Talmud, that the tanna R. Nathan, in theHalakah as well as in theAggadah , was accustomed to group things arithmetically, and to arrange his sayings accordingly. On this observation, Zunz based the conjecture that "this lost work of R. Nathan contained a large portion of hisMishnah , and was arranged in rubrics from one to forty-nine; so that each rubric, under the introductory formula "Middah," mentioned halakic, haggadic, and, in general, scientific subjects which belonged in that particular place in regard to number" ("G. V." 2d ed., pp. 95-97).From the few fragments of this Baraita preserved by the above-mentioned authors, only one fact pertaining to its character can be ascertained, viz., that it contained
haggadic (Yalḳ. l.c. on the seventy nations) as well ashalakic matter, especially such portions of the Halakah as are concerned with exact measurement; for instance, the measurement of the Tabernacle and its furnishings (Rashi , l.c.). If from these short fragments an opinion could be formed concerning the composition of the Baraita, Zunz's assumption would be justified that it contained Haggadah and Halakah numerically arranged. Another assumption of his, however, that it represents the "Mishnat R. Nathan" mentioned elsewhere, is highly improbable;R. Nathan 's Mishnah was in all likelihood only a version ofAkiba 's Mishnah differing from the authoritative Mishnah. Against Zunz's opinion, compareEliakim Milsahagi "RABIH," pp. 4b, 7b.The "Mishnat ha-Middot"
Steinschneider believed that he had put an end to all conjecture concerning the Baraita through a happy find. In the introduction to an edition of the "Mishnat ha-Middot, die Erste Geometrische Schrift in Hebräischer Sprache" (Berlin, 1864), he maintains that this mathematical work, edited by him, is identical with the Baraita under consideration. Were this the case, the Baraita would be a product of the 9th or, at the earliest, of the 8th century, and its birthplace would have to beBabylonia . For, although the scientific terminology of this, the oldest, mathematical work of theJews shows its origin to have been in a time previous toArabic influences on Jewish scholarship, yet expressions like חץ = Arabic סהם ("arrow") for sinus versus, or משיחה = Arabic מסאחה for measure, area, show that the work could not have been written before the contact of the Jews with the Arabs.But Steinschneider's assumption can hardly be supported. The "
Mishnat ha-Middot " has nothing in common with the Baraita cited by the old scholars under that name: for the citations leave no doubt that the Baraita, even in its mathematical parts, was founded on theBible ; whereas the "Mishnat ha-Middot" is a purely secular work, and, possibly, it drew upon the same source as didMohammed b. Musa , the oldest Arabic mathematician. The plea that the "Mishnat ha-Middot" has not been preserved in its entirety, and that in its original form there were references to the Bible for special points, is of no weight, since it is absolutely incomprehensible thathaggadic orhalakic matter should fit into the frame of the work as it now is.The same reason demolishes the hypothesis of the German translator of the "Mishnat ha-Middot" ("Abhandlung zur Geschichte d. Mathematik," in Supplement to "Zeitschrift für Mathematik und Physik," 1880; H. Schapira, "Mishnat ha-Midoth . . . ins Deutsche Uebersetzt"), who assumes that there was a
Mishnah with theGemara on it, and that citations of the old scholars refer to the Gemara, whereas the printed text represents the Mishnah (compare the tannaR. Nathan , and "Baraita on the Erection of the Tabernacle ").Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography
*Abraham b. Solomon of Wilna, in the introduction to his edition of Aggadat Bereshit;
*idem, Rab Pe'olim, pp. 86 et seq.;
*S. Buber , Yeri'ot Shelomoh, pp. 22, 23, Warsaw, 1896;
*Grünhut, in Israelitische Monatsschrift (scientific supplement to Jüdische Presse), vii. 30-31, 1898;
*idem, Sefer ha-Liḳḳutim, ii. 3 et seq. (Grünhut believes that he found more citations from the present Baraita inYalḳuḳ ; the proofs for his assumption are not convincing, at least not for all the passages in Yalḳuṭ, the source of which he considers to be the Baraita);
* Zunz, Schapira, and Steinschneider, as cited above;
*A. Geiger , in Wissenschaftliche, Zeitschrift für Jüdische Theologie, vi. 25-30;
*A. Epstein , in Ha-Ḥoker, i. 35.External links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=254&letter=B&search=forty-nine Jewish Encyclopedia article for Baraita of the Forty-nine Rules] , by
Marcus Jastrow andLouis Ginzberg .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.