Midrash Eleh Ezkerah

Midrash Eleh Ezkerah
Rabbinic Literature

Talmudic literature

MishnahTosefta
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Minor tractates


Halakhic Midrash

Mekhilta de-Rabbi Yishmael (Exodus)
Mekhilta de-Rabbi Shimon (Exodus)
Sifra (Leviticus)
Sifre (Numbers & Deuteronomy)
Sifre Zutta (Numbers)
Mekhilta le-Sefer Devarim (Deuteronomy)
Baraita of Rabbi Ishmael


Aggadic Midrash

—— Tannaitic ——
Seder Olam Rabbah
Alphabet of Akiba ben Joseph
Baraita of the Forty-nine Rules
Baraita on the Thirty-two Rules
Baraita on Tabernacle Construction
—— 400–600 ——
Genesis RabbahEichah Rabbah
Pesikta de-Rav Kahana
Esther RabbahMidrash Iyyov
Leviticus RabbahSeder Olam Zutta
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—— 650–900 ——
Avot of Rabbi Natan
Pirkei de-Rabbi Eliezer
Tanna Devei Eliyahu
Alphabet of Ben-Sira
Kohelet RabbahCanticles Rabbah
Devarim Rabbah • Devarim Zutta
Pesikta RabbatiMidrash Shmuel
Midrash ProverbsRuth Rabbah
Baraita of SamuelTargum sheni
—— 900–1000 ——
Ruth Zuta • Eichah Zuta
Midrash TehillimMidrash Hashkem
Exodus RabbahCanticles Zutta
—— 1000–1200 ——
Midrash TadsheSefer haYashar
—— Later ——
Yalkut ShimoniYalkut Makiri
Midrash JonahEin Yaakov
Midrash HaGadolNumbers Rabbah
Smaller midrashim


Rabbinic Targum

—— Torah ——
Targum Onkelos
Targum Pseudo-Jonathan
Fragment Targum • Targum Neofiti

—— Nevi'im ——
Targum Jonathan

—— Ketuvim ——
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Targum Iyyov
Targum to the Five Megillot
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Midrash Eleh Ezkerah (Hebrew: אלה אזכרה‎) is an aggadic midrash, one of the smaller midrashim, which receives its name from the fact that a seliḥah for the Day of Atonement, which treats the same subject and begins with the words "Eleh ezkerah," recounts the execution of ten famous teachers of the Mishnah in the time of the persecution by Hadrian (see Ten Martyrs). The same event is related in a very ancient source, Ekah Rabbati on Lam. ii. 2, ed. S. Buber, p. 50b (comp. also Midr. Teh. on Ps. ix. 13, ed. Buber, p. 44b).

The version in Eleh Ezkerah

Page from Midrash Eleh Ezkerah, Constantinople (?), 1620.

According to the Midrash Eleh Ezkerah, a Roman emperor commanded the execution of the ten sages of Israel to expiate the guilt of the sons of Jacob, who had sold their brother Joseph—a crime which, according to Ex. xxi. 16, had to be punished with death. The names of the martyrs are given here, as in the seliḥah already mentioned (varying in part from the Eicha Rabba and the Midrash Tehillim), as follows:

  • R. Simeon b. Gamaliel
  • R. Ishmael the high priest
  • R. Akiba
  • R. Ḥanina b. Teradion
  • R. Judah b. Baba
  • R. Judah b. Dama
  • R. Ḥuzpit
  • R. Hananiah b. Ḥakinai
  • R. Jeshebeab
  • R. Eleazar b. Shammua'

Although this midrash employs other sources, borrowing its introduction from the Midrash Konen, and the account of the conversation of Rabbi Ishmael with the angels in heaven probably from the Hekalot, it forms, nevertheless, a coherent work. It was edited, on the basis of a Hamburg codex, by A. Jellinek (Leipsic, 1853, and in his B. H. ii. 64-72), and, according to another manuscript, by S. Chones, in his Rab Pe'alim (pp. 157-160). A second and a third recension of the midrash were edited, on the basis of manuscript sources, in B. H. (vi. 19-35), and a fourth is contained in the Spanish liturgical work Bet Ab (Leghorn, 1877). According to Jellinek, "the fourth recension is the oldest, since it has borrowed large portions from the Hekalot; next to this stand the second and the third; while the youngest is the first, which, nevertheless, has the advantage of real conformity with the spirit of the race and represents this the best of all." The martyrdom of the ten sages is also treated in the additions to the Hekalot (B. H. v. 167 et seq.) and in the ḳinah for the Ninth of Ab.

Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography

  • Zunz, G. V. p. 142;
  • A. Jellinek, B. H. ii., pp. xxiii. et seq.; v., p. xli.; vi., pp. xvii. et seq.;
  • Benjacob, Oẓar ha-Sefarim, p. 299.
  • On the problem of the synchronism of the ten martyrs see Heinrich Grätz, Gesch. iv. 175 et seq., and Monatsschrift, i. 314 et seq. A German translation by P. Möbius appeared in 1845.

External links

This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.


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