Copyright

Dotan Arad, Esther-Miriam Wagner

Published On

2025-07-22

Page Range

pp. 373–379

Language

  • English

Print Length

7 pages

W.1: Qohelet Rabbah

This fourteenth-century fragment, in Sephardi script, contains a sermon on Eccl. 3.16 from Midrash Qohelet Rabbah, discussing the famous rabbinic legend about the murder of the prophet Zechariah in the temple (2 Chron. 24.17–22) and other sermons on Eccl. 3.16.1 The reader can find a commentary on the text in Hirshman’s critical edition to Qohelet Rabbah (Hirshman 2017, 217–21). Due to the fact that there are not many manuscripts of Qohelet Rabbah, we thought it would be useful to compare our manuscript, which has not yet been discussed by scholars of rabbinic literature,2 to the other extant manuscripts.3 Preparing a complete critical edition of this Midrashic passage is, however, beyond the goals of this book. We therefore limit ourselves to presenting the main differences between our manuscript and other manuscripts. We compared it also to the first printed edition of this Midrash (Constantinople 1512, hereinafter: C). In this comparison we were helped by Hirshman’s (2017, 216–220) edition.

Contributors

Dotan Arad

(author)
Senior Lecturer in the Israel and Golda Koschitzki department of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry at Bar-Ilan University

Dr. Arad is a senior lecturer in the Israel and Golda Koschitzki department of Jewish History and Contemporary Jewry in Bar-Ilan University. Dotan has a PhD in Jewish History from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research focuses on the Jews in Egypt, Syria and Palestine during the Mamluk and Early Ottoman period. Between 2012 and 2014 he published, with Prof. Shmuel Glick and other colleagues, a series of volumes containing responsa fragments of Jewish Sages in the Ottoman Empire, from the Cairo Genizah. His current research focuses on the Judeo Arabic letters of the Karaites in the Ottoman empire and on the social history of the Damascus and Cairo’s Jews during the Ottoman Period.

Esther-Miriam Wagner

(author)
Executive Director of the Woolf Institute at University of Cambridge

Esther-Miriam Wagner is the Executive Director of the Woolf Institute. She is a Fellow of St Edmund's College and teaches the MPhil in Middle Eastern Studies: Muslim-Jewish Relations at the University of Cambridge. Miriam has written broadly on sociolinguistics, historical linguistics of Judaeo-Arabic and Yiddish, scribal practice, and Jewish-Muslim relations in Egypt and Muslim Spain as reflected in the Genizah sources. Her books include Linguistic Variety of Judaeo-Arabic in Letters from the Cairo Genizah (2010), Scribes as Agents of Language Change (2013), Merchants of Innovations. The Languages of Traders (2016) and A Handbook and Reader of Ottoman Arabic (2021). Her work has been featured on TV and Radio programmes, such as on BBC3 The Essay, in History Magazine and in documentaries on the Cairo Genizah.