Letter to the King of the Khazars (Poetic Prologue)

May the priestly crown [be given] to the tribe that rules the far-off kingdom;
May God’s benefit be upon it and peace be upon all its governors and host.
May salvation be raiment upon its shrine, its holidays and sacred occasions.
May its trained army and its warriors’ shields be made mighty by the wondrous hand.
May its chariots’ horses and…
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Menaḥem Ibn Sarūq composed this Hebrew poetic introduction for the letter sent from Ḥasday Ibn Shaprūṭ to Joseph, king of the Khazars. See Ibn Shaprūṭ’s “Letter to the King of the Khazars (Prose Section).” The Khazars, a multiethnic group living across East Eurasia, were rumored to have converted to Judaism in the ninth century, and Jews in al-Andalus (Muslim Spain) were eager to learn more about them. In the introduction presented here, Menaḥem explores the tantalizing image of a Jewish king at the head of his kingdom’s army.

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