Letter to Shemariah ben Elḥanan
Ḥushiel ben Elḥanan
Late 10th Century
These excerpts are from a long Hebrew letter addressed to Shemariah ben Elḥanan (d. 1011), leader of the Rabbanite community of Fustāt (Old Cairo) and his son Elḥanan, who led Jewish communities in Cairo and, later, Jerusalem. Shemariah was one of the “four captives” from Babylonian academies described by Abraham ibn Dā’ūd in The Book of Tradition. Upon his release from captivity, he established an academy in Qayrawān. In these excerpts, Ḥushiel describes his travels abroad.
Creator Bio
Ḥushiel ben Elḥanan
Ḥushiel ben Elḥanan, a native of Bari in southern Italy, migrated to Qayrawān, in what is now Tunisia, where he later headed the talmudic academy. The circumstances of Ḥushiel’s arrival in Qayrawān are legendary. According to Abraham ibn Dā’ūd (ca. 1110–ca. 1180), Ḥushiel was one of the “four captives” who established important centers of Jewish learning outside the Near East, heralding the decline of the Baghdad academies. Ḥushiel’s reputation spread widely during his lifetime, and he was the teacher of many leading figures, including Nissim Ibn Shāhīn (ca. 990–ca. 1062) and his own son Ḥananel ben Ḥushiel (ca. 990–ca. 1053).
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