Isaac Karo

1458–1535

Born in Toledo, Isaac Karo was famed for his rabbinic erudition, as well as his knowledge of secular studies, particularly medicine. Having taught at the yeshiva in Toledo, he founded a yeshiva in Lisbon and was joined there by his family after the 1492 expulsion of the Jews from Spain. However, they did not find respite for long. After the Jews were expelled from Portugal in 1497, Karo traveled extensively, and his sons perished. He eventually settled in Constantinople. There he composed a commentary on the Pentateuch, Toledot Yitzḥak (The Generations of Isaac; 1518, the only one of his works printed in his lifetime). His other writings include responsa, talmudic novellae, a commentary on Pirke Avot (not extant but quoted by others), and a collection of homilies, Ḥasde David (The Mercies of David). The homilies, for holidays and other occasions, mainly concern eschatological topics, including immortality of the soul, reward and punishment, and resurrection. Isaac Karo adopted his nephew, Joseph, the author of the Shulḥan ‘arukh (Set Table). Although Isaac Karo is known to have longed to reach the land of Israel, nothing is known of his fate after 1518.

Content by Isaac Karo

Primary Source

Sermon: On the Holy Land

Public Access
Text
Isaac Karo’s 16th-century sermon compares the land of Israel to the human heart, using medieval medical theory and kabbalistic traditions.