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Only edition of these one-hundred-eighteen responsa from the Franco-German rabbis (Ba’alei Tosafot) brought to press by by R. Abraham Epstein for the Mekize Nirdamim Society. The title page describes Ma'asei ha-Ge'onim as responsa and piskei dinnim from the early sages and Rashi. There are German and Hebrew title pages, both informing that it was brought to light and annotated by R. Epstein and arranged for printing and edited by R. Jacob Friemann. There is a detailed scholarly introduction from R. Epstein, a list of the responsa and then the text, in a single column in square letters accompanied by footnotes with references. The subject of the responsa are highly varied, encompassing halakhic issues and customs on all issues of Jewish life. The EJ misdates publication, incorrectly giving a 1901 date for this edition.
R. Abraham Epstein (1841–1918) who brought the book to press was a rabbinic scholar and historian. He was born in Staro-Konstantinov, Russia, to a wealthy family. R. Epstein leased some land near Kozmin in 1865 and worked it himself for many years, trying to persuade some of the local Jewish poor to do the same. During that period he developed an interest in natural sciences and built a laboratory, where he carried out various experiments. After his father's death R. Epstein left his farm and took over the family business. In 1861 he traveled to Western Europe, where he met some of the leading figures in Jewish scholarship (S. J. L. Rapoport, Z. Frankel, and M. Sachs) who greatly stimulated his interest in Jewish studies. Gradually, he liquidated his shares in the family business and devoted himself to research. In 1876 he settled in Vienna, where he pursued his studies and contributed articles to learned Hebrew periodicals. Among R. Epstein's Midrash and Targum studies are Kadmut ha-Tanhuma (1886), on the antiquity and origin of Midrash Tanhuma; and a critical edition of Eldad ha-Dani (1891) with a comprehensive introduction, notes, and appendices, including a note on Beta Israel and their customs. On the Franco-German school he wrote "Der Gerschom Meor-ha-Golah zugeschriebene Talmud-Kommentar" (in Festschrift . . . Steinschneider (1896), 115–43), an article which aroused much interest and revolutionized the study of pre-Rashi Talmud commentaries; Schemaja, der Schueler und Sekretaer Raschis (1897); and Das talmudische Lexikon Jechuse Tannaim we-Amoraim und Jehuda b. Kalonimos aus Speier (1895). Epstein's historical studies on the same period include Juedische Altertuemer in Worms und Speyer (1896); and Mishpahat Lurie (1901). In the controversy between Rapoport and I. Weiss, Epstein defended the former in Divrei Bikkoret (1896). Epstein's works manifest his vast knowledge and painstaking researches: he combined the best of Eastern scholarship with Western method and is recognized as an outstanding scholar in his fields. A collection of some of his writings appeared under the title Mi-Kadmoniyyot ha-Yehudim (1887), of which the second volume of Kitvei R. Avraham Epstein (1950–57), edited by A. M. Habermann, is an enlarged version. An autobiographical sketch was published in N. Sokolow, Sefer Zikkaron le-Sifrei Yisrael (1889, 162–6) and is reproduced in Kitvei R. Avraham Epstein (1, 1950, 14–19). Epstein willed his large and valuable library to the Vienna Jewish Theological Seminary. |
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כולל תשובות ופסקי דינים מחכמי שו"ם [שפירא, וורמייזא, מגנצא] הקדמונים ורש"י ז"ל. יוצא לאור ראשונה עם מבוא והערות מא אברהם עפשטיין בווינא. נערך ונסדר לדפוס עם תוספות הערות ע"י יעקב פריימאנן אבד"ק העלישויא
(ספרים היוצאים לאור על ידי חברת מקיצי נרדמים >הוקמה מחדש בשנת תרמ"ה, חזרה ונתיסדה בשנת תרס"ט< שנה א, תר"ע).
"בני ר' מכיר ממגנצא שחיו בדור רש"י קבצו כתבו על ספר את ההוראות והמנהגים והתשובות של חכמי דורם. את הקונטרסים השונים האלה אסף כנראה ר' מנחם ב"ר מכיר ויצא מהם הספר שהראב"ן מכנה >דף פ"ד ע"ג< בשם מעשה המכירי, והספר הזה יה המקור הראשי
לס' מעשה הגאונים בנוגע. נכנס
אל כתבי ר' אברהם עפשטיין, א, עמ' [שיא]-שנג.
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