Law: Continuity and Change in the Early Modern Period
Yeshiva University, New York, NY, August 17-19, 2008
The topic in 2008 was "Law: Continuity and Change in the Early Modern Period." It was chosen because various shifts in the legal sphere are among the many changes that mark the early modern period as transitional. These include issues of communal self-governance as well as the relationship of Jews to the laws and courts of the lands in which they lived. The participants looked at the primary texts through both an historical and a jurisprudential lens, and engaged in an interdisciplinary dialogue about how law evolves, and how it affects and is affected by historical developments. The keynote address by Professor Richard Ross (University of Illinois) and the roundtable discussions that also included Professor Susanne Stone (Yeshiva University, Cardozo School of Law) guided historians who have not always been attuned to methodologies of legal theories in exploring new ways of examining legal sources. The 2008 workshop addresses these questions in an attempt to understand better what types of legal developments are characteristic of the early modern period. As in previous workshops, topics will be considered from a multi-regional perspective. Edward Fram focused on the role of print in the popularization and codification of Jewish law; Yaron Ben Naeh presented text of Jewish cases in Ottoman courts; Adam Teller discussed legal status of Jews and Jewish courts in Poland-Lithuania; Benjamin Ravid highlighted the nexus between baptism and charters for Jews and Marranos in Venice; Barbara Staudinger presented texts of Jews in imperial courts in the Holy Roman Empire; David Horowitz and Ann Oravetz discussed questions of the herem in Hamburg and Amsterdam respectively; Miriam Bodian focused on Amsterdam Regulations of 1616 concerning the Jews, and Kenneth Stow explored questions of common law (ius commune).
Additional sources included here are, Stefan Litt’s transcription and translation of the takkanot (community ordinances) of the community in Ühlfeld, dating from 1688; and Elimelech Westerich’s presentation of the question of divorce in Jewish law.
Sponsors
- Yeshiva University
- Wesleyan University’s Jewish and Israel Studies Certificate programs, the Office of Academic Affairs and the Academic Deans, Center for Faculty Career Development; Information Technology Services Department
- University of Maryland’s Louis L. Kaplan Chair of Jewish History at the Joseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Center for Jewish Studies.
- The Center for Jewish Law and Contemporary Civilization at Cardozo School of Law