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4,760 result(s) for "David Solomon"
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Divorce out of Love: A Sixteenth-Century Woman's Story
In this article we will closely read a responsum, written by the greatposekRabbi David ben Solomon ibn Abi Zimra (known as the Radbaz, Spain––Eretz Israel, c. 1479––1573), that revolves around the plight of a woman in Jerusalem around the turn of the sixteenth century. Her husband has disappeared, but he had sent her aget, by messenger. This document unfortunately was lost when she fled following the expulsion of the Jews from Spain. Our exploration of the responsum sheds light on a facet of divorce that is not commonly considered today. Divorce is not only a legal procedure for terminating a marriage mired in discontent, but it was also routinely employed to avoid‘‘igunor widowhood, evidence that the Jewish legal system is subject to creative compliance.
David Gans’s Magen David
In 1612, the Jewish polymath David Gans (1541–1613) published a prospectus for his astronomical-cosmological work Magen David in the Prague printing press of Moses ben Joseph Betsalel Katz. The prospectus is preserved as a slightly damaged unicum in the Bodleian Library of Oxford (Opp. 4° 417 [4]). Gans died almost exactly one year after the prospectus was published, before the entire work was printed. A comparison of the list of chapters in the prospectus with the surviving earlier version of the work (MS Hamburg, Cod. hebr. 273) and with the later printed version (Jessnitz 1743 as Neḥmad ve-naʿim) allows us to reconstruct with some exactitude how Gans proceeded with his work on the book in the years before and after the prospectus was published. It appears that during the last year of his life Gans expanded his Magen David with additional chapters. Some of this material is incongruous with the original focus of the work and it likely originated in another of Gans’s works, Migdal David on mathematics and geometry, which Gans must have feared would otherwise not be published. The analysis of the position of Magen David among Gans’s other known writings, including those that have not survived, suggests that Magen David, together with the historical Ṣemaḥ David (Prague 1592) and Migdal David (now lost), formed the trio of works that Gans valued most highly. This is why he gave them titles that contained an allusion to his own name. The title Neḥmad ve-naʿim, under which Magen David was later printed, is thus most likely not authentic. The text of the prospectus contains an extensive commendation from Yom-Ṭov Lipmann Heller, approbations of three Prague rabbis, and a preface by Gans, which allows us to clarify his attitude towards theoretical astronomy. The publication of a modern complete edition of the prospectus should therefore be a useful contribution to the study of Jewish science at the turn of the seventeenth century.
QLD: Polymer pioneer says UK protest 'stupid'
BRISBANE, Dec 2 AAP - The Australian pioneer of the polymer bank note says it's \"stupid\" that vegetarian and vegans are protesting in the UK about the five pound polymer note containing animal fat. \"It's stupid. It's absolutely stupid,\" Prof [David Solomon] told 2GB radio. \"There's trivial amounts of it in there.\"
Rockland Puts Texas CCGT on the Block
PJ Solomon, which hired former Goldman Sachs managing director Jeff Pollard to lead a push into power investment banking last year (PFR, 10/30), is marketing the 290 MW Victoria Power Station on behalf of the private equity firm. Recent secondary debt trading suggests a valuation of around $400/kW, says one, who notes, however, that Panda Power Funds and ExGen Texas Power's gas-fired projects in the state are newer and more efficient than the Victoria plant.
Trade Publication Article