Saul, choice of, as king, 1, 83.
qualities of, 1, 83.
discontent with, 1, 83.
сын. См. Ионатан.
offends Samuel at Gilgal, 1, 86.
condemns Jonathan to death, 1, 88–9.
at Gibeah, 1, 89–90.
defeats the Ammonites, 1, 89–90.
homage paid to, at Gilgal, 1, 90.
creates new offices, 1, 91.
defeats Agag, 1, 91–2.
beginning of the madness of, 1, 93–4.
orders a massacre of the Gibeonites, 1, 94.
royal ostentation of, 1, 94–5.
permits David to fight with Goliath, 1, 97.
invites David to his court, 1, 98.
fears David as a rival, 1, 99.
attempts David’s life, 1, 99.
murders the descendants of Eli, 1, 100.
consults the witch of Endor, 1, 103.
death of the sons of, 1, 103.
death of, 1, 103.
body of, dishonored by the Philistines, 1, 104.
remains of, buried, 1, 124.
Israelites under, settle in the Hejas, 3, 54.
favorite character of the Puritans, 5, 26.
Saul, member of the Herodian family, wickedness of, 2, 236.
accuses Gessius Florus before Nero, 2, 268.
Савл из Тарса. См. Павел, апостол.
Saul, son of Anan ben David, succeeds him, 3, 136.
Saul Astruc Cohen, physician in Tlemçen, 4, 198.
protects Marrano fugitives, 4, 199.
Saul Cohen Ashkenasi, disciple of Elias del Medigo, 4, 293.
letter to, from Isaac Abrabanel, 4, 386.
pure style of, 4, 389.
Saurim, brother of Raba bar Joseph, heartlessness of, 2, 588.
Savoy, Oran Jews settle in, 5, 169.
Savoy, the Jews of, charged with well poisoning, 4, 103–4.
during Vincent Ferrer’s crusade, 4, 218.
privileges of, confirmed by Martin V, 4, 219.
Saxon emperors, the, position of the Jews under, 3, 241, 242–3.
Saxony, the Jews of, under heavy restrictions, 5, 509.
Sbaráz, battle of, between Cossacks and Poles, 5, 12.
Scaliger, Joseph, philologist, tolerance of, 4, 685.
quickens learning, 5, 20.
devotes himself to Rabbinical literature, 5, 21.
introduces Rabbinical literature to Christians, 5, 179.
Scaurus, legate of Pompey in Syria, attacks Aretas, 2, 70.
called upon to arbitrate between Hyrcanus II and Aristobulus II, 2, 61–2.
commands Aretas to raise the siege of Jerusalem, 2, 62.
bribed to favor Hyrcanus II, 2, 62.
Schaffhausen, the Jews of, charged with well poisoning, 4, 105.
Schiller, expresses regard for Solomon Maimon, 5, 409.
Schimmelpennik, Grand Pensioner of the Batavian Republic, appoints Jews to public offices, 5, 458.
Schlegel, Frederick, character of, 5, 423–4.
union of, with Dorothea Mendelssohn, 5, 424.
representative of the romantic school, 5, 515, 516.
Schleiermacher, intimacy of, with Henrietta Herz, 5, 423.
hostile to Judaism, 5, 426–7, 428.
refuses to acknowledge the Jewish origin of Christianity, 5, 426.
ill-will of, towards Jews, 5, 462.
Schmidt, Bremen deputy to the Congress of Vienna, opposes the emancipation of the Jews, 5, 519.
Schmidt of Hildburghausen, defends the Jews, 5, 522.
Scholastic philosophy, the, and Ibn-Gebirol’s works, 3, 270–1.
influenced by the “Guide of the Perplexed,” 3, 486.
studied by Leone Romano, 4, 69.
quoted by Jewish preachers in the fifteenth century, 4, 232.
Schools, elementary, established in Judæa by Joshua ben Gamala, 2, 249.
in Spain by the law of Avila, 4, 229.
Schools for young men, origin of, in Palestine, 1, 396.
reorganized by Simon ben Shetach, 2, 50–1.
lack of, in Galilee, 2, 148.
in Asia Minor and Egypt, 2, 357–8.
in Judæa inspected by order of Judah III, 2, 532.
at Sora established by Chasda, 2, 553.
in Palestine in the sixth century, 3, 12.
at Yathrib, 3, 59.
founded in the West by emissaries from Sora, 3, 208.
in Amsterdam, 4, 681–2.
in Rotterdam, 4, 685.
См. под заголовком Образование для других разделов.
Schools, secular, founded by Jews, in Trieste, 5, 369–70.
in Prague, 5, 371.
in Berlin, 5, 405, 416.
in Tarnopol, 5, 612.
in Egypt, 5, 664.
Schools, the, of the prophets, 1, 205, 234.
Schor, Elisha, Frankist, 5, 275.
draws up the Frankist confession of faith, 5, 280.
Schudt, author of “Jewish Curiosities,” 5, 549.
Schurmann, Anna Maria, student of Hebrew literature, 5, 21.
«Schutzjuden» (защищенные евреи). См. Евреи под защитой.
Schwager, preacher, on the emancipation of the Jews, 5, 358.
Schwarz, Peter, apostate, maligns the Jews, 4, 301.
motives of, suspected by Reuchlin, 4, 442.
Schweidnitz, the Jews of, engaged in money-lending, 4, 260.
charged with host desecration, 4, 261.
Science, promoted by Judaism during the Middle Ages, 3, 146, 187.
Science, the study of, by Jews, advocated by Jonathan of Lünel, 3, 397.
opposition to, at the end of the thirteenth century, 4, 27–34, 37–45.
ban against, 4, 39–40.
controversy on, continued at Perpignan, 4, 50–1.
baneful effect of the ban against, 4, 143.
opposition to, in the fourteenth century, 5, 147.
См. также Маймонистский спор.
Science of Judaism, the, subserves the Reform movement, 5, 627.
“Scientific Journal, The,” the tone of, 5, 625.
founder of, 5, 626.
inculcates self-respect, 5, 626.
recalls the Karaites, 5, 626.
Scipio, follower of Pompey, has Alexander, son of Aristobulus II, beheaded, 2, 75.
Scopas, an Ætolian, takes Jerusalem, 1, 432.
garrisons the Baris, 1, 433.
routed by the Syrians near Panion, 1, 433.
Scopus Zophim, camp of Titus, 2, 302.
Скот. См. Дунс Скот.
“Scourge of the Jews,” name given to John of Capistrano, 4, 260.
Книжники. См. Соферим.
Scriptures, the, written with Assyrian characters, 1, 395–6.
studied in the schools of Judæa, 2, 50–1.
allegorical interpretation of, by the Judæo-Alexandrian school, 2, 208–9.
as interpreted by Paul, 2, 230.
canon of, completed, 2, 344.
translated into Greek by Akylas, 2, 385, 386–7.
Chiya bar Abba ignorant of, 2, 536.
translations of, 2, 581–2.
studied in Palestine under Theodosius II, 2, 623–5.
the Latin translation of, 2, 625.
incorrect explanation of, favored by the Talmud, 2, 633.
vowel-points and accents introduced into, 3, 7.
use of translations of, ordered by Justinian I, 3, 14–15.
knowledge of, among the Arabian Jews, 3, 59.
love for, among the Arabs, 3, 59.
Mahomet’s doctrines borrowed from, 3, 72.
study of, revived among Jews under Mahometan influence, 3, 111–12.
rendered comprehensible by the introduction of vowel points, 3, 112.
study of, stimulates poetic composition, 3, 118.
studied by the Jews of Arabia, 3, 119–20.
replaced by the Talmud, 3, 128.
a return to the letter of, advocated by Anan ben David, 3, 130.
study of, stimulated by Anan ben David, 3, 133.
ardently studied by the Karaites, 3, 136.
commentators on, among the Karaites, 3, 136.
neglected by the Rabbanites, 3, 189.
translated into Arabic by Saadiah, 3, 189–90.
trustworthiness of, doubted in Saadiah’s time, 3, 198.
the Ben-Asher copies of, 3, 207.
the Massoretic text of, now in use, 3, 207.
the oldest copy of, in Spain destroyed, 3, 387.
the distortion of, by the Kabbalists, 3, 556.
verses of, happily used by the fabulists, 3, 560.
as interpreted in the Zohar, 4, 15–16.
as explained by the mystics and the philosophers, 4, 23–4.
study of, neglected in Spain in the fourteenth century, 4, 91.
study of, neglected in Spain in the fifteenth century, 4, 231, 234.
concordance of, by Isaac Nathan ben Kalonymos, 4, 234–5.
taught to Karaites by Rabbanites, 4, 269.
in Hebrew declared heretical, 4, 444–5.
German translation of, by Luther, 4, 469, 475.
study of, encouraged by Luther and Reuchlin, 4, 474–5.
translated into the European languages, 4, 475, 540.
in Hebrew, demand for copies of, 4, 475–6.
studied by Marranos, 4, 485.
Ferrara Spanish edition of, dedicated to Gracia Mendesia, 4, 576.
translated into Polish, 4, 647.
polyglot edition of, published by Arias Montano, 4, 651.
study of, declines under the influence of the Polish Talmudists, 5, 17.
neglect of, among Jews, 5, 327.
studied by German Jews, 5, 395.
French translation of, projected, 5, 449.
Heine’s admiration for, 5, 553–4.
translation of, by Sachs, 5, 693.
См. также Закон; Ветхий Завет; Пятикнижие; и под названиями различных книг.
Scriptures, the, commentary on, by Abraham Ibn-Ezra, 3, 370–3.
by Abulsari Sahal ben Mazliach Kohen, 3, 204.
by Isaac Abrabanel, 4, 342.
by Jephet Ibn-Ali Halevi, 3, 206.
by Joseph ben Isaac Kimchi, 3, 392.
by Joseph Kara, 3, 345.
by Moses ben Nachman, 3, 607.
by Rashi, 3, 288.
by Saadiah, 3, 189–90.
by Samuel ben Meïr, 3, 345.
by Shemarya Ikriti, 4, 70.
by Solomon ben Yerucham, 3, 206.
by Yizchaki, 3, 273.
См. Закон, комментарии.
Писание, экзегеза. См. Экзегеза Библии.
Писание, переводы. См. под заголовком Перевод.
Scrutinium Scriptuarum, polemic against Judaism by Solomon Levi, 4, 233.
Scythians, the, invade Media, Assyria, and Philistia, 1, 287.
bribed by Psammetich of Egypt, 1, 287.
ravage Judæa, 1, 287.
Скифополь. См. Бет-Шеан.
“Searching the Scriptures,” polemic against Judaism by Solomon Levi, 4, 233.
Себаста. См. Самария.
Sebastian, of Portugal, defeated in Africa, 4, 381.
Sebastus, harbor of Cæsarea, built by Herod, 2, 106.
Sebel ha-Yerusha, hereditary teaching, among the Karaites, 3, 159.
Seche, a Christian Shylock, punished by Sixtus V, 4, 657.
Sechel ha-Poel, term used by Maimonides, 3, 480.
“Secret of the Trinity,” by Nehemiah Chayon, 5, 217.
Секты, еврейские. См. Иудаизм, секты.
Secundinus, bishop, and the Jew Antoninus, 3, 29.
Seder ha-Kabbalah, historical work by Abraham Ibn-Daud, 3, 366.
Seder Olam, historical work by José ben Chalafta, 2, 442.
Sefer ha-Osher, grammatical work by Samuel Ibn-Nagrela, 3, 261.
Sefer Madda, Maimonides’ code, attacked by anti-Maimunists, 3, 523.
Sefer Refuoth, attributed to king Solomon, used by the Essenes, 2, 29.
Sefer Yezirah, commentary on, by Saadiah, 3, 197.
Sefer Yizchaki, Biblical work, 3, 273.
Sefer Yochasin, chronicle by Abraham Zacuto, 4, 391.
Sefiroth, the Ten, emanations from the Deity, in the Kabbala system, 3, 551.
qualities of, 3, 552.
correspond to the Temple, 3, 553.
prayer addressed to, 3, 554.
in the Zohar, 4, 14, 17.
names of, 4, 17.
instruments of the creation, 4, 619.
streams of mercy flow through, 5, 121.
Сегал. См. Меир бен Барух ха-Леви.
Segan (Sagan) ha-Cohanim, deputy of the high priest, 1, 492; 2, 330.
Segelmessa, the Jews of, persecuted by the Almohades, 3, 360.
Segovia, the synagogue of, transformed into a church, 4, 196.
the Marranos of, slain, 4, 283.
Segovia, the Jews of, accused of host desecration, 4, 195–6.
accept baptism under Vincent Ferrer, 4, 205.
riot against, 4, 278–9.
carry their tombstones into exile with them, 4, 352.
Segre, Joshua Benzion (1720–1809), deputy to the Assembly of Jewish Notables, 5, 488.
on the commission to answer the twelve questions put to the Notables, 5, 490.
vice-president of the Synhedrion, 5, 495.
Ségur, French state councilor, advocates Jewish emancipation, 5, 480–1.
Seir, mount, the capital of Edom on, 1, 222.
Sejanus, minister of Tiberius, hostile to Judaism, 2, 136.
sends Pontius Pilate to Judæa as procurator, 2, 138.
treachery of, revealed by one of the Herodians, 2, 172.
Selden, John, student of Hebrew, 5, 21.
Seleucia, north-eastern limit of Judæa under Alexander Jannæus, 2, 46.
Seleucidæan era, the, used by Jews, 1, 417.
abolished, 4, 394–5.
Seleucidæan kings, the, gain possession of Judæa, 1, 432.
Seleucus I, ally of Ptolemy I at the battle of Ipsus, 1, 417.
the era of, 1, 417.
founds Antioch, 1, 419.
invites Judæans to Antioch, 1, 419.
Seleucus II, orders the confiscation of the Temple treasures, 1, 438.
appealed to by Onias III, 1, 438–9.
Seleucus, son of Demetrius Nicator, killed by his mother, 2, 6.
Селихот. См. Молитвы покаянные.
Selig, Eliakim, obtains from the pope an acquittal of the Jews from the blood accusation, 5, 282, 285.
Selim I, sultan of Turkey, conquers Egypt, 4, 393.
employs a Jewish financier, 4, 393.
makes the Jewish Egyptian communities autonomous, 4, 394.
employs a Jewish physician, 4, 401.
Jews under, 4, 402.
Selim II, sultan of Turkey, the cause of, espoused by Joseph Nassi, 4, 594–5.
espouses the cause of Joseph Nassi against the French ambassador, 4, 595.
conveys land near the Sea of Tiberias to Joseph Nassi, 4, 596.
proposes to give Naxos to Joseph Nassi, 4, 596.
makes Joseph Nassi duke of Naxos, 4, 596.
protects Joseph Nassi against France, 4, 597.
banishes Daud to Rhodes, 4, 599.
enters upon a war with Venice, 4, 600.
favorably inclined towards Jews, 4, 602.
death of, 4, 627.
Selve, George de, bishop, studies Hebrew under Elias Levita, 4, 472.
has Elias Levita invited to France, 4, 474.
Selvia, the second ban against the Chassidim published in, 5, 393–4.
Semak, manual of religious duties, by Isaac ben Joseph, 3, 587.
Semender (Tarki), Jews settle in, 3, 124.
second town of the Chazars, 3, 222.
Семиха. См. Ординация.
Semijudæi, sects called forth by the Protestant Reformation, 4, 541.
Semi-Judaizantes in Poland, 4, 647.
Semuna, principal of the Pumbeditha academy, 3, 5.
Saburean, 3, 6.
commits the Talmud to writing, 3, 6–7.
successors of, not known, 3, 7.
Senbaris, scroll of the Law burnt at, 2, 569.
Сенека, персидский. См. Абузурдж-Михир.
Сен Эскалита. См. Самуил Сулами.
Сениор. См. Авраам Бенвенисте Сениор.
Sennacherib, king of Assyria, subdues Syria, 1, 270.
takes the fortified towns of Judah, 1, 272.
makes Lachish his headquarters, 1, 273.
demands unconditional surrender from Hezekiah, 1, 274.
besieges Pelusium, 1, 276.
returns to Assyria, 1, 277–8.
murdered, 1, 280.
son of, murdered, 1, 284.
Sens, archbishop of, anti-Jewish sentiments of, 3, 171.
rabbi of, at the first rabbinical synod, 3, 377.
archbishop of, banished for harsh treatment of the Jews, 3, 401.
college of, sold, 4, 48.
Sephardic Jews, the, looked upon as the nobility, 4, 382–3.
distinguished by Pinto, 5, 344–5.
См. также Марраны; Португалия, евреи; Испанские изгнанники; Испания, евреи.
Sepharvaim, the inhabitants of, colonized in Samaria, 1, 285.
Sepphoris (Diocæsarea), a Synhedrion established at, by Aulus Gabinius, 2, 71.
an arsenal for Antigonus, 2, 85.
arsenal of, seized by Judas the Galilean, 2, 125.
burnt by Quintilius Varus, 2, 126.
capital of the tetrarchy of Herod Antipas, 2, 137.
school of, 2, 148.
the only Galilean city faithful to Rome, 2, 276.
ordered by the Synhedrion not to protect Josephus, 2, 281.
makes overtures to Rome, 2, 283.
seat of Agrippa II’s Jewish governors of Galilee, 2, 333.
sides with the Romans during the Bar-Cochba revolt, 2, 414.
home of José ben Chalafta, 2, 442.
seat of the Synhedrion, 2, 452.
center of the Jewish community, 2, 458.
ceases to be the seat of the Patriarch, 2, 480.
people of, characterized by Chanina bar Chama, 2, 491–2.
academy of, loses prestige, 2, 532.
the first church at, 2, 565.
revolt of the Jews at, against Rome, 2, 570.
razed to the ground, 2, 570.
Septimania, the governor of, promises Jews religious freedom, 3, 105.
the Jews of, punished for conspiracy against Egica, 3, 108.
Septuagint, the, Greek translation of the Scriptures, made at the instigation of Ptolemy VI, 1, 510–11.
criticism of, by Judæans, 1, 512.
makes Judaism known, 1, 512–13.
inaccurate, 1, 513–14.
why so called, 1, 514.
Samaritan objections to, 1, 516.
tampered with, by various religious bodies, 2, 385–6.
Origen tries to revise, 2, 488–9.
recommended to Jewish congregations by Justinian I, 3, 14.
declared not authoritative by Chayim Ibn-Musa, 4, 237.
studied by Z. Frankel, 5, 684.
Sepulveda, the Jews of, charged with child murder, 4, 278–9.
Serach ben Nathan, and Joseph Delmedigo, 5, 76–7, 79.
Serachya ben Isaac (Ben Shaltiel-Chen), physician and Aristotelian, 3, 630.
influence of, on the Italian Jews, 4, 59.
Serachya Halevi Gerundi, (1125–1186), Talmudist, annotates Alfassi’s commentary, 3, 389, 392, 399.
settles at Lünel, 3, 389.
controversies of, with Abraham ben David, 3, 389, 490.
on friendly terms with Judah Ibn-Tibbon, 3, 397.
refuted by Nachmani, 3, 532.
Serachya Halevi Saladin, at the disputation of Tortosa, 4, 208.
sermon by, 4, 212.
Seraiah, high priest, beheaded by Nebuchadnezzar, 1, 314.
grandson of, 1, 352.
ancestor of Ezra, 1, 365.
Serene, a pseudo-Messiah leads the onslaught upon Talmudic Judaism, 3, 120–2.
joined by the Jews of Spain, 3, 121.
brought before Yezid, 3, 121.
adherents of, wish to rejoin their communities, 3, 121–2.
opposition of, to the Talmud, without result, 3, 128.
Sergius, bishop, intercedes for the Samaritans, 3, 16–17.
Serkes, Joel, Talmudist, 4, 703.
grandson of, 5, 152.
Sermons, origin of, among the Judæans in Egypt, 1, 514–15.
Sermons for the conversion of Jews, preached by the Dominicans in England, 3, 643.
in France in the fourteenth century, 4, 132.
ordered by Benedict XIII, 4, 216.
ordered by the Council of Basle, 4, 245.
ordered by Gregory XIII, 4, 654–5.
in Hamburg, 4, 690.
in Vienna, 4, 706.
inefficacy of, 5, 186.
Sermons, vernacular, under Louis the Pious, 3, 163.
by Jews, attract Christians, 3, 173.
by Moses of Coucy, 3, 546.
by Jacob Anatoli, 3, 566; 4, 32, 39, 40.
in the Middle Ages, 4, 478.
introduced into Germany by Jacobson, 5, 562, 563.
the age of, pointed out by Zunz, 5, 621.
Serra, Nicolas, papal nuncio, not favorable to the conversion of the Frankists, 5, 285.
objects to the Lemberg disputation, 5, 285.
believes the blood accusation, 5, 285–6.
Serrarius, Peter, Messianic visionary, 5, 24, 36.
Слуги. См. Христианские слуги.
Servetus, Michael, anti-Trinitarian, martyr, 4, 541.
disciples of, in Poland, 4, 646–7.
“Servi Cameræ,” Jews become, after the second crusade, 3, 356–7.
Jews considered, by Frederick I, 3, 416–17.
why Jews were considered, 3, 417.
name given to the Jews of Germany, 3, 516.
Jews called, by Frederick II, 3, 569.
Jews of Aragon considered, by Jayme I, 3, 597.
possession of, granted to the electors, 4, 128.
Сесонхозис. См. Шишак.
Seth, family of high priests, 2, 237.
Seth, the Pneumatic type of the Gnostics, 2, 377.
Setubal, port open to Jews on their banishment from Portugal, 4, 374.
Severus, emperor with Niger, 2, 463.
victorious over Niger, 2, 464.
promulgates laws against Judaism, 2, 464.
death of, 2, 468.
wife of, 2, 468.
Severus, bishop of Magona, burns the synagogues, 2, 619.
Север, Александр. См. Александр Север.
Severus, Julius, sent to quell the Bar-Cochba revolt, 2, 414.
military tactics of, 2, 415.
takes the Jewish strongholds in the north, 2, 416.
helped by a Samaritan at Bethar, 2, 418.
returned to Britain, 2, 421.
Seville, early Jewish settlements in the environs of, 3, 43.
Jewish political fugitives from Granada settle in, 3, 258, 279–80.
the Arab ruler of, organizes a revolt against the Berbers, 3, 276.
the center of Jewish Spain, 3, 284.
the Mahometan court of, cultured, 3, 291.
Abu-Ayub in, 3, 312.
the Ibn-Migash family in, 3, 315.
the Jewish academy of, closed by the Almohades, 3, 361, 384.