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Encyclopedia
Judaica 2nd Edition
An essential source of information on
Jewish life, culture, history, and
religion.
In 1972, the
Encyclopaedia Judaica fulfilled the
longstanding dream of capturing the full
richness of Jewish culture in a single
authoritative publication, heralded in the
scholarly community as one of the best
reference works ever compiled.
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The
Encyclopedia Judaica is
a 26-volume English-language encyclopedia
of the Jewish people and their faith,
Judaism. It covers diverse areas of the
Jewish world and civilization, including
Jewish history in all eras, culture,
holidays, language, scripture, and
religious teachings.
It was first published in
1971-1972 in sixteen volumes. It was
published in Jerusalem by Keter Publishing
House and in New York by the Macmillan
Company.
Between 1972 and 1994, ten annual
yearbooks were collected in a 1973-1982
events supplement and a 1983-1992 events
supplement was added. Together these
volumes contain more than 15 million words
in over 25,000 articles.
Its general editors were, successively,
Cecil Roth and Geoffrey Wigoder.
Advertisers describe it as the result of
about three decades of study and research
by about 2,200 contributors and 250
editors around the world.
A Shorter Jewish Encyclopedia in Russian
launched in the early 1970s as an abridged
translation of the Encyclopedia Judaica
evolved into a largely independent
publication that by late 2005 included
eleven volumes and three supplements.
An earlier, unfinished German-language
Encyclopedia Judaica was published by
Nahum Goldmann's Eshkol Publishing Society
in Berlin 1928-1934. The chief editors
were Jakob Klatzkin and Ismar Elbogen. Ten
volumes from Aach to Lyra appeared before
the project halted due to the Nazi
persecutions. Two Hebrew-language volumes
A-Antipas were also published, under the
title Eshkol (Hebrew אשכול). A few of the
articles from the German Judaica and even
some of the reparations payments to
Goldmann were used in making the
English-language Judaica. A shorter Jewish
Encyclopedia was published at the turn of
century. It was followed by the Jüdisches
Lexikon I — II. (1927 — 28) and
Encyclopedia Judaica I — II (1927 — 28)
and Zsidó Lexikon (1929, edited by Ujvári
Péter, on Hungarian) |
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Best Deals found at:
Aharon's Jewish Books and Judaica
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
303-322-7345
800-830-8660
-
Judaic
Online store that
provides a wide selection of all types of Judaica,
Jewish gifts, Jewish books, Jewish ritual items and
more
www.judaic.com
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The English-language
Judaica is also available on CD-ROM. The
CD-ROM version is enhanced by at least
100,000 hyperlinks and several other
features including videos, slide shows,
maps, music and Hebrew pronunciations.
Because of its comprehensive scope,
authority, and widespread availability,
the Encyclopedia Judaica is recommended
by the Library of Congress and by the
Association of Jewish Libraries for use
in determining the authoritative
romanization of names of Jewish authors.
Its guidelines for transliterating
Hebrew into English are followed by many
academic books and journals.
Second edition
In July 2003, Thomson
Gale announced that it had acquired the
rights to publish a second edition of
Encyclopedia Judaica, expecting to
publish in December 2006 under one of
its imprints, Macmillan Reference USA.
It was published in January 2007.
Gale has published other substantial
revisions of major reference works in
the field of religion in recent years,
including second editions of The
Encyclopedia of Religion and The New
Catholic Encyclopedia. Together with
original publishers Keter Publishing
House, Gale has made major updates to
many sections of Encyclopedia Judaica
for the new edition, including the
entries on the Holocaust, American
Jewry, Israel and others.
Fred Skolnik, who served as a co-editor
on the original edition of Judaica, was
retained as Editor-in-Chief for the 2nd
edition. American Holocaust scholar
Michael Berenbaum serves as the editor
for the Holocaust and Americana sections
of the encyclopedia. The new edition
contains more than 21,000 signed
entries, including 2,600 brand-new
entries. |
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