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Ephraim Urbach

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Name
  
Ephraim Urbach


Died
  
1991, Jerusalem, Israel

Ephraim Urbach webnliorgilsitesNLIHebrewcollectionsperson

Books
  
Collected Writings in Jewish Studies, The Laws Regarding Slavery, The Halakhah, Its Sources and Development

Ephraim Elimelech Urbach (Hebrew: אפרים אלימלך אורבך) (born 1912; died 3 July 1991) was a distinguished scholar of Judaism. He is best known for his landmark works on rabbinic thought, The Sages, and for research on the Tosafot. He was an unsuccessful candidate to be President of Israel in 1973.

Contents

A professor of Talmud at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Urbach was a member and president of the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.

Life

Urbach was born in Białystok, Poland, to a hasidic family. He studied in Rome and Breslau, where he received rabbinic ordination. He emigrated to Palestine in 1937. He served as a rabbi in the British army during World War II. He also took part in Israel's War of Independence and thereafter worked for several educational institutions before joining the Hebrew University faculty in 1953.

Urbach died on 3 July 1991 at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem after a long illness. The cause of death is undisclosed. He is buried at the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem, near Menachem Begin.

Works

  • The Sages - his major work.
  • in Ephraim Urbach, דרשות חז"ל על נביאי אומות העולם ועל פרשת בלעם "Rabbinic Exegesis About Gentile Prophets And The Balaam Passage" (Hebrew), Tarbitz (25:1956), Urbach explored the interpretation of the rabbis about Gittin 57a where Onkelos raises up Balaam from hell, and concluded that Balaam was not a reference to Jesus in the Talmud.
  • Awards

  • In 1955, Urbach was awarded the Israel Prize, for Jewish studies.
  • In 1983, he was a co-recipient (jointly with Nechama Leibowitz) of the Bialik Prize for Jewish thought.
  • References

    Ephraim Urbach Wikipedia