Publications by Type: Journal Articles

2019
Ask the Midwives: A Hebrew Manual on Midwifery from Medieval Germany†
Baumgarten E. Ask the Midwives: A Hebrew Manual on Midwifery from Medieval Germany†. Social History of Medicine [Internet]. 2019;32 (4) :712 - 733. Publisher's VersionAbstract

SummaryThis article focuses on a chapter in a manual on circumcision written in Worms in the thirteenth century by Jacob and Gershom haGozrim (the circumcisers). The third chapter of the manual contains medical instruction on how to attend to women in labour and other gynaecological conditions. Whereas the first two chapters of the manual were published in the late nineteenth century, the midwifery chapter has only been recently examined. This article is comprised of a translation of the midwifery text(s) along with an introduction to the text and the community practices it reflects. It outlines the cooperation between medical practitioners, male and female, Jewish and Christian, and discusses the medical remedies recommended and some practices current in thirteenth-century Germany.

“Introduction: Jewish Daily Life in Medieval Europe,” Chidushim
Baumgarten E. “Introduction: Jewish Daily Life in Medieval Europe,” Chidushim. Chidushim [Internet]. 2019;21 :5 - 13. Publisher's Version
2018
Four Mothers in Three Stories from Medieval Northern France (Hebrew)
Baumgarten E. Four Mothers in Three Stories from Medieval Northern France (Hebrew). Zmanim: A Historical Quarterly [Internet]. 2018;139 :70 - 77. Publisher's Version
Baumgarten E. “Towards a History of Medieval Jewish Women’s Lives,” in Yosef Kaplan, ed., A Conference in Honor of Professor Avraham Grossman on the Occasion of His Eightieth Birthday (Hebrew). the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities [Internet]. 2018 :95 - 113. Publisher's Version
‘Like Adam and Eve’: Biblical Models and Jewish Daily Life in Medieval Christian Europe
Baumgarten E. ‘Like Adam and Eve’: Biblical Models and Jewish Daily Life in Medieval Christian Europe. Irish Theological Quarterly [Internet]. 2018;83 (1) :44 - 61. Publisher's Version
Appropriation and Differentiation: Jewish Identity in Medieval Ashkenaz
Baumgarten E. Appropriation and Differentiation: Jewish Identity in Medieval Ashkenaz. AJS Review [Internet]. 2018;42 (1) :39 - 63. Publisher's VersionAbstract

This article discusses the ways scholars have outlined the process of Jewish adaptation (or lack of it) from their Christian surroundings in northern Europe during the High Middle Ages. Using the example of penitential fasting, the first two sections of the article describe medieval Jewish practices and some of the approaches that have been used to explain the similarity between medieval Jewish and contemporary Christian customs. The last two sections of the article suggest that in addition to looking for texts that connect between Jewish and Christian thought and beliefs behind these customs, it is useful to examine what medieval Jews and Christians saw of each other's customs living in close urban quarters. Finally, the article suggests that when shaping medieval Jewish and Christian identity, the differences emphasized in shared everyday actions and visible practice were no less important than theological distinctions. As part of the discussion throughout the article, the terminology used by scholars to describe the process of Jewish appropriation from the local surroundings is described, focusing on terms such as “influence” and “inward acculturation,” as well as “appropriation.”

2016
Praying separately Gender in medieval Ashkenazi Synagogues (thirteenth-fourteenth centuries)
Baumgarten E. Praying separately Gender in medieval Ashkenazi Synagogues (thirteenth-fourteenth centuries). Clio. Women, Gender, History [Internet]. 2016;44 (2) :43 - 62. Publisher's VersionAbstract

The English version of this issue is published thanks to the support of the Fondation pour la Mémoire de la ShoahFrom Egypt under the Fatimid Caliphate to medieval Germany, from the Iberian peninsula to the Ottoman Empire, from Tsarist Russia to contemporary Ethiopia, from New York to Berlin or Paris, this issue of Clio FGH constitutes an itinerary through the history of Judaism in relation to gender. The “Jewish religious tradition” assigns entirely different roles, obligations and rights to women and men. The Scriptures and their interpretations, everyday actions and ritual feasts, as well as customs and Rabbinic law (halakha) all combine to produce a number of rules, concepts and representations of relations between the sexes. But this tradition has also developed within multiple historical context, allowing room to be created for evolution, influences and challenges: it is this diversity of “gender arrangements” within Judaism that is restored to prominence in this issue. Editors for this issue: Leora AUSLANDER & Sylvie STEINBERG Editor for the English online edition: Siân REYNOLDS

Prier à part ? Le genre dans les synagogues ashkénazes médiévales (xiiie-xive siècle)
Baumgarten E. Prier à part ? Le genre dans les synagogues ashkénazes médiévales (xiiie-xive siècle). Clio [Internet]. 2016;(44) :43 - 62. Publisher's Version
2015
Charitable like Abigail: The History of an Epitaph
Baumgarten E. Charitable like Abigail: The History of an Epitaph. Jewish Quarterly Review [Internet]. 2015;105 (3) :312 - 339. Publisher's Version
Shared and Contested Time: Jews and the Christian Ritual Calendar in the Late Thirteenth Century
Baumgarten E. Shared and Contested Time: Jews and the Christian Ritual Calendar in the Late Thirteenth Century. Viator [Internet]. 2015;46 (2) :253 - 276. Publisher's Version
2014
Daily Commodities and Religious Identity in the Medieval Jewish Communities of Northern Europe
Baumgarten E. Daily Commodities and Religious Identity in the Medieval Jewish Communities of Northern Europe. Studies in Church History [Internet]. 2014;50 :97 - 121. Publisher's VersionAbstract

The Hebrew chronicle written by Solomon b. Samson recounts the mass conversion of the Jews of Regensburg in 1096.’ The Jews were herded and forced into the local river where a ‘sign was made over the water, the sign of a cross’ and thus they were baptized, all together in the same river. The local German rivers play another role in the accounts of the turbulent events of the Crusade persecutions. They were also the place where Jews evaded conversion, drowning themselves in water, rather than being baptized by what the chronicles’ authors call the ‘stinking waters’ of Christianity. Reading these Hebrew chronicles, one is immediately struck by the tremendous revulsion expressed toward the waters of baptism. Indeed, in his analysis of the symbolic significance of the baptismal waters for medieval Jews, Ivan Marcus has suggested that baptism by force in the local rivers was so traumatic that they instituted a ritual response during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. One component of the medieval Jewish child initiation ceremony to Torah study was performed on the banks of the river, expressing Jewish aversion to baptism (see Fig. i).

Baumgarten E. The Intellectual History and Rabbinic Culture of Medieval Ashkenaz. Journal of Jewish Studies [Internet]. 2014;65 (2) :442 - 445. Publisher's Version
2013
Palaces of Time: Jewish Calendar and Culture in Early Modern Europe by Elisheva Carlebach
Baumgarten E. Palaces of Time: Jewish Calendar and Culture in Early Modern Europe by Elisheva Carlebach. Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies [Internet]. 2013;31 (4) :105 - 108. Publisher's Version
A Tale of a Christian Matron and Sabbath Candles: Religious Difference, Material Culture and Gender in Thirteenth-Century Germany
Baumgarten E. A Tale of a Christian Matron and Sabbath Candles: Religious Difference, Material Culture and Gender in Thirteenth-Century Germany. Jewish Studies Quarterly [Internet]. 2013;20 (1) :83. Publisher's Version
2012
Shared Stories and Religious Rhetoric: R. Judah the Pious, Peter the Chanter and a Drought
Baumgarten E. Shared Stories and Religious Rhetoric: R. Judah the Pious, Peter the Chanter and a Drought. Medieval Encounters [Internet]. 2012;18 (1) :36 - 54. Publisher's VersionAbstract

AbstractThis article discusses a story about a Jewish-Christian interaction during a drought that appears in Peter the Chanter’s Verbum abbreviatum and R. Judah the Pious’ Sefer Hasidim . I suggest that the two authors had a common source, noting that Peter’s version was earlier so that R. Judah might have based his story on an account based on Peter the Chanter’s story, whether oral or written. Analyzing the tale, the article points to narrative strategies used by both authors and to what they can tell us about Jewish and Christian knowledge of each other’s religious practice and belief in medieval Christian Europe.

Debra Kaplan. Beyond Expulsion: Jews, Christians, and Reformation Strasbourg.
Baumgarten E. Debra Kaplan. Beyond Expulsion: Jews, Christians, and Reformation Strasbourg. The American Historical Review [Internet]. 2012;117 (4) :1310 - 1311. Publisher's Version
2011
Introduction to Gender and Jewish Identity
Baumgarten, Fishman. Introduction to Gender and Jewish Identity. Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues [Internet]. 2011;(22) :7 - 14. Publisher's Version
2009
Marked and Unmarked Flesh: Jewish Identity, Gender, and Circumcision in Historical Perspective
Baumgarten E. Marked and Unmarked Flesh: Jewish Identity, Gender, and Circumcision in Historical Perspective. Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies [Internet]. 2009;26 (2) :143 - 148. Publisher's Version
Gendering Disgust in Medieval Religious Polemic by Alexandra Cuffel
Baumgarten E. Gendering Disgust in Medieval Religious Polemic by Alexandra Cuffel. Nashim A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues [Internet]. 2009;17 (Spring 5769) :205 - 209. Publisher's Version
Baumgarten E. Jewish Conceptions of Motherhood in Medieval Christian Europe: Dialogue and Difference. Micrologus: Nature, Sciences and Medieval Societies [Internet]. 2009;17 :149 - 165. Publisher's Version

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