Difference between revisions of "Commentators:Sifre Bemidbar/0"
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Latest revision as of 00:11, 27 July 2015
Sifre Bemidbar
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Name | Sifre Bemidbar ספרי במדבר |
---|---|
Dates | 3rd century |
Place | Eretz Yisrael |
Characteristics | |
Sources | |
Impacted on |
Background1
Names
Date
3rd century4
Place
SifNum was redacted in Eretz Yisrael.
Language
Mishnaic Hebrew
Text
- Manuscripts – The best manuscript of SifNum is ms Vatican 32.5 Other important manuscripts include London 341, Oxford 151, Berlin Tubingen 1594.33, eight leaves of Firkovich II A 269.6
- Printings –
The first critical edition was published by H. Horovitz (Leipzig, 1917).7
A new critical edition based on all known manuscript and citation evidence was published by M. Kahana (Jerusalem, 2011) in three volumes. The first volume contains the text of SifNum to Naso and Behaalotecha, with critical notes, parallels, and textual variants, along with an interim edition of the rest of SifNum containing only the text and critical notes. The second volume contains an extensive critical commentary to SifNum on Naso, and the third volume contains Kahana’s commentary to SifNum on Behaalotecha. - Textual layers – SifNum is marked by a significant number of expositions or opinions whose placement either interrupts the flow of the discourse, or is out of order in relation to the verses. This may imply that an additional stratum was inserted following an initial redaction.8
Content
Genre
- – midrash halakhah
Structure
- – SifNum covers eleven distinct units in Bemidbar:
5:1-7:19,7:84-8:4, 8:23-9:14, 10:1-10, 10:29-12:16, 15:1-41, 18:1-19:22, 25:1-14, 26:52-56, 27:1-31:24, 35:9-34.
SifNum was originally partitioned into two “sefarim”: Sefer Vayedaber and Sefer Zot (named after the opening words in the verses they first expound, respectively, 5:1 and 19:2). Each of these sefarim is divided into subtopics, which are further subdivided into “baraitot”.9
Characteristics
- – See Introduction to the Midreshei Halakhah.
Sources
Significant Influences
Occasional Usage
Possible Relationship
Impact
Other Midrashim
- –
Medieval Exegetes
- – SifNum was widely known and used by medieval exegetes.