Abstract

��� With the publication of Jacob Katz’s Masoret u-Mashber and Haim Hillel Ben-Sasson’s Hagut ve-Hanhagah just over a half century ago, rabbinic responsa gained wide recognition as a valuable historical source for the study of late medieval and early modern Jewish history. The two Hebrew works, composed by eminent Israeli scholars, drew heavily on this largely overlooked literature and from ethical-moral writings as well, in order to reconstruct patterns of leadership and authority that prevailed in Ashkenazic kehillot, to probe deep-seated social and religious tensions, and to examine the relations between Jews and the surrounding general society and culture. Over the past several decades, the historical literature has come to rely on these sources rather routinely. Historians have also regularly consulted rabbinic responsa in order to measure, substantiate or disprove—as the case may be—the impact of major historical events and trends. The spread of Sabbatianism, the reception of the Enlightenment, the decline of rabbinic authority, and the first stirrings of secularization are several of the major themes in early modern Jewish history that have been studied profitably with the assistance of responsa. But it is also clear from an extended exchange between Ben-Sasson and Katz that the use of responsa raises any number of methodological questions that continue to divide historians to this day. 1 This essay will not occupy itself with questions concerning the reliability of responsa or other rabbinic writings as historical sources, nor will it dwell on the perspectives they bring to certain historical events. Preoccupation with the decline of religious authority and ritual observance, viewed by many as an essential condition of modernity, has all too often obscured important themes in cultural and intellectual history. It has also reinforced the assumption that Jewish law remained largely intact prior to the nineteenth century. Instead of focusing so much attention on the growth or decline of rabbinic authority, historians might consider exploring the dynamics of rabbinic authority in broader terms. Intellectual creativity and independence,

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