Year Year arrow
arrow-active-down-0
Publisher Publisher arrow
arrow-active-down-1
Journal
1
Journal arrow
arrow-active-down-2
Institution Institution arrow
arrow-active-down-3
Institution Country Institution Country arrow
arrow-active-down-4
Publication Type Publication Type arrow
arrow-active-down-5
Field Of Study Field Of Study arrow
arrow-active-down-6
Topics Topics arrow
arrow-active-down-7
Open Access Open Access arrow
arrow-active-down-8
Language Language arrow
arrow-active-down-9
Filter Icon Filter 1
Year Year arrow
arrow-active-down-0
Publisher Publisher arrow
arrow-active-down-1
Journal
1
Journal arrow
arrow-active-down-2
Institution Institution arrow
arrow-active-down-3
Institution Country Institution Country arrow
arrow-active-down-4
Publication Type Publication Type arrow
arrow-active-down-5
Field Of Study Field Of Study arrow
arrow-active-down-6
Topics Topics arrow
arrow-active-down-7
Open Access Open Access arrow
arrow-active-down-8
Language Language arrow
arrow-active-down-9
Filter Icon Filter 1
Export
Sort by: Relevance
  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.010.gold
Hakham Solomon Ayllon: Amsterdam’s Sabbatean Rabbi, 1700-1728
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Matt Goldish

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.003.nadl
Menasseh ben Israel (and Maimonides) on Human Freedom
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Steven Nadler

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.007.scla
Western Sephardic Prayer Books and an Evolving Religious Culture in Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • David Sclar

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.006.wall
Creating an Urban Rabbinate: The Dynamics of the Early Rabbinate of the Ashkenazi Community in Amsterdam
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Bart Wallet

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.005.orav
The Committee of Six: What a Little-Known Regulation Reveals about Rabbinic Opposition to Communal Authority
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Anne Oravetz Albert

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.009.levi
Shadows of Support: Women and Religious Leadership of the Portuguese Jewish Community in Early Modern Amsterdam
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Tirtsah Levie Bernfeld

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.004.orfa
Isaac Aboab da Fonseca: Leadership between the Spinozist and Sabbatian Storms
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Moisés Orfali

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.008.warn
‘No Person Shall Act Against the Resolutions of the Ma’amad’: Dynamics of Printing in the Amsterdam Sephardic Congregation in the Seventeenth Century
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Heide Warncke

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2025.1-2.001.wall
The Early Modern Rabbis of Amsterdam: Urban Dynamics, Communal Tensions, and Diasporic Entanglements – Introduction to the Special Issue
  • Dec 1, 2025
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Bart Wallet

  • Research Article
  • 10.5117/sr2024.2.001.resh
The Ashkenazi Meat Hall in Amsterdam, 1673-1815
  • Dec 1, 2024
  • Studia Rosenthaliana
  • Ronny Reshef

This study analyses the Ashkenazi meat hall in Amsterdam from 1673 to 1815, identifying five distinct phases in its development. It examines the challenges faced by the institution and the leadership’s adaptive strategies. The meat hall served multiple crucial functions: preserving Jewish identity through halachic adherence, sustaining communal welfare via indirect taxation, and mediating relations with municipal authorities. The identified phases are: (1) Establishment and Institutionalization (1673-1736); (2) Standardization and Accountability (1737-1764); (3) Enhanced Anti-Smuggling Measures (1764-1790); (4) Decentralisation (1790-1808); and (5) Reorganisation (1808-1815). Findings reveal persistent opposition throughout the hall’s history, manifested in recurring violations. Ultimately, the separation of state and religion necessitated a fundamental restructuring of the meat hall, reflecting broader societal changes. This research contributes to our understanding of communal governance, religious institutions, and socio-economic adaptations in early modern Jewish communities.