Talmud, Der, in seiner Nichtigkeit, by Buchner, [146].
Talmud, the, the study of, [31], [71-72];
burnt in public, [70];
customs of, according to Elijah Gaon, [74];
attacks on, [145-147], [170], [242-248];
published in Russia, [147-149];
neglected in Germany, [168].
Talmud Torah, the, [47], [184].
Talmudists, ancient Russo-Jewish, [28-30];
opposed by Hasidism, [66];
in Vilna, [197-198].
Tarnopol, on Russo-Jewish women, [299-300].
Taz, David, rabbi, [34].
Temkin's Derek Salulah, [146].
Te'udah be-Yisraël, by Levinsohn, [205-207], [209], [210], [212].
Toledot Ya'akob Yosef, by Jacob Joseph Polonnoy, [65].
Tolstoi, [245], [250], [302].
Troki, city, [22].
Troki, Abraham, author and physician, [39].
Troki, Isaac ben Abraham, Karaite scholar, [36].
Turgenief, on Russia, [224];
his Zhid, [224];
referred to, [245], [250];
on Alexander II, [251];
his Virgin Soil, and Fathers and Sons, [257];
his Lithuanian Jewish character, [259-260].
Tushiyah Society, [296-297].

Ukraine, the, Jewish community in, [20];
famous for scholars, [35-36];
Jewish self-government in, [44];
expulsions from, [56-57];
state of morality in, [64];
Hasidism in, [69], [122];
first school in, [164].
Uman, [59], [164].
[United States], the, [158], [220], [270], [283].
Uvarov, on persecution, [155], [302];
on "re-education," [171], [174], [175], [182].

Vassile Lupu, hospodar of Moldavia, [40].
Vassilyevich, Ivan, [23], [26].
Vernacular, the, [18], [29], [30-31], [38], [188], [194], [255].
Vilna, scene of martyrdom, [27];
Talmudists of, [34];
kahal of, [62];
persecution of Hasidim, [76];
the last rabbi of, [79];
notables of, [91], [92], [124], [150];
first graduates from University of, [126-127];
opposition to Haskalah in, [133];
first publication of the Talmud in, [148-149];
first assembly of Maskilim in, [165];
innovations in, [166];
reception of Lilienthal in, [172], [173];
rabbinical seminary at, [175], [186], [202];
yeshibot of, [197];
Haskalah in, [198], [200], [206], [246];
champions of Jews in, [225];
referred to, [230], [292], [295].
Virgin Soil, by Turgenief, [257].
Vital, Hayyim, Cabbalist, [103], [134].
Vitebsk, [128], [202], [292].
Vitebsk, Menahem Mendel of, zaddik, on Haskalah, [135].
Vladimir, grand duke, [20].
Volhynia, jurisdiction over, [44];
massacres in, [60];
Hasidism in, [69], [81], [104];
first complete edition of the Talmud published in, [148];
referred to, [162], [195];
blood accusations in, [208].
Volozhin, Hayyim, dean, [135], [150-151], [175], [176].
Volozhin, Isaac of, dean, [151].
Volozhin, yeshibah of, [150-152], [245], [295].
Vosnitzin, Captain, martyr, [27], [57].

Wahl, Saul, Jewish Polish king (?), [22].
Warsaw, Jewish community in, [20];
persecution in, [58];
protest at, [62];
defended by Jewish soldiers, [115];
first Yiddish paper in, [124];
rabbinic college of, [144-145], [170], [202];
censor in, [148];
condition of, [159];
German influence in, [196];
Maskilim of, [202], [206], [246];
referred to, [286].
Way, Lewis, English missionary, [129-130], [144].
Weigel, Katharina, proselyte, [27].
Wengeroff's Memoirs, [163];
on Russo-Jewish women, [300].
Wessely, Naphtali Hartwig, quoted, [38];
course of study prescribed by, [75];
his ancestry, [77];
his opinion on Russo-Jewish students, [80], [92], [108];
his Mosaïde, [98];
his Yen Lebanon, [105];
his Epistles and Yen Lebanon banned, [132], [133], [192].
What to Do, by Chernichevsky, [257].
White, on Jewish farmers, [288].
Wissotzky, Kalonymos, philanthropist, [292].
Wohl, censor of Hebrew books, [252], [294].
Wolf, Levy, jurist, [126].
Wolff's Metaphysics, [84-86];
Mathematics, [90], [108].
Wolper, Michael, educator, [294].
Women's education, [45-46], [253], [258], [259], [276], [296], [299-301].
Words of Peace and Truth, by Wessely, [75].
Workingmen, Russo-Jewish, [163], [293-294], [318] (n. [2]).

Yankele Kovner. See [Barit, Jacob].
Yaroslav, fair of, [49].
Yaroslav, Aaron, friend of Mendelssohn, [81].
Yavan, Baruch, diplomat, [104].
Yelisavetgrad, [247], [269], [292].
Yen Lebanon, by Wessely, [105], [132], [133], [192].
Yeralash, [201].
Yeshibat 'Ez Hayyim, [150-152], [175], [184], [254].
Yeshibot, [32], [46-49], [168].
Yeven Mezulah, by Hannover, [48-49].
Yiddish, as spoken by Russian Jews, [38];
first used for secular instruction, [100-101], [124];
first weekly in, [123], [196];
studied for missionary purposes, [145];
employed by Maskilim, [167], [232];
by Zionists, [286].

Zabludovsky, Jehiel Michael, Talmudist, [199].
Zacharias, monkish proselyte, [26].
Zacharias of Kiev, missionary, [25].
Zaddikim, [66], [122], [220].
Zamoscz, city, [90], [202].
Zamoscz, Israel Moses Halevi, instructor of Mendelssohn, [77], [90], [195].
Zamoscz, Reuben of, quoted, [80].
Zamoscz, Solomon of, liturgical poet, [35].
Zangwill, on Maimon, [88];
referred to, [297].
Zaremba, proselyte, [27].
Zaslav, fair of, [49];
blood accusation in, [208].
Zaslaver, Jacob, Massorite, [36].
Zbitkover, Samuel, financier, [116].
Zederbaum, Alexander, publisher, [288].
Zeitlin, Joshua, financier, [118-119].
Zeker Rab, [124].
Zelmele, Talmudist, [119-120].
Zerubbabel, by Levinsohn, [210-212], [213].
Zhagory, [200], [202].
Zhitomir, rabbinical seminary at, [175], [186], [197], [202], [248];
printing-press in, [230];
trade school in, [235];
Evening and Sabbath schools in, [239].
Zionism, [267], [284-287]:
difficulties of, [287-288];
effect of, [289-291].
Zohar, [63], [134].
Zunser, Eliakum, badhan, on Alexander II, [231];
on Orthodoxy, [240-241];
on the "intelligentia," [278];
on Zionism, [290];
on the awakening, [324-327] (n. [27]).

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