(pp. 17-52)
Footnote 1:[(return)]
Mention might, indeed, be made of Dr. Zunz's pioneer work in his Aelteste Nachrichten über Juden und jüdische Gelehrte in Polen, Slavonien, Russland (Gesammelte Schriften, Berlin, 1875, iii. 82-87), and Firkovich, who, in his Abne Zikkaron (Vilna, 1872), threw much light on the history of the Crimean Jews. The best contributions to the subject, however, are those of Harkavy, Russ i Russkiye v Sred. Yevr. Lit. (Voskhod, 1881), and Malishevsky, Yevreyi v Yuzhnoy Rossii i Kieve, v. x-xii. Vyekakh, St. Petersburg, 1878.
Footnote 2:[(return)]
LTI, p. 33, n. 2; LBJ, ii. 94, n. 2.
Footnote 3:[(return)]
See JE, s.v. Azov, and Kertch. See also Fishberg, The Jews: A Study of Race and Environment, New York, 1911, pp. 150, 192-194.
Footnote 4:[(return)]
See Judah Halevi's Kuzari, Introduction.
Footnote 5:[(return)]
Minor, Rukovodstvo, Moscow, 1881, iv; Ha-Pardes, St. Petersburg, 1902, p. 155.
Footnote 6:[(return)]
HUH, pp. 31-32, 69-76.
Footnote 7:[(return)]
Yevrey Minister, Voskhod, 1885, v. 105 f.
Footnote 8:[(return)]
JE, i. 112, 119, 223; viii. 652.