Footnote 27:[(return)]

Zunz, Literaturgeschichte, pp. 433-435, 442; Buber, Anshe Shem, Cracow, 1895, pp. 307-309; Benjacob, Ozar ha-Sefarim, p. 396; JE, xi. 217; Bikkure ha-'Ittim, 1830, p. 43. Jacob of Gnesen, I suspect, must have lived in Russia.

Footnote 28:[(return)]

Steinschneider, Jewish Literature, pp. 235, 240; Benjacob, op. cit, p. 396.

Footnote 29:[(return)]

JE, xii. 265-266: "Enfin les incrédules les plus déterminés n'out presque rien allégué qui ne soit dans le Rampart de la Foi du Rabbin Isaac."

Footnote 30:[(return)]

Nusbaum, Historya Zhidóv, i. p. 180; Edelman, op. cit, attributes the coming of Saul Wahl to this cause.

Footnote 31:[(return)]

The Elim (Amsterdam, 1629), if not, as the Karaites maintain, actually the work of Zerah Troki, was surely the result of the problems submitted by him to Delmedigo.

Footnote 32:[(return)]

JE, iv. 504; vii. 264; xii. 266; Ha-Eshkol, iii. and iv. (R.M. Jarre); LTI, ii. 80; Benjacob, op. cit, no. 1428.

Footnote 33:[(return)]

Zunz, Ritus, Berlin, 1859, p. 73, and Gottesdienstliche Vorträge, Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1892, p. 452, n.a.; Wessely, Dibre Shalom we-Emet, ii. 7; Benjacob, op. cit., no. 1187.

Footnote 34:[(return)]

Voskhod, 1893, i. 79; New Era Illustrated Magazine, v.; FNI, p. 28 f.; JE, i. 113; ii. 22, 622; xii. 265.

Footnote 35:[(return)]

JE, vii. 454.