I.H. Weiss, <I>Dor Dor we-Dorshaw</I>, iv and V.
Gross, <I>Gallia judaica</I>, Paris, 1897, passim.
Berliner, <I>Beitrage zur Geschichte der Raschi-Commentare</I>,
Berlin, 1903.
It is impossible to enumerate all the monographs and all the magazine articles. Concerning Samuel b. Meir, see Rosin, <I>R. Samuel ben Meir als Schrifterklarer</I>, Breslau, 1880; concerning Jacob Tam, see Weiss, <I>Rabbenu Tam</I>, in the <I>Bet Talmud</I>, iii; concerning Jacob b. Simson, see Epstein in the <I>Revue des etudes juives</I>, xxxv, pp.240 <I>et seq.</I>; concerning Shemaiah, see A. Epstein in the <I>Monatsschrift</I>, xli, pp.257, 296, 564; concerning Simson b. Abraham, see H. Gross in the <I>Revue des etudes juives</I>, vii and viii; concerning Judah Sir Leon, see Gross in Berliner's <I>Magazin</I>, iv and V.
The influence of Rashi upon Nicholas de Lyra and Luthcr is the subject of an essay by Siegfried in <I>Archiv fur wissenschaftliche Erforsehung des Alten Testaments</I>, i and ii. For Nicholas de Lyra alone, see Neumann in the <I>Revue des etudes juives</I>, xxvi and xxvii.
Concerning Rashi's descendants, see Epstein, <I>Mishpahat
Luria et Kohen-Zedek</I> in <I>Ha-Goren</I>, i, Appendix.
NOTES
1 See W. Bacher, <I>Raschi una Maimuni, Monatsschrift,</I>
XLIX, pp.1 <I>et seq.</I> Also D. Yellin and I. Abrahams,
<I>Maimonides.</I> Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication
Society of America, 1903.
2 A legend has it that Vespasian made some Jews embark on three
vessels, which were then abandoned on the open sea. One of
the ships reached Aries, another Lyons, and the third
Bordeaux. See Gross, <I>Gallia judaica,</I> p.74.
3 See, for example, p.164.