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- Palestinian_minhag abstract "The Palestinian minhag, or Palestinian liturgy, as opposed to the Babylonian minhag, refers to the rite and ritual of medieval Palestinian Jewry in relation to the traditional order and form of the prayers.A complete collection has not been preserved from antiquity, but several passages of it are scattered in both the Babylonian Talmud and Jerusalem Talmud, in the Midrashim, in the Pesiktot, in minor tractate Soferim, and in some responsa of the Palestinian Geonim. Some excerpts have been preserved in the Siddur of Saadia Gaon and the Cairo geniza yielded some important texts, such as the Eighteen Benedictions.One fragment of a Palestinian siddur discovered in the genizah was written in Hebrew with various introductions and explanations in Judaeo-Arabic. The Geniza fragments mostly date from the 12th century, and reflect the usages of the Palestinian-rite synagogue in Cairo, which was founded by refugees from the Crusades.Though the Palestinian Talmud never became authoritative against the Babylonian, some elements of the Palestinian liturgy were destined to be accepted in Italy, Greece, Germany and France, even in Egypt, against the Babylonian, owing to the enthusiasm of the scholars of Rome. The Babylonian rite was accepted mainly in Spain, Portugal and the southern countries.Liturgies incorporating some elements of the Palestinian minhag fall into three distinct groupings. The German ritual, itself divided into two rituals, the western or Minhag Ashkenaz and the eastern, or Minhag Polin. Minhag Ashkenaz was introduced in Palestine itself during the 16th-century by German and Polish Kabbalists. The Italian minhag, perhaps the oldest Palestinian-influenced ritual. Lastly the Romaniot Minhag, more accurately, the Rumelic or Greek ritual; this ritual of the Balkan countries has retained the most features of the Palestinian minhag. It has been argued that Saadya Gaon’s siddur reflects at least some features of the Palestinian minhag, and that this was one source of the liturgy of German Jewry. Another historic liturgy containing Palestinian elements is the old Aleppo rite (published Venice, 1527 and 1560).This traditional view, that the Sephardi rite was derived from that of Babylon while the Ashkenazi rite reflects that of Palestine, goes back to Leopold Zunz, and was largely based on the fact that the Ashkenazi rite contains many piyyutim of Palestinian origin which are absent from the Babylonian and Sephardi rites. However, the correspondence is not complete. First, a few Sephardi usages in fact reflect Palestinian as against Babylonian influence, for example the use of the words morid ha-tal in the Amidah in summer months; and Moses Gaster maintained that the correspondence is the other way round (i.e. Ashkenazi=Babylonian, Sephardi=Palestinian). Secondly, Palestinian influence on any of the current Jewish rites extends only to isolated features, and none of them substantially follows the historic Palestinian rite. A comparative list of Babylonian and Palestinian customs, known as Hilluf Minhagim, is preserved from the time of the Geonim: most of the Palestinian customs there listed are not now practised in any community. The most important and long-lasting difference was that Torah reading in Palestinian-rite synagogues followed a triennial cycle, while other communities used an annual cycle. Similarly, Palestinian prayer texts recovered from the Cairo Geniza are not reflected in any current rite.↑ 1.0 1.1 ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑ ↑".
- Palestinian_minhag thumbnail סידור_אר._ישראל.jpg?width=300.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageExternalLink results?keyword=genizah&fullText=Palestinian&excludeText=&textJoin=and&shelfLocator=&title=&author=&subject=&location=&yearStart=&yearEnd=.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageID "32190987".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageLength "8811".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageRevisionID "702919390".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Amidah.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Babylonian_minhag.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Balkans.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Cairo_Geniza.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewish_services.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jews_and_Judaism_in_Palestine.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Category:Nusachs.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Geonim.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Jerusalem_Talmud.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Judeo-Arabic_languages.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Kabbalah.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Leopold_Zunz.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Midrash.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Minhag.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Moses_Gaster.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Mustaarabi_Jews.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Nusach_Ashkenaz.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Palestinian_Gaonate.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Palestinian_Jews.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Pesikta_Rabbati.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Piyyut.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Romaniote_Jews.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Saadia_Gaon.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Siddur_of_Saadia_Gaon.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Soferim_(Talmud).
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Talmud.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Torah_reading.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink Triennial_cycle.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLink File:סידור_אר._ישראל.jpg.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eretz Yisrael".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "Judaean/Galilaean Jewish tradition".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "Minhagei Eretz Yisrael".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nusach Eretz Yisrael".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "Palestinian minhag".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "Palestinian".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "minhag".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "old Palestinian rite".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageWikiLinkText "that used in Palestine".
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Palestinian_minhag wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Palestinian_minhag subject Category:Jewish_services.
- Palestinian_minhag subject Category:Jews_and_Judaism_in_Palestine.
- Palestinian_minhag subject Category:Nusachs.
- Palestinian_minhag type Service.
- Palestinian_minhag comment "The Palestinian minhag, or Palestinian liturgy, as opposed to the Babylonian minhag, refers to the rite and ritual of medieval Palestinian Jewry in relation to the traditional order and form of the prayers.A complete collection has not been preserved from antiquity, but several passages of it are scattered in both the Babylonian Talmud and Jerusalem Talmud, in the Midrashim, in the Pesiktot, in minor tractate Soferim, and in some responsa of the Palestinian Geonim.".
- Palestinian_minhag label "Palestinian minhag".
- Palestinian_minhag sameAs Q7127427.
- Palestinian_minhag sameAs נוסח_ארץ_ישראל.
- Palestinian_minhag sameAs m.0gx_stf.
- Palestinian_minhag sameAs Q7127427.
- Palestinian_minhag wasDerivedFrom Palestinian_minhag?oldid=702919390.
- Palestinian_minhag depiction סידור_אר._ישראל.jpg.
- Palestinian_minhag isPrimaryTopicOf Palestinian_minhag.