Thursday, March 03, 2011

The new earliest known source in print for the Golem of Prague. (3/4/11 - Please see update below.)

It was fun while it lasted. On November 4, 2009 I posted what was then the earliest discovered reference to the Maharal creating a golem in any known written source. My source was the Oesterreiche Zeitschrift für Geschichts und Staatsunde, 92, November 16, 1836, page 368.

Now, a new book called The Golem Returns by Cathy S. Gelbin has found an earlier source from 1834. What's particularly awesome about this is that this source was sitting right there on the pages of the Jewish Encyclopedia for more than 100 years.



Here is a sample, and below it is the entire document in Scribd.



As you can see, this is from Sulamith v.8 (which is available at compactmemory.de). It's described as a "Prague Legende,"and it is titled Der Golem und die Ehebrecherin, which means The Golem and the Adulteress. This piece is by Gustav Frankl, who was already known for his version of the legend - but it had been published in 1841. The Jewish Encyclopedia erroneously says that this earlier source is "abridged" from the later one, but there can be no doubt, 1834 is 1834, and it is about Rabbi Lob and his Golem.

Eli Eshed, a golem researcher, gets the credit for calling attention to this new book, which I have not yet seen.




EDIT 3/4/11: Important update. This is a mistake. Please see this post, where I give an actual 1834 source for the Golem.

6 comments:

  1. Better let Dr. Leiman know. I think he dates the Golem story later than that...

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  2. Does having met several of the Golem's descendants count for anything?

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  3. >Better let Dr. Leiman know. I think he dates the Golem story later than that...

    I did. But he doesn't "date" it at all. He, like all, merely point to earliest known sources in writing.

    Gabbe: Groan.

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  4. Awesome. I have just discovered a source that is also from 1834, and approached an entirely different angle of the golem legend. I'm not yet sure which is older.

    Stay tuned.

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  5. For those interested in further reading (of which, I'm sure, the webmaster here has read thoroughly) -
    http://seforim.blogspot.com/search/label/Golem

    and the related comments..

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  6. It turns out this is a mistake. Please see this post where I show an actual 1834 for source for the Maharal's Golem.

    ReplyDelete