Tarbiz

Academic journal on Jewish studies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tarbiẕ (Hebrew: תרביץ, romanized: tarbiṣ) is a quarterly academic journal of contemporary Jewish studies, humanities and religion (including Judaism, Biblical criticism, Talmud, Kabbalah, Jewish customs, and Jewish history). It is published in Hebrew by the Institute of Jewish Studies (now "Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies", Hebrew University of Jerusalem). The journal was established in 1930. Etymologically, the word "Tarbiz" means "place of dissemination of learning," particularly that related to an "academy," or "seat of learning."[1] The editors-in-chief are Roni Goldstein, Moshe Halbertal, Shlomo Neah, and Sarit Shalu-Aini.

DisciplineJewish studies
LanguageHebrew
EditedbyRoni Goldstein, Moshe Halbertal, Shlomo Neah, Sarit Shalu-Aini
History1930–present
Quick facts Discipline, Language ...
Tarbiẕ
DisciplineJewish studies
LanguageHebrew
Edited byRoni Goldstein, Moshe Halbertal, Shlomo Neah, Sarit Shalu-Aini
Publication details
History1930–present
Publisher
Mandel Institute for Jewish Studies (Magnes Publishing House, Hebrew University) (Israel)
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Tarbiz
Indexing
ISSN0334-3650
LCCNsn85006921
JSTOR03343650
OCLC no.1026583582
Links
Close

History

The first editor of the journal was Yaakov Nahum Epstein [he] who served until 1952, after whom Hayyim Schirmann took-over until 1969. He was followed by Ephraim Elimelech Urbach [he] (1970–1981), while assisted by E.J. Goleh.[2] The following years saw a range of other chief editors.

The current publisher is the Magnes Publishing House at the Hebrew University.

Abstracting and indexing

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI