Online Encyclopedia

QARAITES, or KARAITES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 706 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

QARAITES, or KARAITES  , a Jewish
See also:
sect of the
See also:
middle ages, claiming to be distinguished by adherence to Scripture as contrasted with oral tradition, whence the name (from H1 qara, to read, as if " readers," scripturarii; sometimes also NIP !? '4 " children of the Text " as read) . They have frequently been identified with the
See also:
Sadducees or with the
See also:
Samaritans, with neither of whom have they any
See also:
historical connexion or much spiritual affinity . The
See also:
schism arose at Bagdad about the middle of the 8th century, when the hereditary claims of Anan, a learned Talmudist, to the office of Resh Galutha were set aside by the Gaonim (heads of rabbinical
See also:
schools) at Sura and Pumbeditha, because he was believed to undervalue the authority of the
See also:
Talmud . Anan, nevertheless, allowed himself to be proclaimed
See also:
Exilarch by his followers, a step construed into treason by the
See also:
Mahommedan government . He was sentenced to
See also:
death, but his
See also:
life was saved by his
See also:
fellow prisoner,
See also:
Abu Hanifa., the founder of the
See also:
great school of Moslem
See also:
theology and jurisprudence . Ultimately he and his followers were permitted to migrate to
See also:
Palestine . They ereCtxd a synagogue in Jerusalem Anan, who is said to have died in A.D . 765, was the author of a commentary on the
See also:
Pentateuch and other
See also:
works in Talmudic
See also:
Hebrew and Arabic . Most of these are lost, and we are thus
See also:
left chiefly dependent on the hostile indications of opponents . His code was recovered in
See also:
Egypt by the Qaraite Moses b . Elijah Bashyazi (1544-172) .

Fragments were published by Harkavy (Voskhod 1897-1898) . It is clear that Anan, although theoretically antagonistic to rabbinic methods, was in the end compelled to incline towards them . Considerable

influence, too, was exercised on his theology by Abu Hanifa . In general we know that he showed great bitterness against the Talmud and its upholders (the "Rabbanites ") for their modification of the written law by arbitrary additions and subtractions, but there is nothing to indicate that he himself had the insight or the fervour by which he could have become the
See also:
pioneer of a really great reformation . The questions appear to have turned entirely on points of minute detail . Several of them related to the regulation of the
See also:
calendar, the new moon, for example, being fixed by the Qaraites by
See also:
direct observation, not by astronomical calculation, and the intercalary
See also:
year also being determined empirically; _ others related to paschal and pentecostal ritual, such as the precise
See also:
hour for killing the lamb or for burning its remains . The differences which affected social life most deeply were those
See also:
relating to
See also:
Sabbath observance and the forbidden degrees of
See also:
marriage, the Qaraites not recognizing any distinction between relationships of consanguinity and those of affinity, while in their zeal to avoid all
See also:
risk of infringement of the sacredness of the day of rest they prohibited the burning of any
See also:
light at all in their houses from sunset to sunset . Of
See also:
late years much Qaraite literature has been published . The most valuable contribution to learning made by it is in the direction of Hebrew
See also:
philology and the natural exegesis of the scriptural text . Little information as to the Qaraites can be derived from their liturgies; they differ fundamentally from those used by Rabbanites in being composed almost entirely of scriptural versicles and in containing practically no Piyyutim (liturgical poems) . The controversies as to the
See also:
rule of faith which so deeply divided the Christian Church in the 16th century gave to this obscure sect an illusory and passing importance, the Catholics frequently hurling the epithet Karaei, in token of contempt, at the Protestants, who in their turn willingly accepted it as sufficiently descriptive of their attitude towards Scripture . The Qaraites never have been numerous; in 1904 their
See also:
total number was estimated at 12,000, 10,000 being found in Russia: the
See also:
present community in Jerusalem numbers only a few families .

They occur in

Constantinople and else-where in
See also:
Turkey, and in Egypt, but are chiefly met with in
See also:
southern Russia, and especially in the
See also:
Crimean districts of Eupatoria,
See also:
Theodosia and Sevastopol . Here their historical capital and chief synagogue was formerly the " Jews' Castle " (Tshuful-Kale), near Bakh-chisarai . The place is now deserted; its cemetery was the seat of Firkowitsch's notorious forgeries (inscriptions of 1st century), by which he sought to establish a fabulous antiquity for his sect . According to Strack (A . Firkowitsch u. seine Entdeckungen, 1876) the
See also:
oldest tombstones do not go back beyond the 14th century . The
See also:
modern Qaraites are generally, well spoken of for their honesty, perseverance and
See also:
simple habits of life; they are gradually approximating to the Rabbanites, with whom, in some places, they are on terms of social intimacy . The
See also:
Russian government exempts the Qaraites from the restrictions to which the rest of the Jews are subject; this circumstance is probably due to the insignificance of the Qaraites numerically . Among the older authorities may be mentioned Morinus, Exercit . Bibl.
See also:
lib. ii. ex . 7 (166g) ; and Triglandius, Diatribe de Secta Karaeorutn II (17o3) . See Gratz, Gesch. der Juden, especially in vol. v . (i8o6), with the additions and corrections of Harkavy in the Hebrew
See also:
translation; and Furst, Gesch.
See also:
des Karaerthums (1865); S .

Pinsker, Ligqu(e Qadmoniyyot: articles by A . Harkavy and by S . Poznanski in the Jewish Quarterly

Review (e.g. x . 238–276, and vols. xviii.–xx.) . See also Jewish Encyclopedia, s.v . " Anan," Karaites," &c . (I .

End of Article: QARAITES, or KARAITES
[back]
QAAAA
[next]
QARO (or CARO), JOSEPH BEN EPHRAIM (1488-1575)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.