Encyclopaedia Judaica

E381983

Encyclopaedia Judaica is a comprehensive, multi-volume reference work on Jewish history, religion, culture, and biography, widely regarded as an authoritative source in Jewish studies.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Encyclopaedia Judaica canonical 7

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Jewish studies reference
encyclopedia
reference work
countryOfPublication Israel
United States of America
coversPeriod biblical period
medieval period
modern period
rabbinic period
coversRegion Diaspora communities
Israel
surface form: State of Israel
editorInChief Cecil Roth
Geoffrey Wigoder NERFINISHED
field Jewish studies
history
religious studies
firstEditionPublicationYear 1971
1972
hasArticleType biographical articles
geographical entries
topical articles
hasDigitalVersion yes
hasEdition first edition
second edition
hasNotableContributor Gershom Scholem
Isaiah Berlin
Jacob Katz
Rabbi Dr. Louis Jacobs
surface form: Louis Jacobs

Salo Wittmayer Baron
hasSecondEditionNumberOfVolumes 22
hasSecondEditionPublicationYear 2006
2007
isBasedOn Jewish Encyclopedia
surface form: Jüdisches Lexikon
isRegardedAs authoritative source in Jewish studies
language English
mediaType online
print
name Encyclopaedia Judaica self-link
numberOfVolumes 16
publisher Keter Publishing House
Macmillan Publishers
surface form: Macmillan
subject Jewish biography
Jewish culture
Jewish history
Jewish religion
Judaism
targetAudience general readers interested in Judaism
scholars
students

Referenced by (7)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Sholom Aleichem describedBySource Encyclopaedia Judaica
Leopold Zunz describedBySource Encyclopaedia Judaica
Annie Nathan Meyer describedBySource Encyclopaedia Judaica
Marcus Jastrow describedBySource Encyclopaedia Judaica
Encyclopaedia Judaica name Encyclopaedia Judaica self-link
Jewish Encyclopedia influenced Encyclopaedia Judaica
Sherira Gaon describedIn Encyclopaedia Judaica