Baruch ben Samuel
Encyclopedia
Baruch ben Samuel also called Baruch of Mainz to distinguish him from Baruch ben Isaac
Baruch ben Isaac
Baruch ben Isaac was a Tosafist and codifier who was born at Worms, but lived at Regensburg; he is sometimes called after the one and sometimes after the other city....

, was a Talmudist and prolific payyeṭan, who flourished in Mainz
Mainz
Mainz under the Holy Roman Empire, and previously was a Roman fort city which commanded the west bank of the Rhine and formed part of the northernmost frontier of the Roman Empire...

 at the beginning of the thirteenth century. He was a pupil of Moses ben Solomon ha-Kohen of Mainz and of Eliezer ben Samuel
Eliezer ben Samuel
Eliezer ben Samuel of Metz was a Tosafist and the author of the halachic work Sefer Yereim . An abridgment of this work was produced by Benjamin ben Abraham Anaw.-References:...

 of Metz; the judicial sentences of both of whom he frequently cites. Baruch was one of the most eminent German rabbis of his time, and one of the leading signatories of the Takkanot Shum
Takkanot Shum
The ' , or Enactments of SHU"M were a set of decrees formulated and agreed upon over a period of decades by the leaders of three of the central cities of Medieval Rhineland Jewry: Speyer, Worms, and Mainz. The initials of the Hebrew names for these cities, , , and form the initials...

. Several of his responsa have been preserved in the German collections; most of them refer to the rabbinic civil law. His Sefer ha-Ḥokmah (Book of Wisdom), still extant in the time of Bezalel ben Abraham Ashkenazi, but now lost, appears also to have been largely legal in character. Early writers cite also a commentary by Baruch on the treatise Nedarim, which was lost at an early date.

Of Baruch's poetical activity more is known. His penitential poems and dirges, as well as his hymns for the Sabbath and for weddings, which made him one of the most popular of the payyeṭanim, were incorporated into the German and the Polish rituals. Baruch displays a great command of language; the seliḥot, in particular, being frequently characterized by genuine poetic fervor. The following is a specimen of these poems, translated into English from a German version by Zunz:

"Jeshurun's God, beyond compare, Enthroned above the clouds, Who dwelleth in the heavens high, Yet still on earth is ever nigh; Mid tears and sadness, songs and gladness, To Him my gaze I turn, Who all my feeling, thought, and action, Is ever sure to learn."


Baruch, the subject of this article, should not be confounded with Baruch of Greece, a Tosafist quoted several times in the Tosafot
Tosafot
The Tosafot or Tosafos are medieval commentaries on the Talmud. They take the form of critical and explanatory glosses, printed, in almost all Talmud editions, on the outer margin and opposite Rashi's notes...

 and in Mordecai (compare List of Tosafists).

Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography

  • Azulai, Shem ha-Gedolim, ed. Wilna, i. 38;
  • Kohn, Mordecai ben Hillel, p. 102;
  • Michael, Or ha-Ḥayyim, No. 637;
  • Grätz (who, without good reason, considered the payyeṭan Baruch, who died in 1221, as not identical with Baruch, author of Sefer ha-Ḥokmah, who, according to Grätz, was still living in 1223), Gesch. der Juden, vii. 21;
  • Zunz, S. P. pp. 268–270 (contains a translation of two pieces);
  • idem, Literaturgesch. pp. 306–309;
  • idem, Z. G. pp. 54, 55, 59, 193;
  • idem, Monatstage, xxii.;
  • Landshuth, Ammude ha'Abodah, p. 55.L. G.
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