Lectionary Calendar
Sunday, November 24th, 2024
the Week of Christ the King / Proper 29 / Ordinary 34
Attention!
For 10¢ a day you can enjoy StudyLight.org ads
free while helping to build churches and support pastors in Uganda.
Click here to learn more!

Bible Encyclopedias
Pedigree

The 1901 Jewish Encyclopedia

Search for…
or
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z
Prev Entry
Pedat B. Eleazar
Next Entry
Pedlers
Resource Toolbox
Additional Links

Table of descent and relationship; sometimes given in narrative form. Jews have always carefully recorded their genealogies (see article), but owing to their wide and frequent dispersions very few can trace their descent further back than a couple of hundred years. All persons of the name of Cohen claim descent from Aaron the high priest, but no attempt has ever been made by any Cohen actually to trace his descent through wellauthenticated documentary sources (see see COHEN (2)). After the return from the Exile the need of pedigrees became urgent owing to the rules of PRECEDENCE and the determination to avoid mixed marriages, as seen in the books of Ezra and Nehemiah. This especially applied to those of priestly descent, who were not able to marry legally any woman who could not prove the purity of her descent as far back as her great-grandfather. There appears to have been a court at Jerusalem especially devoted to the investigation of cases of this kind (Ḳid. 76b).

Modern Pedigrees.

With the spread of Jews throughout Europe the difficulty of preserving pedigrees increased a hundredfold. The frequent expulsions and persecutions would prevent any written record being retained for any length of time, and traditional knowledge of a pedigree rarely extends beyond four or five generations. The Seder 'Olam Zuṭa professes to give eighty-nine generations, tracing back the exilarchs to Adam. With the rise of historical literature attention was paid rather to the spiritual and intellectual pedigree of teacher and pupil than to physical descent. Descent had little part in determining distinction, which went for the most part with learning in the Law; hence, in references to ancestry, more is made of the fact that a person is the author of a book than that he was the son of such and such a one. In the Middle Ages, besides, there was no registration of population in the ghettos, as a rule, and, consequently, no hereditary rights there which would require municipal records of Jewish descent. In Spain, however, after the rise of the Maranos, an attempt was made to trace their descent so as to avoid contamination by intermarriage with the Old Christians. One of the main objects in recording and preserving pedigrees was the claim, frequently put forward, to descent from David, which would permit of Messianic aspirations. For instance, the Abravanels made this claim, and Manasseh ben Israel appears to have been influenced in his Messianic aspirations by the consciousness that he had married into that family.

Owing to these and other causes it is extremely rare to find a Jewish family that even claims to trace its ancestry further back than the sixteenth century. The only one which has some pretensions to a pedigree reaching back to Talmudic times is the Luria family, which follows its descent back to Rabbi Johanan the sandal-maker (A. Epstein, "Die Familie Lurie," Vienna, 1901). Lucien Wolf attempted to connect the Treves family with that of Rashi in connection with the pedigree of the Marquis of Bute, but two of the links were hypothetical.

Sources.

Of the families whose pedigrees can be checked by tombstone inscriptions those of Frankfort-on-the-Main seem to be traceable the furthest; among these the Schiff family appears to be the earliest, going back to about 1375 (see Schiff Pedigree). It is, indeed, mainly from the tombstone inscriptions that material exists for any lengthy pedigrees among modern Jews. The most voluminous list of names thus found is that contained in Hock's Die Familien Prags," and Horowitz's "Inschriften," relating to Frankfort-on-the-Main. Only a beginning has been made with the important tombstones of Amsterdam; those of Rome relate to the earliest period, and are, therefore, of little use for the compilation of pedigrees; and the London ones have been almost entirely neglected. Berliner's collection of the Venice inscriptions is, perhaps, the next in value to Hock's.

Besides inscriptions, lists of authors often afford clues of family pedigrees. During the Middle Ages a family rarely persisted without producing one or other of the works recorded in the bibliograpḥies. Those who did not write works often printed them, and the list of printers and their assistants, again, is of value. The local records of congregations often contain information of importance in the list of benefactors recited during divine service at least once a year. The earlier list of martyrs in the memor-books is rarely of use, owing to the gap between the records of the fourteenth and those of the sixteenth century. Other sources are the books of the "mohelim," recording the circumcisions in various localities, though very few of these books have been preserved or printed. Local tax-lists ofthe period when Jews were separately taxed have been utilized, and a remarkable series of names was compiled by M. Freudenthal of the Jewish visitors to the Leipsic fair in the last quarter of the seventeenth century (Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1902). This list, with the tombstone inscriptions of Frankfort-on-the-Main, Lemberg, and Prague, gives a very fair account of the most important Ashkenazic Jewish families of the seventeenth century.

A hitherto unexplored source for Sephardic families is the Inquisition records, mainly in Spain and Portugal, but found also in Mexico and South America. These contain a whole series of investigations into the family histories of persons accused of "Judaism," and it also frequently happens that, for one reason or another, Spanish families claim to have had their purity of blood ("limpieza de sangre")—that is, their freedom from Jewish blood—determined by the officers of the Inquisition. In both cases elaborate pedigrees were drawn up, which are of Jewish interest. One of these has been published by R. Gottheil in the "Jewish Quarterly Review" (1904), and further instances are referred to by Joseph Jacobs in his "Sources of Spanish-Jewish History" (Nos. 2, 14, 16). It is almost invariably a requirement for the establishment of the right to bear arms granted at the various heralds' colleges of Europe that a pedigree of the family making the claim shall be deposited in the herald's office. Many of these grants are of modern date, and the pedigrees supplied are often very scanty, but they are a hitherto unworked source of Jewish genealogies, and the list given under COAT OF ARMS must also be regarded as offering to those having access to the heralds' colleges material for the pedigrees of Jewish families.

From these and other sources a certain number of pedigrees of Jewish families have been compiled and printed separately, of which the following is a tentative list:

Apart from these, a certain number of pedigrees have been privately printed.

The largest collection of Jewish pedigrees ever made is that contained in the volumes of The Jewish Encyclopedia; they are indicated in the following list, which is intended as a guide to those investigating Jewish pedigrees. Besides the pedigrees therein contained (see names below in capitals) it gives also a number of articles on important families (names italicized), and these frequently contain sufficient material for pedigrees. The names of families bearing coats of arms are also given (marked with asterisks). In addition to these, there are the names of families contained in the great tombstone inscriptions of Frankfort-on-the-Main (marked F), Prague (P), and Rome (R); and for Italy the list contained in Mortara's "Indice" (M) often gives valuable information. The list of visitors to the Leipsic fair (L) at the end of the seventeenth century, made by Freudenthal, includes family lists that are practically equivalent to pedigrees. The pedigrees contained in Steinschneider's "Bodleian Catalogue" are given (St). It sometimes happens that information about certain Jewish families is contained in all or in a number of these sources.

  1. *Abarbanel
  2. *Abarbanel de Sousa
  3. *Abarbanel da Veiga
  4. *Abdala
  5. Abeles (P)
  6. *Abendana
  7. Abi Zimra
  8. *Aboab (M)
  9. *Abolais
  10. *ABRAVANEL
  11. Abudarham
  12. Abudiente
  13. ABULAFIA
  14. *Acosta
  15. Adelkind
  16. ADLER
  17. Adret
  18. *Aguilar (or D'Aguilar)
  19. Ahron (St)
  20. Alashkar
  21. Alatino
  22. (M)
  23. Albalia
  24. Alexander
  25. ALFANDARI
  26. Alfual
  27. Alhadib
  28. ALMANZI
  29. Almoli
  30. Almosnino
  31. ALNAQUA
  32. (P)
  33. *Alvarez
  34. Amsterdam (F)
  35. (P, St, M)
  36. *Andrade (or D'Andrade)
  37. Antunes
  38. Ardit
  39. *Arnstein (F)
  40. Ascoli (M)
  41. Askenazi (P)
  42. *Asser
  43. ASTRUC
  44. Athias
  45. Attar,Ibn
  46. (P)
  47. Austerlitz (L, P)
  48. *Avernas-le-Gras
  49. *Azevedo
  50. *Azevedo-Coutinho
  51. AZULAI
  52. (P)
  53. Bachi (M)
  54. Back (P)
  55. Bagi
  56. Bak (St)
  57. (St)
  58. Basilea
  59. Bassani (M)
  60. *Bassevi von Treuenfels
  61. Bathyra
  62. *Bebri
  63. Beck (L, P)
  64. BELINFANTE
  65. BELMONT
  66. *BELMONTE
  67. Bendiner (L, P)
  68. Benveniste
  69. Berlin (P)
  70. *Bernal
  71. *Bessels
  72. Bethel (R, M)
  73. Bettelhein
  74. Bierschenk (P)
  75. Bing (F)
  76. BISCHOFFSHEIM
  77. *Bleichroder
  78. (P)
  79. Bondi (P)
  80. Bonn(R)
  81. BOTON
  82. Bozeechi
  83. Brandeis (L)
  84. Brandes (P)
  85. Braunschweig (F)
  86. *Brito
  87. Brody (F)
  88. Buch (F)
  89. Buchsbaum (F)
  90. *Bueno
  91. Bumslau (P)
  92. Busch (P)
  93. Caballeria, de la
  94. (M)
  95. *Caceres-Solis
  96. *Cahen d'Anvers
  97. *Camondo
  98. (L)
  99. Cantor (L)
  100. *Capadose
  101. Capsali
  102. Carabajal
  103. *CARDOZO
  104. *Carvajal
  105. Cases (M)
  106. Caslari
  107. Castellazzo
  108. *Castello
  109. *CASTRO, DE
  110. Cavallero
  111. *Cesana
  112. Chalfon (St)
  113. Chasan (F)
  114. Chasid (St)
  115. Chaves
  116. Chezighin (M)
  117. Clive (F)
  118. Coen (M)
  119. *Cohen
  120. *Cohn
  121. Conegliano
  122. (M)
  123. *Coronel
  124. *COSTA, DA
  125. Cousseri
  126. Coutinho
  127. Covo
  128. *Curiel
  129. Dajan (F, P)
  130. Dalpuget
  131. Darmstadt (F)
  132. Darshan (P)
  133. Darum (F)
  134. David
  135. Deiches
  136. De Lattes (R)
  137. *Delmar
  138. Delmedigo
  139. Derenburg
  140. De Rossi (R)
  141. De Sola (R)
  142. Deuz (F)
  143. Deweles (P)
  144. Diaz de Soria
  145. Diena (M)
  146. *DISRAELI
  147. Drach (F)
  148. DURAN
  149. Duschenes (P)
  150. Dusselsheim (F)
  151. Edels (P)
  152. (P)
  153. *Eichthal
  154. Eidlitz (L, P)
  155. Eisels
  156. Eisensiadt (P)
  157. ELIEZER
  158. *Elkan von Elkansberg
  159. (F)
  160. Emden (F)
  161. Emmerich (F)
  162. Engel (F)
  163. *Enriquez
  164. (P)
  165. *Erlanger
  166. *Eskeles
  167. *Espinosa
  168. Estrumsa
  169. Etting
  170. Ettinger
  171. Falk (F)
  172. Fano (M)
  173. *Faudel-Phillips
  174. Finzi (M)
  175. Fischeles (P)
  176. Fleckeles
  177. Foa
  178. *Fonseca
  179. Forti (M)
  180. *Fould
  181. Francia
  182. *Franco
  183. *Franco-Mendes
  184. Frank (F)
  185. FRÄNKEL (L)
  186. Frankel-Spira (P)
  187. Franks
  188. Freund (P)
  189. Friedburg (F)
  190. Friedenwald
  191. (P)
  192. Fuchs (F)
  193. Fuld (F)
  194. Fulda (F)
  195. Furie (P)
  196. Fürst (L)
  197. Fürth (P)
  198. Gabbai
  199. Gagin
  200. GALANTE
  201. Gallico (M)
  202. Gamburg (F)
  203. Gans (F, P)
  204. Gatigno
  205. Geiger (F)
  206. Gelhaüser (F)
  207. Gentili (M)
  208. Gerondi (St)
  209. Ghez
  210. Ghiron (M)
  211. Ghirondi
  212. *Gideon
  213. Gins (F, P)
  214. Ginzburg (P)
  215. Glogau (P)
  216. *Goldschmidt (L)
  217. *GOLDSMID
  218. *GOMEZ
  219. *Gomez de Sossa
  220. Grab (P)
  221. Gracian
  222. GRADIS
  223. Graetz (P)
  224. Graf (P)
  225. (P)
  226. Gregor (P)
  227. Gumpels (P)
  228. *GÜNZBURG
  229. *Haber
  230. Habern (P)
  231. *Haber von Lindsberg
  232. *Halevi
  233. Halfon (P)
  234. Hamburg (P)
  235. Hammerschlag (L)
  236. Hamon
  237. Harby
  238. Harkavy
  239. Hart
  240. Hasan (P)
  241. Hayet (P)
  242. Hayot (P)
  243. HAYS
  244. HAZZAN
  245. Hecht
  246. Heid (P)
  247. HEILPRIN
  248. *HEINE
  249. *Heine-Geldern
  250. Held (P)
  251. HENDRICKS
  252. HENRIQUES
  253. *Herschell
  254. Hesch (F)
  255. *Hirsch von Gereuth
  256. Höchheimer
  257. Hock (P)
  258. *Hofmann von Hofmannsthal
  259. *Hönig von Hönigsberg
  260. Horwitz (P)
  261. *Hurtado de Mendoza
  262. Hurwitz (St)
  263. Hyneman
  264. Ibn Shoshan
  265. Ibn Tibbon
  266. Israel
  267. Itzig
  268. Jachja (St)
  269. Jacobson
  270. Jafe (St)
  271. JAFFE
  272. Jare
  273. Jeiteles
  274. Jeitteles (P)
  275. Jellinek
  276. Jerushalim (P)
  277. Jess (P)
  278. *Jessel
  279. Jesurun
  280. Jetstein (P)
  281. JOAB
  282. *Joel von Joelson
  283. Johnson
  284. Joseph
  285. *Josephs
  286. Jost
  287. Judah
  288. Kadisch (P)
  289. Kaffky (L)
  290. Kalisch (P)
  291. Kalonymus
  292. Kapkis (P)
  293. Karmi
  294. Karpeles (P)
  295. Karsah (L)
  296. Katz (P)
  297. KATZENELLENBOGEN
  298. *Kaulla
  299. Kaz (St)
  300. Kimchi
  301. Kimḥi
  302. Kisch (P)
  303. Kish (P)
  304. Klabess (P)
  305. Köhn (L)
  306. Koinis (L)
  307. Königswarter
  308. Konpei (L)
  309. *Kusel
  310. Labi
  311. *Lämmel
  312. LANDAU
  313. Landsberg
  314. Laniado
  315. Lara, Cohen de
  316. Lattes (M)
  317. Leberls (P)
  318. Lehren
  319. Leipan (P)
  320. Lekeles (P)
  321. *Lemos, De
  322. Leon (P)
  323. *Leon, De
  324. Levi P, M)
  325. *Levin
  326. *LEVY
  327. Lichtenstadt (P)
  328. LINDO
  329. LIPKIN
  330. Lipkowitz (P)
  331. Lipmann (L)
  332. Lipschitz (P)
  333. Lipschütz
  334. Lobato
  335. Lombroso
  336. *Lopez
  337. *Lopez de Fonseca
  338. Lopez Rosa
  339. *Lopez-Suasso
  340. *Lopez-Suasso-Diaz-Da Fonseca
  341. *Losada y Lousada, De
  342. LOUSADA
  343. *Lowenthal
  344. LUNTZ
  345. Luria
  346. (M)
  347. Maarssen (St)
  348. *MACHADO
  349. *Machiels-Clinbourg
  350. Machorro
  351. (P)
  352. Marini (M)
  353. *Marx von Marxburg
  354. Massarani (M)
  355. *Mattos, De
  356. *Mayer - Ketschendorf
  357. Me'ati, ha-
  358. Medina
  359. Meisel (P)
  360. Melammed (P)
  361. (M)
  362. Melli
  363. Mendel (P)
  364. MENDELSSOHN
  365. *MENDES
  366. *Mendez
  367. Menken
  368. *Mesquita
  369. Meyuḥas
  370. Michaels (P)
  371. Mieses
  372. Minir
  373. MINIS
  374. Mintz (P)
  375. (M)
  376. Mirles (P)
  377. Mizraḥi
  378. *MOCATTA
  379. Modena (M)
  380. Moïse
  381. Mölln
  382. Monstrete (P)
  383. *Montagu
  384. *MONTEFIORE
  385. *Morenu
  386. *Morpurgo (M)
  387. Moscheles (P)
  388. Murowitz (P)
  389. Mustatel (P)
  390. Myers
  391. Nabon
  392. Nahmias
  393. Najara
  394. Nassy
  395. Nathan
  396. Netira
  397. *Nieto
  398. Norsa (M)
  399. Norzt
  400. Oes (P)
  401. *Oliveira
  402. Öls (P)
  403. *Oppenheim
  404. *Oppenheimer
  405. Otiz (P)
  406. Ottolenghi (M)
  407. Pache
  408. Padova (M)
  409. Paiva
  410. *Palache
  411. Panzieri
  412. *Pardo (M)
  413. *Parente
  414. *Pas, De
  415. Peixotto
  416. *Pereira
  417. *Pereira-Arnstein
  418. Perez (P)
  419. Perles (P)
  420. Perugia (M)
  421. Pesaro
  422. Pfann (P)
  423. Phillips
  424. Pick (P)
  425. Pietosi, Dei (M)
  426. *Pimentel
  427. Pina
  428. Pino
  429. Pinto
  430. *Pinto, De
  431. Polack (L, P)
  432. Polen (P)
  433. Pomis, de
  434. Popper (P)
  435. Porges (L)
  436. *Porges von Portheim
  437. Portaleone
  438. Porto (St? M)
  439. Prager (L)
  440. Pressels (P)
  441. Provenzal (M)
  442. (P)
  443. Rappoport
  444. Raudnitz (L, P)
  445. Racanati (M)
  446. Reggio (M)
  447. *Reinach (P)
  448. Reiner (P)
  449. *Reuter, De
  450. *Ricardo
  451. Riess (L, P)
  452. Rieti (R, M)
  453. Rivera
  454. *Rodriguez
  455. Rofe (P)
  456. Rokeah (P)
  457. Roma (M)
  458. Rophe (P)
  459. Rosello (R)
  460. Rosenberg (P)
  461. Rossi, De
  462. *ROTHSCHILD (L)
  463. Sabteka (P)
  464. Sachs (L)
  465. Sadukes (P)
  466. *Salomons
  467. *Salvador
  468. *Salvador-Rodrigues
  469. *Sampayo
  470. *SAMUEL
  471. *Samuel de Vahl
  472. Saraval (M)
  473. Sarchi
  474. *Sarmiento
  475. Sasportas
  476. *Sassoon (M)
  477. Scazzocchio (R)
  478. (L)
  479. Schilpl (L)
  480. Schmelkes (P)
  481. Schochet (P)
  482. Schomberg
  483. Schor
  484. SCHORR
  485. Schuk (P)
  486. SCHWARZSCHILD
  487. Scialon (M)
  488. Segre
  489. Segri (M)
  490. Seixas
  491. *Seligmann
  492. Sephardi (M)
  493. Sforno
  494. Shames (P)
  495. Shapin (P)
  496. Shapiro
  497. Sheftall
  498. Shemariah (R)
  499. Sheshet
  500. Shoeb
  501. Shor
  502. *Simson
  503. Sinigaglia (M)
  504. SOLA
  505. SOLIS
  506. (St)
  507. *Sonnenfels
  508. Sopher (P)
  509. Sousa
  510. (P)
  511. Spira (P, St)
  512. Stern (L)
  513. *Suasso
  514. SULZBERGER
  515. Sussmann
  516. *Sylva, Da
  517. Tales (P)
  518. Tatar (P)
  519. Taussig (P)
  520. Tebeles (P)
  521. *Tedesco
  522. *Teixeira
  523. *Teixeira de Mattos
  524. Teller (P)
  525. (R)
  526. Teomim-Frankel
  527. Teplitz (P)
  528. Terracini
  529. Texeira
  530. Thein (P)
  531. Todros (P)
  532. Toledano
  533. Trabot (M)
  534. Trabotto
  535. *Treves (R, M)
  536. Trevoux
  537. Tuska (P)
  538. Ulma (P)
  539. *Vahl, De
  540. Vecchio
  541. Veit (L)
  542. Ventura (M)
  543. *Vidal
  544. Viterbo (R, M)
  545. (P)
  546. *Waley (P)
  547. Wallerstein (P)
  548. *Wandsworth
  549. Warburg
  550. *Wartenegg von Wertheimstein
  551. *Weil von Weilen
  552. Wele (P)
  553. *Weling
  554. Welsch (P)
  555. *Wertheimer
  556. Wessel (P)
  557. Wien (P)
  558. Wiener (Prague) (L, P)
  559. Winternitz (P)
  560. WORMS
  561. *Worms, De
  562. *Ximenes
  563. *Ximenes-Cisneros
  564. Yaḥya, Ibn
  565. YATES
  566. Zahalon
  567. Zahen
  568. Ẓarfati (M)
  569. Zifroni
  570. Zoref (P)
  571. ZUNZ

It is, of course, obvious that such pedigrees deal in the main with male descendants, and the intermarriages of the families can only be ascertained by the investigation of the communal lists of "ketubot," which rarely exist except among the Sephardim of London and Amsterdam. Consanguineous intermarriages are so frequent among Jews that any well-worked-out pedigree which includes the marriages tends to connect almost all important families. Thus, the Speyer pedigree gives references in its indexes to no less than 194 families with which that family has intermarried during the last three centuries. It would not, indeed, be difficult to connect all the Sephardic families of the United States by one sketch pedigree showing their intermarriages with the Seixas family. Indeed, as the study of Jewish pedigrees proceeds, the proverb that "All Israel are brethren" is seen to be literally true. It is, indeed, extremely rare that, as in the case of the Samuel and Yates families, the ancestry can be traced back to a mixed marriage (also Purity of Race).

The study of Jewish pedigrees is still in its infancy, and, considering the materials at hand, but little has hitherto been done toward the compilation of such pedigrees of Jewish families. The scattering of Jews all over the world renders such compilations extremely difficult; but, on the other hand, the great number of names that have been brought together of recent years gives material sufficient, in most cases, to indicate the directions in which search should be made.

J.
Bibliography Information
Singer, Isidore, Ph.D, Projector and Managing Editor. Entry for 'Pedigree'. 1901 The Jewish Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​tje/​p/pedigree.html. 1901.
 
adsfree-icon
Ads FreeProfile