Type | Journal Article - EURO-ASIAN JEWISH YEARBOOK |
Title | Notes On Eastern Jewish Necropolises (Caucasus And Central Asia) |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
Page numbers | 209-221 |
URL | http://manifestoes.eajc.org/data/image/books/18/0/180_d.pdf#page=208 |
Abstract | There is not much literature on Jewish necropolises in the territory of the former Soviet Union and the amount of it dedicated to cemeteries and other types of burials of the non-Ashkenazi Jewish sub-ethnic groups is even less. In fact, we can only cite a number of studies carried out as far back as in the 19th and early 20th centuries on the cemetery in the so-called Jehoshaphat Valley in Chufut Kale, the famous Jewish Karaite necropolis in the Crimean Mountains; studies of the Jehoshaphat Valley monuments resumed in the Soviet times after a long pause by the Georgian semitologist Nisan Babalikashvili. He also devoted a number of works to Jewish epitaphs in Transcaucasia1. The untimely passed away scholar certainly occupies a special place in the history of Soviet Hebrew and Jewish Studies. His papers that were published in Georgia, where the attitude towards Jewish issues was relatively liberal, stand out by virtue of their very existence and high proficiency amid the utter lack of any Jewish studies in the former Soviet Union. Today, at long last, already in the post-Soviet period, large-scale researches are being carried out at the same Chufut Kale under the auspice of the International Center for Jewish Education and Field Studies headed by Artem Fedorchuk. Apart from Chufut Kale, the recent discovery by Israeli and Armenian archeologists of a Jewish cemetery dating back to the 14th – 15th centuries, located in the Armenian Highland to the south of Lake Sevan, is worth mentioning. |
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