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Credit and Usury in Jewish Society in the Mishnah and Talmud
Credit and Usury in Jewish Society in the Mishnah and Talmud
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Author(s): Rosenfeld, Ben Zion
Rosenfeld, Ben-Zion
ISBN No.: 9789004681958
Pages: XII, 256
Year: 202312
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 183.54
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Contents Preface Abbreviations 1 Introduction 1.1 Aims and Structure 1.2 Credit: A Definition 1.3 Sources and Methods 1.4 Previous Research, Manuscripts, and Editions 1.5 The Structure of the Book2 Credit in Rome and Persia 2.1 Credit in the Roman World 2.2 Credit in the Parthian and Sasanian Empires3 Credit and Usury in Jewish Society in Palestine and Babylon 3.


1 Socio-Historical Background 3.2 Lenders and Borrowers in Jewish Roman Palestine 3.3 The Economy of the Jewish Community of Babylon 3.4 Types of Credit in Palestine and Babylon 3.5 The Rabbis' Considerations: Social Justice 3.6 Credit in Jewish Society: The Problem of Interest 3.7 Expanding the Scope of Usury 3.8 Jews and Non-Jews4 "Money for Money" 4.


1 Introduction 4.2 Lending "Money for Money" 4.3 Usury in Loans of "Money for Money" 4.4 Business Partnership (Iska)5 "Money for Fruit" 5.1 Introduction 5.2 "Money for Fruit": Future Sales (Pesika) 5.3 Linking a Loan to the Price of a Commodity 5.4 Down Payments 5.


5 Future Sales That Are Not Pesika 5.6 Loans against Deduction of Future Tithes from the Field 5.7 Summary6 "Fruit for Money" 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Sale on Credit 6.3 Delayed Payment 6.4 A Cash Loan Presented as a Two-Sided Sale Transaction 6.5 Tarsha: A Talmudic Version of Delayed Payment 6.


6 "Fruit for Money" in a Partnership 6.7 "Iron Flocks": An Agreement to Ensure the Investor's Capital 6.8 Transport of Merchandise Guaranteeing the "High Price" 6.9 Conclusion7 "Fruit for Fruit" 7.1 Introduction: In the Roman World 7.2 "Fruit for Fruit" in Rabbinic Literature 7.3 "Fruit for Fruit" for the Purchase of Seeds 7.4 Additional Cases of Usury in Sharecropping 7.


5 Paying Back a Prohibited Loan of "Fruit for Fruit" 7.6 Exchange of Services 7.7 Loan of "Denars for Denars" 7.8 Conclusion8 The Sages' Attitude toward Those Involved in Usury 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Expanding the Prohibition 8.3 Combating Usury 8.4 Repentance from Usury 8.


5 Permission to Lend for Interest in Special Cases9 Conclusion 9.1 Contributions to Scholarship 9.2 Epilogue Bibliography Index.


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