❧ Description
Tashbetz (acronym of Teshuvot Shimon ben Tzemaḥ) — a vast collection of responsa by the Rashbatz (1361-1444), chief rabbi of Algiers post-1391. Together with the responsa of the Rivash, the Tashbetz is the cornerstone of fifteenth-century Maghrebi halakha and remains a reference throughout Sephardic Judaism. The Rashbatz, exiled from Palma de Mallorca to Algiers after the pogroms of 1391, codifies there the post-traumatic halakhic practice: matrimonial effects of the expulsions, status of the anusim (forced converts), reorganization of minhag, articulation with non-Jewish authority.
Provenance: 1 Composed in Algiers between 1391 and 1444 2 Manuscript circulation in Maghrebi Judaism 15th-18th c. 3 Editio princeps: Amsterdam, 1738-1741 (4 parts)
Codicological notice — origin Algiers, central Maghreb, Algeria; script: Sephardic; editorial status: Partial edition available.
— Source: Mémoires des Manuscrits Juifs du Moyen-Âge Maghrébin (MMJMM / Collectif GMPL), https://mmjmm.org/corpus/catalogue/to-locate-duran-tashbetz.