Shulchan Aruch facts for kids
Part of a series on | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
|||
Judaism | |||
Category | |||
Jewish religious movements | |||
Orthodox (Haredi • Hasidic • Modern) | |||
Conservative • Reform | |||
Reconstructionist • Renewal • Humanistic | |||
Jewish philosophy | |||
Principles of faith • Kabbalah • Messiah • Ethics | |||
Chosenness • Names of God • Musar | |||
Religious texts | |||
Tanakh (Torah • Nevi'im • Ketuvim) | |||
Ḥumash • Siddur • Piyutim • Zohar | |||
Rabbinic literature (Talmud • Midrash • Tosefta) | |||
Religious Law | |||
Mishneh Torah • Tur | |||
Shulchan Aruch • Mishnah Berurah | |||
Kashrut • Tzniut • Tzedakah • Niddah • Noahide laws | |||
Holy cities | |||
Jerusalem • Safed • Hebron • Tiberias | |||
Important figures | |||
Abraham • Isaac • Jacob | |||
Moses • Aaron • David • Solomon | |||
Sarah • Rebecca • Rachel • Leah | |||
Rabbinic sages | |||
Jewish life cycle | |||
Brit • Pidyon haben • Bar/Bat Mitzvah | |||
Marriage • Bereavement | |||
Religious roles | |||
Rabbi • Rebbe • Posek • Hazzan/Cantor | |||
Dayan • Rosh yeshiva • Mohel • Kohen/Priest | |||
Religious buildings & institutions | |||
Synagogue • Beth midrash • Mikveh | |||
Sukkah • Chevra kadisha | |||
Holy Temple / Tabernacle | |||
Jewish education | |||
Yeshiva • Kollel • Cheder | |||
Religious articles | |||
Sefer Torah • Tallit • Tefillin • Tzitzit • Kippah | |||
Mezuzah • Hanukiah/Menorah • Shofar | |||
4 Species • Kittel • Gartel | |||
Jewish prayers and services | |||
Shema • Amidah • Aleinu • Kaddish • Minyan | |||
Birkat Hamazon • Shehecheyanu • Hallel | |||
Havdalah • Tachanun • Kol Nidre • Selichot | |||
Judaism & other religions | |||
Christianity • Islam • Judeo-Christian | |||
Abrahamic faiths | |||
Related topics | |||
Antisemitism • The Holocaust • Israel • Zionism | |||
The Shulchan Aruch (Hebrew: שׁוּלחָן עָרוּך, literally: "Set Table") is a compilation of Jewish law, or halakha. It was written by Rabbi Yosef Karo in 1563 in Tzfat (Safed), a city in the Galilee region of what is now Israel. It was published in Venice two years later. Rabbi Karo was a Sephardi Jew. His Shulchan Aruch provided a summary of Jewish law from the Torah and Talmud as understood by Sephardi Jews.
A few years later, a Polish Rabbi, Moses Isserles, wrote a commentary on the Shulchan Aruch called the mappah (literally: "tablecloth"). Rabbi Isserles's commentary provided a summary of Jewish law as understood by Ashkenazi Jews.
Since 1578, copies of the Shulchan Aruch have almost always included Rabbi Isserles's commentary. Today, the name "Shulchan Aruch" usually means both Karo's work and Isserles's work together. This combined Shulchan Aruch is the most widely accepted book of practical Jewish law in the world.
See also
In Spanish: Shulján Aruj para niños