Ganzfried, Solomon ben Joseph
GANZFRIED, SOLOMON BEN JOSEPH
GANZFRIED, SOLOMON BEN JOSEPH (1804–1886), rabbi and author. Ganzfried was born in Ungvar, Hungary, where he also died. Orphaned in his childhood, he was brought up in the house of the local rabbi ?evi Hirsch Heller, one of the outstanding scholars of his time. From 1830 to 1849 Ganzfried served as rabbi of Brezewicz and subsequently as head of the bet din of Ungvar. He was one of the chief speakers for orthodox Jewry at the Jewish congress which took place in Budapest in 1869. He also published a polemic against the Reform movement. His first published work, Keset-ha-Sofer (1835; 18712 with additions by the author), was on the laws of writing a Sefer Torah, and was highly recommended by Moses *Sofer as a necessary textbook for scribes of Torah scrolls, tefillin, and mezuzot. Ganzfried's fame, however, rests mainly upon his Kizzur Shul?an Arukh ("Abridged Shul?an Arukh," 1864); it achieved great popularity and widespread circulation and was accepted as the main handbook for Ashkenazi Jewry. It encompassed all the laws relating to the mode of life of the ordinary Jew living outside Ere? Israel (including such subjects as etiquette, hygiene, etc.), but omitting such details as were common knowledge and practice at that time (see his introduction to ch. 80) or that were not essential knowledge for the ordinary man (see especially the laws of matrimony, ch. 145). The Ki??ur Shul?an Arukh is based upon the Shul?an Arukh of Joseph *Caro with the glosses of Moses *Isserles. It is written in simple, popular language, with a lively style, and interest is sustained by the ethical maxims with which it is interlaced. Unlike his predecessor Abraham *Danzig, author of the ?ayyei Adam, Ganzfried does not detail and explain the different views but usually gives his decision without the reasoning. The book had already achieved 14 editions during its author's lifetime, and since then it has gone through scores of editions, displacing all previous abridgments of the Shul?an Arukh. It also became a basic work to which many scholars added marginal notes and novellae.
The important editions of the work are Lublin, 1888, with the commentaries, "Pe'at ha-Shul?an" by the author himself, Ammudei ha-Shul?an by Benjamin Isaiah b. Jeroham Fishel ha-Kohen, and Misgeret Zahav, by Moses Israel; Leipzig, 1924, with source references (Me?udat ?Ziyyon), supplements (Me?zudat David) and with illustrations, edited by D. Feldman; Jerusalem, 1940, a vocalized edition with the addition of the laws and customs applying in Ere? Israel at the present day, edited by J.M. Tykocinski, and one with the additions Misgeretha-Shul?an and Le?em ha-Panim of ?ayyim Isaiah ha-Kohen Halbersberg and a summary of those precepts connected with the land of Israel in accordance with the rulings of Abraham Isaiah *Karelitz, edited by K. Kahana (Jerusalem, 1954).
The book was also translated into many languages (English by H.E. Goldin (1928)). Ganzfried's other published works are a commentary on the prayer book with notes and supplements to the prayer-book commentary Derekh ha-?ayyim of Jacob Lorbeerbaum (first published in the prayer book printed in Vienna in 1839); Penei Shelomo (1845), novellae to Bava Batra; Torat Zeva? (1849), on the laws of she?itah; Le?em ve-Simlah (1861), on the laws of menstruation and ritual immersion; Appiryon (1864; with the author's additions in 1876), homilies on the Pentateuch and on some aggadot; Oholei Shem (1878), on the laws of names in bills of divorce and on the writing of deeds; and Shem Shelomo (1908), on talmudic themes. There have remained in manuscript Leshon ha-Zahav, on Hebrew grammar; Penei Adam, notes to the ?ayyei Adam; Kelalim be-?okhmat ha-Emet, a commentary on the Zohar; and his responsa.
bibliography:
Brody, in: O?ar ha-Sifrut, 3 (1889/90), 55–61 (4th pagination); J. Banet, in: S. Ganzfried, Shem Shelomo (1908), introd.; J.L. Maimon, in: S. Ganzfried, Ki??ur Shul?an Arukh (1950), introd.
[Jacob S. Levinger]
