Purims, Special
PURIMS, SPECIAL
Following the talmudic injunction that one must recite a special thanksgiving benediction on returning to the place where one was once miraculously saved from danger (Ber. 54a), the custom evolved for Jewish communities or families to celebrate the anniversary of their escape from destruction by reciting special prayers and with a ritual similar to that of Purim. (See: A. Gumbiner's note to Sh. Ar., oḤ 686.) These special communal Purims are called *Purim Katan ("minor Purim"), or Mo'ed Katan ("minor holiday") or Purim… (followed by the name of the community or the special event). In many cases special Purims were preceded by a fast comparable to the Fast of *Esther. In addition, on the Purim Katan itself the story of the personal or communal salvation was often read from a scroll (*megillah) in the course of a synagogue service in which special prayers of thanksgiving, in the style of piyyutim, were offered. Sometimes the *Al ha-Nissim prayer and the *Hallel were inserted into the ritual. The traditional Purim observances of enjoying a festive meal and giving charity to the poor were also applied to special Purims. (See Table: List of Special Purims.)
The Karaites observe a special Purim on 1st Shevat, in memory of the release from prison of one of their leaders, Yerushalmi. The exact date of the event is unknown. The followers of Shabbetai Ẓevi observed a special Purim on 15th Kislev, because on this day in 1648 Shabbetai Ẓevi proclaimed himself Messiah.
bibliography:
C. Roth, in: huca, 10 (1935), 451–82; 12–13 (1937–1938), 697–99; Y.T. Lewinski (ed.), Sefer ha-Mo'adim, 6 (1956), 297–321; M. Steinschneider, in: mgwj, 47 (1901–21) ff.; A. Danon, in: rej, 54 (1907).
Purim of… | Observed on | Established in | Reason for Observance |
Algiers (called Purim Edom) | 4th Ḥeshvan | 1540 | Saved from destruction in Spanish-Algerian wars of 1516–1517 and 1542. |
Algiers (called Purim Tammuz) | 11th Tammuz | 1774 | Saved from danger. |
Alessandria Della Paglia (Italy) | 25th Av | 1779 | Saved from massacre. |
Ditto | 2nd Ḥeshvan | 1797 | Saved from riots during revolutionary war. |
Ancona | 21st Tevet | 1690 | Saved from earthquake. |
Ancona | 15th Tishri | 1741 | Synagogue escaped destruction by fire. |
Ancona | 24th Adar | 1775 | Jewish quarter saved from conflagration. |
Ancona | 12th Shevat | 1797 | Saved from riots in revolutionary war. |
Angora/Ankara/(called: Purim Angora or Purim Sari-Kiz) | 21st Elul | ? | Saved from blood libel accusation. |
Angora, called Purim Abazza | 11th lyyar | ? | ? |
Angora, called Purim de la Turquito | 14th Tammuz | 1775 | Saved from blood libel accusation. |
Avignon | 24th Tammuz | ? | ? |
Avignon | 28th Shevat | 1757 | Escaped dangers of a riot. |
Baghdad | 11th Av | 1733 | Relieved from Persian oppression. |
Belgrade | 19th Sivan | 1822 | Saved from destruction during Turko-Serbian war. |
Breche (Champagne, France) | 14th Adar | 1191 | Chief Jew-baiter executed. |
Cairo | 18th Shevat | ? | ? |
Cairo, called Purim Miẓrayim | 28th Adar | 1524 | Saved from extermination. |
Candia (Crete) | 18th Tammuz | 1583 | Saved from collective punishment for treason, during Turco-Venetian conflict. |
Carpentras | 16th Kislev | 1512 | Saved from riot. |
Ditto | 9th Nisan | 1692 | Saved from annihilation. |
Ditto, called Yom va-Yosha | 21st Nisan | 1651 | Saved from threat of massacre. |
Casablanca, called Purim Hitler | 2nd Kislev | 1943 | Escape from riot and Nazi occupation. |
Castille (Spain) called Purim Martinez | 1st Adar | 1339 | Saved from annihilation following accusations by Jew-baiter Gonzales Martinez, king's adviser. |
Cavaillon (Provence) | 25th Iyyar | 1631 | Plague ended. |
Ditto | 29th Sivan | 1677 | Saved from blood libel accusation. |
Cento (Italy) | 12th Av | 1820 | Escaped from fire. |
Chieri (Italy) | 1st Av | 1797 | Saved from danger of war. |
Chios (Greece), called Purim de la Senora ("Purim of the Good Lady") | 8th Iyyar | 1595 (or 1820)? | Saved from death during Franco-Turkish war. |
Cuneo (Italy) | 5th Kislev | 1799 | Synagogue saved from destruction by shell. |
Ettingen (Germany) | 18th Iyyar | 1690 | Saved from destruction by enemies. |
Ditto | 29th Sivan | 1713 | ? |
Ferrara | 24th Kislev | ? | Saved from destruction by fire. |
Ditto | 18th Iyyar | 1799 | Escaped war riots. |
Fez | 22nd Kislev | 1840 | Saved from destruction. |
Florence | 27th Sivan | 1791 | Escaped sacking and riots. |
Fossano (Italy) | 18th Nisan | 1796 | Saved from bomb explosion during war. |
Frankfurt on the Main, also called: Purim Winz or Purim Fettmilch | 20th Adar | 1616 | Expelled Jews readmitted to town and chief Jew baiter, Fettmilch, executed. |
Fulda | 15th Elul | ? | ? |
Gumeldjina (Thrace) called: Purim de los ladrones ("Purim of the thiefs") | 22nd Elul | 1786 | Saved from collective punishment for instigating robbers to sack town. |
Hebron | 1st Av | ? | Saved from collective punishment and execution by Ibrahim Pasha. |
Ditto, called Purim Takka ("Window Purim") | 14th Tevet | 1741 | Saved from annihilation by miraculous ransom money on the windowsill of synagogue. |
Ivrea (Italy) | 1st Shevat | 1797 | Escaped plundering during revolutionary war. |
Komotini (Gumurjina, Gumuldjina) (Greece) | 22nd Elul | 1768 | Saved from destruction during Turkish suppression of Greek revolt. |
Kovno | 7th Adar (II) | 1783 | Privileges of civic freedom granted by King Stanislaus II |
Leghorn | 12th Shevat | 1742 | Saved from destruction in earthquake. |
Ditto | 25th Tevet | 1810 | Plague ends. |
Ditto | 16th Adar | 1813 | ? |
Lepanto (Greece) | 11th Tevet | 1699 | Saved from destruction during Turkish war. |
Medzibezh (Poland) | 11th Tevet | 1648 or 1649 | Saved from annihilation by Chmielnicki's bands. |
Morocco | 13th Nisan | 1771 | Saved from annihilation. |
Mstislavl (Russia) | 4th Shevat | 1744 | Saved from slaughter by Cossacks. |
Ditto | 3rd Kislev | 1844 | Saved from collective punishment for alleged rebellion against authorities. |
Narbonne | 20th Adar | 1236 | Saved from riots. |
Oran | 6th Av | 1830 | Saved from massacre before arrival of French troops. |
Ostraha | 23rd Nisan | 1734 or 1768 | Saved from pogrom. |
Ditto | 7th Tammuz | 1792 | Saved from destruction during Russo-Polish war. |
Padua called Purim di fuoco ("Fire Purim") | 11th Sivan | 1795 | Saved from fire. |
Ditto, called Purim di Buda | 10th Elul | 1684 | Saved from massacre during Austro-Turkish (in Budapest). |
Ditto, called Purim dei Sassi (?) | Shabbat "Bo" | 1748 | ? |
Pesaro/see also: Urbino and Senigallia | ? | 1799 | Escaped damages of war. |
Pitigliano (Italy) | 15th Tammuz | 1757 | Collapse of school roof, no casualties. |
Ditto | 15th Sivan | 1799 | Saved from damages during revolutionary war. |
Posen | 1st Ḥeshvan | 1704 | Saved from death during Polish-Swedish war. |
Prague | 14th Ḥeshvan | 1620 | Saved from sacking and riots by protection of Emperor Ferdinand. |
Ditto, called Vorhang Purim ("Curtain Purim") | 22nd Tevet | 1622 | Beadle of synagogue saved from hanging for keeping stolen curtains. |
Purim Byzanc (observed by Jews of Thrace) | 14th Adar | 1574 | Saved from extermination. |
Ragusa | ? | 1631 | Saved from accusation of blood libel. |
Rhodes | 14th Adar | 1840 | Saved from annihilation. |
Ritova (Lithuania) called Purim Jeroboam b. Nebat. | 14th Adar | 1863 | Jew-baiter Count Aginsky died. |
Rome | 1st Shevat | 1793 | Ghetto saved from assault and fire. |
Sa'na | 18th Adar | ? | Saved from extermination. |
Sarajevo | 4th Ḥeshvan | 1819 | 10 leaders of Jewish community freed from prison and saved from execution. |
Senigallia (Italy)/see also: Urbino and Pesaro | 15th Sivan | 1799 | Saved from annihilation during war by escaping to Ancona. |
Sermide (Italy) | 25th Tammuz | 1809 | Saved from earthquake. |
Shiraz, called Purim Mo'ed Katan | 2nd Heshvan | 1200 or 1400 | Permitted to practice Judaism after having being forced to convert to Islam. |
Sienna | 15th Sivan | 1799 | Saved from destruction during revolution. |
Spoleto | 21st Sivan | 1797 | Saved from annihilation during revolutionary war |
Ditto | 7th Adar | ? | ? |
Syracuse (Sicily), called Purim Saragossa | 17th Shevat | 1425 | Saved from destruction for alleged treason by honoring King Alfonso with empty cases of Torah Scrolls. |
Tetuan and Tangiers, called Purim de las bombas, or Purim de los Christianos | 2nd Elul | 1578 | Saved from destruction during Moroccan Portuguese war. |
Tiberias | 7th Elul | 1743 | Saved from danger of war. |
Ditto | 4th Kislev | ? | ? |
Trieste | 14th Adar | 1833 | Leading Jew-baiter died. |
Tripoli and Tunisia | 25th Shevat | ? | ? |
Ditto, called Purim Sheriff or Purim Kadebani ("False Purim") | 24th Tevet | 1705 | Saved from destruction by hostile ruler, Khalil Pasha. |
Ditto, called Purim Borgḥel | 29th Tevet | 1793 | Saved from destruction during occupation by Bourgel Phasa of Turkey. |
Tunisia, called: Purim Sheleg ("Purim of Snow") | 24th Tevet | 1891 | Jewish quarter saved from natural disaster |
Tunisia | 15th Shevat | ? | ? |
Turino | 1st Av | 1797 | Saved from war and sacking. |
Urbino | 11th Sivan | 1799 | Saved from war and riots. |
Verona | 20th Tammuz | 1607 | Permission granted to lock ghetto gates from inside instead of from outside. |
Vidin, Bulgaria, called Purim de los borrachones ("Purim of the Drunken") | 4th and 5th Ḥeshvan or 9th–10th | 1806 | Saved from annihilation following accusation that the ruler had been poisoned by his Jewish physician. |
Ditto | 2nd Adar | 1878 | Saved from destruction during Russo-Turkish (Balkan) war. |
Vilna | 15th Av | 1794 | Saved from destruction during Russo-Polish war. |
Zborow (Galicia) | 12th Tevet | ? | Saved from annihilation because of blood libel accusation. |
Family Purims | |||
Altschul family of Prague | 22nd Tevet | 1623 | Head of family, Hanokh Moses, saved from death. |
Brandeis family of Jungbunzlau (Bohemia), called Povidl Purim "Plum Jam Purim" | 10th Adar | 1731 | David Brandeis and family saved from accusation of having killed gentiles by poisoning plum jam. |
Danzig family of Vilna, called Pulverpurim ("Powder Purim") | 15th Kislev | 1804 | Family of Abraham Danzig author of "Ḥayyei Adam" saved from explosion of magnesium. |
Elyashar family of Jerusalem | 2nd Nisan | ? | Saved from death. |
Heller family of Prague | 1st Adar | 1629 | Head of family, Yom Tov Lipman, rabbi of Prague saved from death sentence. |
Jonathan ben Jacob of Fulda (Germany) | 17th Tammuz | ? | ? |
Maimon family of Lithuania | ? | 1750 | Grandfather of Solomon Mimon saved from death sentence for blood libel. |
Meyuḥas family of Jerusalem | 16th Adar | 1724 | Head of family, Raphael Meyuhas, escaped death by highwaymen. |
Samuel Ha-Nagid of Spain | 1st Elul | 1039 | Saved from death plot of conspirators. |
Segal family of Cracow | 1st Iyyar | 1657 | Family saved from drowning in river while escaping from pogrom. |
Treves family (?) | Shabbat "Va-Yeẓe" | 1758 | Escaped from fire. |