{"id":1766,"date":"2016-12-25T17:13:19","date_gmt":"2016-12-25T21:13:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.papaworx.com\/Book\/?page_id=1766"},"modified":"2016-12-25T17:13:19","modified_gmt":"2016-12-25T21:13:19","slug":"9-7","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/?page_id=1766","title":{"rendered":"9-7"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"Standard\"> The third and largest group of tax-exempt community employees were the Hebrew schoolteachers. Before 1660 there was no evidence that the community ran its own primary (heder) or secondary school (talmud torah), but instead individual families hired migrant religious teachers. This custom continued in the outlying villages until the end of the seventeenth century <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=3668\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R3668]<\/span><\/a>. A communal schoolmaster was first mentioned in 1667 <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=3574\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R3574]<\/span><\/a>: Yochanan (<a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=Y1\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\"><span class=\"T22\">H\u00f6nlin,<\/span><\/span><\/a><a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=Y1\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\"> Y1<\/span><\/a>), a poor Jew who had originally come to St\u00fchlingen in 1632 <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=2765\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R2765]<\/span><\/a> with his family as refugee from Hemmendorf near Rottenburg, where the Thirty Years\u2019 War had taken a particularly heavy toll. At first, H\u00f6nlin was given protection on a temporary basis, and Naftali (<a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=B1.2.1\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\"><span class=\"T22\">H\u00fcrtzle,<\/span><\/span><\/a><a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=B1.2.1\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\"> B1.2.1<\/span><\/a>) paid the tax on his behalf <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=2791\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R2791]<\/span><\/a>. In 1662 he was finally given permanent protection in Horheim <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=3977\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R3977]<\/span><\/a> and by 1668 in St\u00fchlingen proper, on condition that he only acted as schoolmaster and would not engage in any commerce <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=4186\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R4186]<\/span><\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"Standard\"> Later on, several schoolmasters were mentioned: an unnamed schoolmaster in 1681 had launched a lawsuit against the community <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=1254\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R1254]<\/span><\/a>. Mordechai (Model) called Mendel the schoolmaster an apostate (shumet) in 1688 <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=870\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R870]<\/span><\/a>. In that same year, there was a court case between several St\u00fchlingen Jews and a schoolmaster, Jacob Simon. The latter was to teach the five books of Moses, reading, and writing <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=874\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R874]<\/span><\/a>, a load that seems particularly light. In 1737 schoolmaster Moises Gottfrid was a victim of theft <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=2464\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R2464]<\/span><\/a>. A year later, schoolmaster Jacob Salamon sued Salamon Weil <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=2501\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R2501]<\/span><\/a> for unkown cause.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"Standard\"> The internal structure and function of a Jewish community administration in the early modern period<span class=\"Footnote_20_Reference\"><span class=\"Footnote_20_anchor\" title=\"Footnote: Rohrbacher, \u201cOrganisationsformen der s\u00fcddeutschen Juden,\u201d 000. &lt;pg #?&gt;\"><a id=\"body_ftn34\" href=\"#ftn34\">34<\/a><\/span><\/span> usually followed a standard set of takhanot (bylaws) and minhagim (customs).<span class=\"Footnote_20_Reference\"><span class=\"Footnote_20_anchor\" title=\"Footnote: Baer, Das Protokollbuch, 000&lt;pg #?&gt;; Weldler-Steinberg and Guggenheim-Gr\u00fcnberg, Geschichte der Juden in der Schweiz, 132; Bell, Jewish Identity, 41\u20134; Guggenheim, Aus der Vergangenheit, 000.&lt;pg #?&gt;\"><a id=\"body_ftn35\" href=\"#ftn35\">35<\/a><\/span><\/span> Such an administration commonly required two foremen (parnassim) who were ostensibly elected, but in reality often represented a quasi-hereditary meritocracy. It was also customary for communities to elect, hire, and fire their rabbis. Many letters of protection elsewhere required authorities to sanction, or at least be informed of, such appointments;<span class=\"Footnote_20_Reference\"><span class=\"Footnote_20_anchor\" title=\"Footnote: Mordstein, Selbstbewusste Untert\u00e4nigkeit, 305.\"><a id=\"body_ftn36\" href=\"#ftn36\">36<\/a><\/span><\/span> in some jurisdictions the foremen were even elected in the presence of the secular authorities.<span class=\"Footnote_20_Reference\"><span class=\"Footnote_20_anchor\" title=\"Footnote: Ullmann, Nachbarschaft und Konkurrenz, 000. &lt;pg #?&gt;\"><a id=\"body_ftn37\" href=\"#ftn37\">37<\/a><\/span><\/span> The St\u00fchlingen letters of protection make no mention of this practice; consequently, the appointment of rabbis and foremen is rarely reported in official protocols.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\"><span class=\"Standard\"> The community leaders were expected to record accounts, deliberations, decisions, and relevant events in protocols (pinkasim). Neither pinkasim nor written bylaws have survived from St\u00fchlingen. Parnassim were mentioned only twice in the St\u00fchlingen protocols: at the end of the seventeenth century Sandel (<a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=S1.2\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">S1.2<\/span><\/a>) and Model (<a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=T1\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">T1<\/span><\/a>) Weil acted as parnassim, the former as chairman, the latter as secretary, and a treasurer is mentioned as well <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=962\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R962]<\/span><\/a>. In 1736 the wealthy Marum the Fat (<a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/tree.php?t=W1.3\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">W1.3<\/span><\/a>) Weil and Marum Weil, Sandel\u2019s son, served as parnassim <a class=\"Internet_20_link\" href=\"\/Stuehlingen\/doc.php?d=2436\"><span class=\"Internet_20_link\">[R2436]<\/span><\/a>.<span class=\"Footnote_20_Reference\"><span class=\"Footnote_20_anchor\" title=\"Footnote: Rosenthal, Heimatgeschichte der badischen Juden, 176.\"><a id=\"body_ftn38\" href=\"#ftn38\">38<\/a><\/span><\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: justify;\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"Footnote\"><span class=\"footnodeNumber\"><a id=\"ftn34\" class=\"Footnote_20_Symbol\" href=\"#body_ftn34\">34<\/a><\/span>Rohrbacher, \u201cOrganisationsformen der s\u00fcddeutschen Juden\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"Footnote\"><span class=\"footnodeNumber\"><a id=\"ftn35\" class=\"Footnote_20_Symbol\" href=\"#body_ftn35\">35<\/a><\/span>Baer, &#8220;Das Protokollbuch.&#8221;; Weldler-Steinberg and Guggenheim-Gr\u00fcnberg, &#8220;Geschichte der Juden in der Schweiz,&#8221; 132; Bell, &#8220;Jewish Identity,&#8221; 41\u20134; Guggenheim, &#8220;Aus der Vergangenheit.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"Footnote\"><span class=\"footnodeNumber\"><a id=\"ftn36\" class=\"Footnote_20_Symbol\" href=\"#body_ftn36\">36<\/a><\/span>Mordstein, <span class=\"T2\">Selbstbewusste Untert\u00e4nigkeit<\/span>, 305.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Footnote\"><span class=\"footnodeNumber\"><a id=\"ftn37\" class=\"Footnote_20_Symbol\" href=\"#body_ftn37\">37<\/a><\/span>Ullmann, &#8220;Nachbarschaft und Konkurrenz,&#8221; 187.<\/p>\n<p class=\"Footnote\"><span class=\"footnodeNumber\"><a id=\"ftn38\" class=\"Footnote_20_Symbol\" href=\"#body_ftn38\">38<\/a><\/span>Rosenthal, &#8220;Heimatgeschichte der badischen Juden,&#8221; 176.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The third and largest group of tax-exempt community employees were the Hebrew schoolteachers. Before 1660 there was no evidence that the community ran its own primary (heder) or secondary school (talmud torah), but instead individual families hired migrant religious teachers. This custom continued in the outlying villages until the end of the seventeenth century [R3668]. [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":11,"featured_media":0,"parent":1732,"menu_order":127,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"new_page.php","meta":{"footnotes":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/1766"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/11"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1766"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/1766\/revisions"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/pages\/1732"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.stuehlingen.online\/Book\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1766"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}