In this detailed study, Nina Caputo examines conceptions of history and
messianic redemption in the writings of the Catalonian rabbi and
brilliant Talmudic scholar Nahmanides (1195-1270). An early exponent of
kabbalah, Nahmanides was also a shrewd intermediary between the Jewish
communities and the royal administration of Aragon. Most intellectual
histories focus on Nahmanides in the fairly insular context of Jewish
community dynamics, but this volume explores the largely unexamined
history of encounters between Jewish and Christian interpretations of
history and redemption, as well as the significant role played by Jews
in the expansion of the Crown of Aragon during the thirteenth century.
Caputo explains Nahmanides' distinctive understanding of the shape and
meaning of historical time and change and reveals how his discourse
frequently confronted Christian views of history and scripture,
sometimes embracing Christians forms, but at other times directly
refuting them.
Nina Caputo's book is the first to situate Nahmanides in the full
intellectual and religious context of thirteenth-century Catalonia. It
makes an important contribution to the fields of Jewish studies as well
as medieval and early modern history.