Yevr.
Lit. (Voskhod, 1881), and Malishevsky, Yevreyi v Yuzhnoy Rossii i Kieve,
v. x-xii. Vyekakh, St. Petersburg, 1878.]
[Footnote 2: LTI, p. 33, n. 2; LBJ, ii. 94, n. 2.]
[Footnote 3: See JE, s.v. Azov, and Kertch. See also Fishberg, The Jews:
A Study of Race and Environment, New York, 1911, pp. 150, 192-194.]
[Footnote 4: See Judah Halevi's Kuzari, Introduction.]
[Footnote 5: Minor, Rukovodstvo, Moscow, 1881, iv; Ha-Pardes, St.
Petersburg, 1902, p. 155.]
[Footnote 6: HUH, pp. 31-32, 69-76.]
[Footnote 7: Yevrey Minister, Voskhod, 1885, v. 105 f.]
[Footnote 8: JE, i. 112, 119, 223; viii. 652.]
[Footnote 9: The synagogue in Brest-Litovsk, which Saul Wahl built in
memory of his wife Deborah, was demolished in 1836. WMG, p. 84.]
[Footnote 10: HUH, pp. 77-134.]
[Footnote 11: JE, x. 569.]
[Footnote 12: The story of Zacharias de Guizolfi deserves to be given at
greater length. He was a prince and ruler of the Taman peninsula near
the Black Sea (1419). After he had been unsuccessful in a war against
the Turks, Czar Ivan III sent him a message sealed with the gold seal
(March 14, 1484) as follows:
"By the grace of God, the great ruler of the Russian land, the Grand
Duke Ivan Vassilyevich, czar of all the Russias, to Skariya the Hebrew.
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