Ezekiel Isidore Epstein (; 10/15/94–) was an England Orthodox Judaism rabbi, Jewish studies scholar, and Jewish education. Epstein edited the first complete English translation of the Babylonian Talmud (the Soncino Talmud), served as the headmaster of Jews' College, London, and was the author of The Faith of Judaism,
At the age of fifteen, he studied Talmud at Great Garden Street's beit midrash. Due to the quality of his work, he was sent to study at the Pressburg Yeshiva under Rabbi Akiva Sofer. (He had also studied in Paris under Rabbi Zadoc Kahn, Chief Rabbi of France.) He received semikhah (rabbininc ordination) from Rabbi Isaiah Silberstein of Vác, Rabbi Yisrael Chaim Daiches of Leeds, and Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook while the latter was based in London during World War I.
He was advised by Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom Joseph Hertz to obtain an academic education. He studied at the University of London, earning a First Class BA Honours degree in Semitic languages, followed by two doctorates: the PhD and the DLit.
He served as rabbi of Middlesbrough Hebrew Congregation from 1920 to 1928, and then joined the teaching staff of Jews' College, London. In 1945, he was appointed Director of Studies and, subsequently, Principal. He retired in 1961.
Epstein married twice: he married his first wife, Jeanie, in Belfast in 1921; the couple had two children, Helen and Jack. However, she died in 1924, and Epstein remarried 3 June 1925. With his second wife, Gertrude, Epstein had a third child on 13 April 1926: Samuel Stanley Epstein, who died on 13 March 2018. Isidore Epstein died on 13 April 1962.
Epstein was also an editor of Joseph Hertz's Pentateuch and Haftorahs (1929–1936) and editor of a collection of papers (published 1935) in connection with the eighth centenary of the birth of Maimonides ( 1135).
His publications include:
Works
|
|