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Journee d'etudes 2024. Foto © Ekaterina 'Qeto' Gotsiridze

Bible glossaries as hidden cultural carriers. judeo-French cultural exchange in the High Middle Ages

Funding by and establishment at the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities / Academies' Program

Homepage | Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities

Bible glossaries as hidden carriers of culture | Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities

The project focuses on Hebrew-French glossaries, which are being edited (for the most part for the first time) and historically and philologically processed and contextualized because they are exceptional witnesses to a simultaneously developing (Jewish and Christian) French (Bible) reading culture in Western Europe between the 12th and 14th centuries. The glossaries form basic texts for research into the interrelations between Jewish intellectual history and the non-Jewish environment as well as the lexical interferences between Jewish and Christian vernacular cultures. The French glosses are written in Hebrew throughout and comprise about 1/4 of the Old French vocabulary known today.

From the outset, the philological work will be integrated into a digital working environment that uses the BIMA 2.0 database, which has been in productive use in the Corpus Masoreticum project since 2018 and is continuously being further developed. BIMA 2.0 ensures the editorial indexing and long-term archiving of all Hebrew-French material and provides tools that guarantee the sustainable management, processing, presentation and visualization of the project results. A data export interface via RDF/OntoLex ensures that the interoperability of the lexicographically relevant edition data is guaranteed as 'linked open data' with the resources of DEAFél(Dictionnaire étymologique de l'ancien français électronique), which are still available, and that DEAFél is therefore also used for further research. The field of Digital Humanities also makes an independent research contribution to the differentiation of a digital corpus linguistics of Judeo-French text cultures of the Middle Ages. The digital results will be supplemented by online and print publications that will provide new transdisciplinary academic impetus for Jewish studies, Romance studies, Jewish and Christian theology and medieval (knowledge) history as a whole.


Events

Israel and Middle Eastern StudiesOn-siteEnglish
8 July 2026 16:15 - 17:45 UTC+02:00

Book presentation by Omri Ben Yehuda

DiscussionGerman / English
15 July - 25 November 2026 18:15 - 19:45 UTC+01:00

The Chair of Jewish Philosophy, headed by Prof. Michael Engel, is responsible for the new lecture series

Past events

Shared Citizenship in Action

News Press

Last week, we had the wonderful privilege of hosting the inaugural workshop of the Volkswagen Stiftung-funded project “Shared Citizenship in Deeply Divided Societies: Comparing Israel, Turkey, and Cyprus.”

The format was small and intensive: 20 guests from Turkey, Cyprus, Israel, and Germany gathered for two days of rich discussion, exchange, and joint planning for the research ahead. Together, we brought academics and civil society practitioners into one room—because real change happens when these worlds connect.

Day 1 explored shared society initiatives across our three case studies through inspiring guest lectures:

  • Nil Mutluer on Turkey
  • Ahmet Sözen on Cyprus
  • Shahira Shalaby on Israel

These three perspectives helped us compare the challenges facing civic initiatives in each context and ask: What can these different societies learn from one another?

We also held impactful panel discussions on:

  • Shared society as an alternative to exclusionary populism
  • A comparative study of Turkey, Cyprus, and Israel
  • Practical challenges of building shared societies

Day 2 shifted to internal meetings between our academic team and civil society partners, focusing on:

  • The next stages of the project
  • Field research in Turkey, Israel, and Cyprus
  • Cooperation between academia and civil society organizations
  • Future dissemination of findings to the public

A heartfelt thank you to the Volkswagen Foundation for making this project possible and for supporting a research framework that truly bridges academic work with civic engagement. This is what collaborative, impact-driven research looks like!

We are grateful for every conversation, every insight, and every partner who joined us on this journey. The road ahead is full of promise!

Shared Citizenship Workshop
  • Date: 22 June 2026
    Date 22 June 2026
  • Time: 
	09:14
	UTC+02:00
    Time 09:14 UTC+02:00
  • Participation:
    Participation
  • Language:
    Language
  • Contact:
    Contact
  • Location:
    Location
  • Registration? No

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