33:– after 1550) was a notable rabbi and historian. Capsali, an important historian of Muslim and Ottoman history, has a medieval historical approach, with early modern subject matter. Capsali's chronicle may be the first example of a diasporic Jew writing a history of their own location (Venice).
99:. Additionally he wrote several notable historical works, which were praised for their vivid and detailed descriptions of Ottoman Jewry, many of which provide interregnal accounts used by modern historians.
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family, the
Capsalis had served as heads of the Jewish community on several occasions and distinguished themselves in the study of the
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he became the Chief Rabbi of Crete, during which he associated himself with several great scholars of his time such as,
68:, served as the head of the Cretan Jewish community, and taught Elijah in his early years. In 1508 Elijah went to
84:, after which he moved to Venice. In 1510 Capsali returned to Crete, where he studied under Isaac Mangelheim. In
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150:"Exposed to All the Currents of the Mediterranean—A Sixteenth-Century Venetian Rabbi on Muslim History"
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Sultanic
Saviors and Tolerant Turks: Writing Ottoman Jewish History, Denying the Armenian Genocide
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244:"On the sources of Elijah Capsali's Chronicle of the 'Kings' of Venice"
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120:- a contemporary account of Venice and the condition of
197:"Capsali as a Source for Ottoman History, 1450–1523"
399:"Elia Capsali | Historians of the Ottoman Empire"
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107:Some of his most famous works are as follows:
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242:Corazzol, Giacomo (December 2012).
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423:"CAPSALI - JewishEncyclopedia.com"
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20:Elijah ben Elkanah Capsali
16:Muslim rabbi and historian
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26:: אליהו בן אלקנה קפשאלי;
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112:Seder Eliyahu Zuta
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447:Categories
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154:AJS Review
135:References
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103:Works
70:Padua
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50:Crete
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