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V H BASHI, D.D.S. bestcaredental.com |
Hakham Bashi (Turkish: Hahambaşı حاخامباشی) is the Turkish name for the Chief Rabbi of the nation's Jewish community.
[edit] HistoryThe institution of the Hakham Bashi was established by the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet II, as part of his policy of governing his exceedingly diverse subjects according to their own laws and authorities wherever possible. Religion was considered as primordial aspect of a communities 'national' identity, so the term Ethnarch has been applied to such religious leaders, especially the (Greek Orthodox) Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople (i.e. in the Sultan's imperial capital, renamed Istanbul in 1930 but replaced by Ankara as republican capital in 1923). As Islam was the official religion of both court and state, the Chief Mufti in Istanbul had a much higher status, even of cabinet rank. Because of the size and nature of the Ottoman state, containing a far greater part of the diaspora then any other, the position of Hakham Bashi has been compared to that of the Jewish Exilarch. In the Ottoman Empire, and as such, the Hakham Bashi was the closest thing to an overall Exilarchal authority among Jewry everywhere in the Middle East in early modern times. They held broad powers to legislate, judge and enforce the laws among the Jews of Ottoman Turkey and often sat on the Sultan's divan. The office also maintained considerable influence outside the Ottoman Empire, especially after the forced migration of numerous Jewish communities and individuals out of Spain (after the fall of Granada in 1492) and Italy. The Chief Rabbi of the modern, secular Republic of Turkey is still known as Hakham Bashi (haham başı). [edit] List of individuals holding the titles of Chief Rabbi in the Ottoman Empire[edit] Chief Rabbis of Istanbul and the Ottoman Empire (haham başı)
[edit] Chief Rabbis of Istanbul
[edit] Chief Rabbis of Istanbul and the Ottoman Empire (haham başı)
[edit] Chief rabbis of Palestine
[edit] Chief rabbis of the Turkish Republic (since 1920)
[edit] See also[edit] References
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