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Wellsprings

Aleppoארם צובה

Syria

# Aleppo During the medieval and early modern centuries, Aleppo stood as one of the Ottoman Empire's greatest commercial hubs, its fortunes rising with the spice trade that flowed from the Indian Ocean northward through the Red Sea and into the Mediterranean. Perched in northwestern Syria on the edge of the Anatolian plateau, the city endured scorching summers and mild winters, its famous bazaar—the Souk al-Madina—sprawling for miles in a dizzying maze of vaulted stone corridors where merchants hawked silks, perfumes, and precious metals. The Jewish community there, numbering several thousand by the sixteenth century, enjoyed considerable prosperity and considerable autonomy: they lived in their own quarter, governed their own courts, and maintained an intellectual life centered on Talmudic study and Hebrew poetry. Aleppo became renowned across the Jewish world as a seat of learning and scribal excellence, particularly celebrated for the meticulous copying of sacred texts. The city's most famous Jewish treasure was a magnificent medieval Hebrew Bible, copied with extraordinary precision and adorned with careful notations, which would later inspire reverence and become a beacon of cultural memory for Jews dispersed across the world.

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Aleppo through the eras

Geonic Era

Aleppo (Aram Tzova in the Hebrew sources) in the Geonic era was a key Jewish center under the late Abbasids and the Hamdanid dynasty (944-1004). The community traced its founding to refugees of the First Temple's destruction, and by the 10th century it had become a cultural bridge between the Babylonian academies and the western Mediterranean diaspora. Aleppine merchants moving between Baghdad and Cairo helped diffuse the Babylonian Talmud across the Islamic Mediterranean. The community's most famous treasure — the Aleppo Codex, copied in Tiberias c. 920 — was brought to Aleppo from Jerusalem in the 14th century but was already part of the late-Geonic textual lineage. The intellectual atmosphere combined rabbinic learning with Arabic-language poetry and philosophy.

Rishonim

Aleppo under Mamluk and then Ottoman rule (from 1517) developed into one of the most cohesive Sephardic-Mizrachi communities of the medieval Levant. Located on the trans-Asian caravan routes running from Persia to the Mediterranean, the city's Jewish community lived in the Bahsita quarter and dominated long-distance trade in textiles and silk. Post-1492, Spanish-exile families (megorashim) integrated with the older 'mustarib' Arabic-speaking community to form a distinctive Aleppine identity. The custodianship of the Aleppo Codex (Keter Aram Tzova) in the Central Synagogue's iron-bound chamber gave the community a sense of textual stewardship for all of Jewry.

Acharonim

Aleppo during the Ottoman classical era (16th-19th c.) became the foundation of a distinctive halachic-kabbalistic-liturgical tradition. The Mahzor Aram Tzova (printed Venice 1527) preserved Aleppine high-holiday liturgy with unique piyutim. R. Israel Najara (c. 1555-1625, who later led Gaza) composed many of his hundreds of pizmonim while moving between Damascus, Tzfat, and Aleppo. The Laniado, Galante, and Dweck rabbinic families produced generations of poskim and kabbalists. The Aleppine Bakkashot tradition — an eight-week Friday pre-dawn cycle of Hebrew-Arabic religious singing organized by maqam — crystallized in this period and remains the most elaborate piyut tradition in Jewish liturgy.

Modern Era

Aleppo's Jewish community on the eve of World War II numbered about 17,000, organized around the Bahsita quarter and dominated by the Dweck dynasty of chief rabbis. The community's modern period was catastrophic: after the 1947 UN partition vote, mass anti-Jewish riots burned the Central Synagogue and damaged the Aleppo Codex (a third of which is now missing); the community fled, first to Lebanon and then to Israel, Brooklyn, Mexico City, and Buenos Aires. The Syrian-Sephardic diaspora preserved distinctive Aleppine institutions — pizmonim, Bakkashot, wedding customs, the maqam-based chazanut — in remarkable fidelity. Today no organized Jewish community remains in Aleppo itself, but the Aleppine identity lives in Brooklyn, Bnei Brak, and the South American Sephardic communities.

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