Read Enchantress: A Novel of Rav Hisda's Daughter Online
Authors: Maggie Anton
Adonai
God’s holy name
Agunah
woman whose husband has disappeared or died without witnesses, leaving her unable to remarry
Am-ha’aretz (pl. amei-ha’aretz)
Jew who doesn’t accept rabbinic authority
Av
eleventh month of Jewish year, in midsummer
Bamidbar
Hebrew name for biblical book Numbers
Bar
son of
Baraita
literally “outside,” additional teachings from the Sages of Eretz Israel not included in the Mishna
Bat
daughter of
Bavel
Babylonia
Beit din
Jewish court
Bereshit
Hebrew name for the biblical book Genesis
Brit milah
circumcision ceremony, done eight days after birth
Chaldean
Babylonian astrologer
Charasha
sorcery
Charasheta
sorceress/enchantress
Cheshvan
second month of Jewish year, in midautumn
Ctesiphon
capital city of Babylonia and Persia, on east bank of the Tigris River
Cubit
an arm’s length, roughly twenty inches
Dashtana
menstruating
Devarim
Hebrew name for the biblical book Deuteronomy
Elohim
God’s secular name
Elul
last month of Jewish year, in late summer
Etrog
citron
Exilarch
ruler of the Jewish community in Babylonia, descended from King David
Get
Jewish bill of divorce
Ha-Elohim!
exclamation, “Oh God!”
Haluk
slip, a thin undergarment
Hametz
leavened bread or cakes, forbidden during Pesach
Hanukah
winter solstice holiday, celebrates Jewish victory over Greeks in 167 BCE
Haroset
mixture of fruit, wine, and nuts eaten at Pesach
Huppah
bridal chamber
Kafri
southernmost Babylonian city, on the Euphrates River
Karga
Persian poll tax
Kasa d’charasha
incantation bowl
Kashafa (pl. kashafot)
witch, evil sorceress
Katlanit
woman who has been widowed twice
Kavanah
intent, concentration
Ketuba
Jewish marriage contract specifying husband’s financial obligations to his wife in the event of divorce or his death
Kohen (pl. kohanim)
Jewish man from a priestly family
Kosher
meat from a biblically permitted animal, slaughtered according to Jewish Law
Lilith
female demon and a type of demon who preys on newborn babies, women in childbirth, and men sleeping alone
Machoza
suburb of Persian capital Ctesiphon, on west bank of the Tigris River
Magus (pl. magi)
Zoroastrian priest
Mamzer (pl. mamzerim)
child from a forbidden sexual relationship such as adultery or incest
Matzah
flat, unleavened bread eaten during Pesach
Mazal
luck, fortune
Mazik (pl. mazikim)
impish demon
Mikvah
pool or bath for ritual immersion
Mishna
Jewish Oral Law, teachings of the Sages in Eretz Israel compiled in ca. 200 CE
Mitzvah (pl. mitzvot)
commandment from Torah
Mokh
wad of cloth inserted vaginally to absorb menstrual blood
Nasus
Persian corpse demoness
Nehardea
central Babylonian city, located on the Euphrates River
Nehar Malka
canal connecting the Euphrates River at Nehardea to the Tigris River at Ctesiphon
Niddah
menstruating woman, forbidden to her husband until she immerses in a
mikvah
Palla
Roman shawl-like garment worn by married women
Parasang
Persian mile, approximately six kilometers
Pesach
Passover, spring equinox festival celebrating Exodus from Egypt
Pumbedita
northernmost Babylonian city on the Euphrates River, site of a Torah school since the third century
Purim
holiday celebrating how Queen Esther saved Persian Jews from annihilation
Rosh Hashana
Jewish New Year, in early autumn
Ruchim
evil spirits
Samael
Angel of Death
Shabbat
the Jewish Sabbath, Saturday
Shalom aleichem
greeting, “peace unto you”
Shavuot
late spring festival, celebrates giving of Torah at Mount Sinai
Shayd (pl. shaydim)
demon
Shaydim shel Beitkisay
demons of the privy
Sheloshim
first thirty days of mourning after a close relative’s death
Shema
passage from Deuteronomy said morning and evening, begins with “Hear O Israel, Adonai our God, Adonai is One.”
Shemot
Hebrew name for the biblical book Exodus
Shiva
first seven days of mourning for a close relative
Shofar
ram’s horn
Sivan
late spring month in which Shavuot occurs
Stola
Roman woman’s outer garment
Sukkah
flimsy booth where Jews dwell during festival of Sukkot
Sukkot
autumn equinox festival that recalls the forty years the Hebrews wandered in the desert after leaving Egypt
Sura
southern Babylonian city on the Euphrates River, site of the prophet Ezekiel’s tomb and one of the earliest Torah schools
Tammuz
summer solstice month (tenth month of Jewish year)
Tefillin
two small leather boxes with verses of Torah inside, worn by rabbis on their forehead and dominant hand
Tesserae
small ceramic tiles used in mosaics
Tevet
winter solstice month (third month of Jewish year)
Tisha B’Av
black fast, day of mourning in late summer for destruction of both first and second Temples in Jerusalem
Tishrei
first month of Jewish year, in autumn
Torah
Jewish scriptures, Written Law given to Moses at Mount Sinai
Tractate
volume of Talmud or Mishna, contains many chapters
Traklin
dining room or large hall
Treif
not kosher, food forbidden to Jews
Tzitzit
ritual fringes attached to a Jew’s four-cornered garment
Vayikra
Hebrew name for the biblical book Leviticus
Yetzer hara
evil inclination, sexual urge
Yetzer tov
good inclination
Yom Kippur
Day of Atonement, observed ten days after New Year, with fasting, asking forgiveness, and confession of sins