Isidore Epstein


Rabbi Ezekiel Isidore Epstein, was an Orthodox rabbi and rabbinical scholar in England. He served as rabbi of Middlesbrough Hebrew Congregation, following which he joined the teaching staff of Jews' College, London. In 1945 he was appointed Director of Studies and subsequently principal. He retired in 1961.

Biography

Epstein was born in Kovno, Lithuania on 7 May 1893. His father was David Epstein, a bootmaker and his mother was Malka Epstein. Both parents were Orthodox Jews. The family moved to Paris when he was very young, and in 1903, the moved to London. There, he attended Old Castle Street School, and Raine's Foundation School. At the age of fifteen, he studied Hebrew and Talmud at Great Garden Street Yeshiva. Due to the quality of his work, he was sent to study at the Pressburg Yeshiva, as well as in Paris under Rabbi Zadoc Kahn, chief rabbi of France.
He received semikhah from Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, Rabbi Isaiah Silberstein of Vác, and Rabbi Yisrael Chaim Daiches of Leeds, England.
Epstein married twice, he married his first wife Jeanie in Belfast in 1921 and the couple had two children. However, she died in 1924, and Epstein would marry Gertrude on 3 June 1925. He would become a British citizen in 1928, the same year he started teaching at Jews College, London. He would effectively become principal of the college in 1945, and retire in 1961. Epstein died on 13 April 1962.

Works

Epstein is best known for serving as the editor of the first complete English translation of the Babylonian Talmud, by the Soncino Press. He recruited many rabbis and scholars for the massive project, personally reviewing all of the work as it was produced, and co-ordinating the many details of notation and transliteration of Hebrew words.
Rabbi Epstein was also an editor of Joseph H. Hertz' Pentateuch and Haftorahs, and editor of a collection of papers in connection with the eighth centenary of the birth of Maimonides. Rabbi Epstein was also the author of numerous scholarly books relating to Judaism.

Publications