Gershon ben Eliezer ha-Levi Yiddels of Prague (Hebrew: גרשון בן אליעזר הלוי יידלש מפראג, romanized: Gershon ben Eliʻezer ha-Levi Yidelsh mi-Prag; fl. 17th century)[note 1] was a possibly fictitious[1] Jewish travel writer.[2]
The first edition, presumably published in Lublin in 1635, was publicly burned in Warsaw by order of the Jesuits.[6] Subsequent editions of the work were published in Fürth (1691), Amsterdam (1705), and Prague (1824). It was also printed alongside the Ma'aseh Buch in Amsterdam in 1723.[7] A Hebrew translation, titled ʼIggeret ha-kodesh ('Sacred Epistles'), went through multiple editions.
Notes
^Variants of his name include Edels, Jidls, Yidelsh, Yiddls, and Yidls.
^Kizilov, Mikhail (2013). "Between Europe and the Holy Land: East European Jews as Intermediaries between Europe and the Near East from the 16th through the 17th Centuries". In Fuess, Albrecht; Heyberger, Bernard (eds.). La frontière méditerranéenne du XVe au XVIIe siècle. Brepols. pp. 301–305.