Roots of Magic episode

Gideon Bohak on the Pishra de-Rabbi Ḥanina Ben Dosa

Roots of Magic Interview 7

The Pishra of Rabbi Ḥanina ben Dosa is a relatively-concise work of all-round protective angel-magic, recently edited with an English translation and commentary by Ohad Abudraham and Gideon Bohak at the MagEIA centre. The text first appears up in the Cairo Genizah in MS fragments dating as early as the eleventh century, and was still being copied in amuletic form  as late as the twentieth century (and very likely up to the present day). However, it has such strong parallels with the Babylonian Jewish incantation bowls of late antiquity that Abudraham and Bohak argue for an origin in late-antique Babylonia, perhaps even predating the Arab conquests.

We discuss the text and what it purports to be able to do, its likely place and time of origin, its intriguing relationships both with the much older Akkadian magical texts (many of which employ the analogous verb, PSHR, to indicate the magical act of ‘loosing’) and with late-antique contemporary traditions, Mandæic, Syriac, and more. A slew of random questions angelogical, astrological, vox-magical, and more finish out this fascinating interview. As always, Bohak delivers the goods.

Interview Bio:

Gideon Bohak is Professor of Jewish Philosophy and Religious Studies at Tel Aviv. His work centres on the broad panoply of practices, artefacts, and texts relating to Jewish ‘magic’, particularly in late antiquity, and the list of his publications and edited volumes on the subject is awe-inspiring. He has recently co-edited, along with Dr Ohad Abudraham, also of Tel Aviv University, the first conspexus-edition with translation and commentary of the Pishra de-Rabbi Ḥanina Ben Dosa, to appear with Brill in 2026.

Works Cited in this Episode:

Bohak, Gideon and Abudraham, Ohad, ed. and trans. The Pishra de-Rabbi Ḥanina ben Dosa. Forthcoming, Brill 2026.

Michelini Tocci, Franco, Note e documenti di letterature religiosa e parareligiosa giudaica, in Annali dell’Istituto Universitario Orientale di Napoli 46 (1986), pp. 101–8.

 

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