Isaac ben Joseph Caro
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The following is an old, outdated article, containing factual errors. Joseph Caro was born (either in Spain or in Portugal) in 1488 and died (probably in Palestine) in 1575. See the Joseph Karo" article in wikipedia.
Isaac ben Joseph Caro was a Spanish Talmudist and Bible commentator. He flourished in the second half of the fifteenth century and the first half of the sixteenth. The son of a scholar and scion of a noble family, he devoted himself to study in his native city of Toledo, being one of the foremost rabbinical authorities of the country when he had to leave it on the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492. Then he went to Portugal, where he remained for six years. When the Jews were driven from that country too, he fled to Constantinople. During the persecution in Portugal he lost all but one of his sons, "who were beautiful like princes." Finally he found refuge in Turkey, where he probably died at an advanced age after 1518.
In that year he published his commentary to the Pentateuch, Toledot Yitzchaq (Constantinople; printed six times in Italy and Poland). In this work Caro endeavors to do justice to the "peshat," the literal interpretation, as well as to the allegorical interpretation, evincing little originality but good taste. He left a collection of responsa, unpublished by the early twentieth century. His nephew, Joseph ben Ephraim Caro, quotes from it several times (compare David Conforte, s.v., and Abqat Rokel, No. 144), and the latter's son, Judah, intended to publish it, but never carried out his intention. The Bodleian Library contains Caro's novellæ to Ketubot (No. 535, 2, 3, in Adolf Neubauer, "Cat. Bodl. Hebr. MSS."), as well as a work entitled Chasde Dawid, containing philosophic and haggadic homilies (Neubauer, l.c. No. 987).
This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia article "Caro, Isaac b. Joseph" by Louis Ginzberg, a publication now in the public domain.