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Responsa

Responsa, plural of responsum, is a genre of formal written answers by rabbinic authorities in Judaism to questions of Jewish law and practice. The responses are typically framed as a question (she'elah) submitted to a learned rabbi and a concise, reasoned answer (teshuva) that cites Talmudic and later legal sources. In Hebrew literature the term is often rendered as she'elot u-te-shuvot, meaning questions and replies; in scholarly work the collection is referred to as responsa literature.

Historically, responsa began in the Geonic era with letters from leading rabbis addressing practical questions for

In modern times responsa remain a dynamic field, with scholarly institutions compiling and translating large bodies

Jewish
communities.
Over
the
medieval
period
the
genre
expanded
across
the
Jewish
world,
including
Spain,
France,
Germany,
North
Africa,
and
the
Middle
East,
with
many
authorities
producing
widely
circulated
collections.
The
responsa
shaped
everyday
practice
in
ritual
law
(Sabbath
observance,
dietary
laws,
prayer),
civil
and
family
law,
conversions,
and
communal
governance,
and
they
also
addressed
new
issues
arising
from
changing
circumstances
such
as
commerce,
printing,
and,
later,
science
and
medicine.
The
form
usually
includes
the
question,
a
detailed
analysis
grounded
in
Talmudic
sources,
and
a
ruling
or
conditional
ruling.
of
answers.
They
continue
to
influence
contemporary
halakhic
decision
making
and
serve
as
a
record
of
how
Jewish
law
adapts
to
new
technologies,
ethical
questions,
and
social
change.