THE JEWISH ENCYCLOPEDIA
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[page 251] MAGEN DAWID (“David’s shield”): The hexagram formed by the combination of two equilateral triangles; used as the symbol of Judaism. It is placed upon synagogues, sacred vessels, and the like, and was adopted as a device by the American Jewish Publication Society in 1873 (see illustration, JEW. ENCYC. i. 520), the Zionist Congress of Basel (ib. ii. 570)—hence by “Die Welt” (Vienna), the official organ of Zionism—and by other bodies. The hebra kaddisha of the Jewish community of Johannesburg, South Africa, calls itself “Hebra Kaddisha zum Rothen Magen David,” following the designation of the “red cross” societies. The Jewish view of God, which permitted no images of Him, was and still is opposed to the acceptance of any symbols, and neither the Bible nor the Talmud recognizes their existence. It is noteworthy, moreover, that the shield of David is not mentioned in rabbinical literature. The “Magen Dawid,” therefore, probably did not originate within [page 252] Rabbinism, the official and dominant Judaism for more than 2,000 years. Nevertheless, a David’s shield has recently been noted on a Jewish tombstone at Tarentum, in southern Italy, which may date as early as the third century of the common era (see Herbert M. Adler in “J. Q. R” xiv. 111). The earliest Jewish literary source which mentions it, the “Eshkol ha-Kofer” of the Karaite Judah Hadassi (middle of the 12th cent.), says, in ch. 242: “Seven names of angels precede the mezuzah: Michael, Gabriel, etc. Tetragrammaton protect thee! And likewise the sign called ‘David’s shield’ is placed beside the name of each angel.” It was, therefore, at this time a sign on amulets. In the magic papyri of antiquity, pentagrams, together with stars and other signs, are frequently found on amulets bearing the Jewish names of God—“Sabaoth,” “Adonai,” “Eloai”—and used to guard against fever and other diseases (Wessely, “Neue Zauberpapyri,” pp. 68, 70, and note).
The pentagram, called Solomon’s seal, is also used as a talisman, and Henry thinks that the Hindus derived it from the Semites (“Magic dans l’Inde Antique,” p. 93, Paris, 1904), although the name by no means proves the
BIBLIOGRAPHY: M. Grunwald, Jahrb. Fuer Juedische Gesh. Ind Literatur, vol. iv., Berlin, 1901; Mitteilungen der Gesellschat fuer Juedische Volkskunde, x. 137-140, Hamburg, l902; B. Vajda, Zur Gesch. Des Davidsschildes, in Magyar Zsido Szemle, 1900, xvii.310-322; Zunz, Ritus, p. 149 9the 67th Psalm on David’s shield in the form of the menorah); D. Mayer, Der Aberglaube des Mittelalters, p. 237, Basel, 1884.
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