Moses ben Israel Isserles (born c. 1525, Kraków, Pol.—died May 1, 1572, Kraków) was a Polish-Jewish rabbi and codifier who, by adding notes on Ashkenazic customs to the great legal digest Shulḥan ʿarukh of the Sephardic codifier Joseph Karo, made it an authoritative guide for Orthodox Jews down to the present day.
A precocious scholar, Isserles became the head of the great yeshiva (institution of Jewish learning) in Kraków while he was still a young man. Until his time, most of the great codifications of Jewish law had been written by Sephardim, i.e., Jews of Spanish and Portuguese descent. Therefore many eastern European customs (minhagim) had been ignored, making the Sephardic codes increasingly unacceptable to the Ashkenazim, the Jews of German-Polish descent. When Joseph Karo published Shulḥan ʿarukh (1565; “The Well-Laid Table”), its Sephardic bias provoked Isserles to write a commentary entitled Mappa (“The Tablecloth”), first published in Kraków in 1571 as notes to an edition of Shulḥan ʿarukh. This commentary, which extensively utilized Ashkenazic customs, made the Shulḥan ʿarukh acceptable all over the Jewish world. A man of unusual intellectual breadth, Isserles was greatly interested in philosophy, history, and astronomy, as well as in Kabbalistic studies. He considered philosophy and the Kabbala, the influential body of Jewish mystical writings, to be different expressions of the same religious truth.