From Jewish Encyclopedia (1906) A cryptograph which gives, instead of the intended word, its numerical value, or a cipher produced by the permutation of letters. The term first occurs in literature in the twenty-ninth of the thirty-two hermeneutic rules of R. Eliezer b. R. Jose, the Galilean ( c. 200). In some texts the rule for permutative gemaṭria is counted as a separate regulation—the thirtieth (comp. Königsberger's edition of the rules in his "Monatsblätter für Vergangenheit und Gegenwart des Judenthums"). Waldberg ("Darke ha-Shinnuyim"), who gives a list of 147 cases of gemaṭria occurring in traditional literature, includes in this number cases of symbolical numbers, which properly belong to the twenty-seventh rule ("ke-neged"). The reader is referred for the subject of permutative gemaṭria and symbolical numbers to the articles Anagram and Numbers and Numerals ; the present article is limited to a discussion of gemaṭria in the later meaning of the term, namely, numerical gemaṭria, and treats therefore only of the numerical values of words.
Terms.
In its form gemaṭria is a simple arithmetical equation;
e.g.
,
(= 138) =
(= 138). The computation of the numerical value of a word, with the inference drawn therefrom, is called
(comp. Krauss, "Lehnwörter," ii.
s.v.
). The plural is
(Krauss,
l.c.
,
s.v.
),
(Ibn Ezra; see "Kerem Ḥemed," iii. 174), and
(see Kohut, "Studies in Yemen-Hebrew Literature," ii. 68). The numerical value itself is called
(Ned. 32a),
or
(Num. R. xiii. 15, 16),
(
ib.
),
(Tan., ed Buber, p.
).
The etymology of the word is doubtful. Some identify it with the Greek γεωμετρία in the sense of ἀριϑμητική (Krauss,
l.c.
,
s.v.
); others consider it to be a transposition of a supposed
=
*
γραμματεία, and a derivative of either γράμμα ("letter") or γραμματευς ("scribe"; Bacher, "Die Aelteste Terminologie der Jüdischen Schriftauslegung," p. 127; Königsberger, "Monatsblätter," p. 94). The derivation from γράμμα may perhaps be supported by the use of the term
, the Hebrew equivalent of
(Sanh. 38a = Yoma 65a).
In the Bible itself there is no reference to numerical gemaṭria, or the symbolical use of numbers, and their existence can not be positively demonstrated. Nevertheless, considering that examples of permutative gemaṭria are found in Biblical literature (
, Jer. xxv. 26;
,
ib.
li. 1), there is great probability that at least some of the claims made by later writers to having found also numerical gemaṭriot are justified. The following three may be considered as very probable: (1) Gen. xiv. 14, where the number 318 is the equivalent of "Eliezer" (Ned. 32a), the only name known to tradition from among those of Abraham's servants; (2) Deut. xxxii. 1-6, the initial letters of the verses giving the number 345, the value of the name of Moses (Tan.
ad loc.
), and the abnormal form of the first letter of verse 6 calling the reader's attention to the cryptographic acrostic; (3) Ezek. v. 2, where
, omitting ו and ח, = 390, the number given in
ib.
iv. 9 (comp. Berthelot's commentary
ad loc.
).
The following forms of gemaṭria occur: (1) A number in the text points to a person or object, as the number 318 to Eliezer (see above). (2) A word in the text points to a number, a person, or an object. Under this head fall the following kinds:
, the money (Esth. iii. 11) promised Haman, foreshadows
, the gallows on which he was to be hanged (Esth. R. vi.), since each = 165.
(5 + 5 + 6 + 1) =
(5 + 2 + 6 + 4, see Esth. R. i.).
to the 613 commandments contained in the Torah, when the first letter ק is changed by the permutation
into a ד, giving (400 + 200 + 9 + 4) = 613 (Num. R. xiii. 15, 16).
= 39 when ח is substituted for ח (Yer. Shab. vii. 2).
may be disregarded when written, or supplied when not in the text; e.g.,
= 120 (Ex. R. xlii. 8), the ח being disregarded;
(Isa. v. 2) = 606 (Tan., section
), the spelling
being assumed.
(Ps. iii. 8) = 60 (Meg. 15b), counting only the last letter of the first word and the last two letters of the second word (40 + 10 + 10). This is done because if the text had nothing to include which is not distinctly said by the Scriptures, it would have had the singular
. The expression
shows that God, the One (Deut. vi. 4), has chosen out of 70 (
) nations Israel (י; comp. Waldberg, l.c. p. 81b, note 160).
read
(Men. 43b).
(Prov. xxii. 20) = 606, and together with the 7 Noachian commandments gives the number 613 (Tan. l.c.).
and
each amount to 611; add to this sum 2, the external number of both words, and the total becomes 613 (Num. R. xviii. 21).
).
(Ex. xxxv. 1) amount to 39 in the following way:
= 36; the additional 3 are gained from
in one of two ways. R. Jose b. Ḥanina says:
is 1,
is 2,
is 3; R. Ḥanina of Sepphoris, in the name of R. Abahu, explains:
is 1,
is 2 (Yer. Shab. v. 2),
is 3 (anonymously in Num. R. xviii. 21).
The gemaṭria method, developed largely in the Middle Ages, became a very popular mode of interpretation, entire treatises being devoted to this branch (see Benjacob, "Oẓar ha-Sefarim," p. 96, Nos. 119, 120; 123; p. 479, No. 737).
III. In the Cabala:In cabalistic literature the use of gemaṭria has been greatly extended, and its forms have been developed in many directions. The principle on which gemaṭria rests is not stated in traditional literature; but it may be assumed that it is essentially the same as that which is found in the Cabala, though in the latter it has been developed along the lines of cosmogonic theories.
("degree of equibalance"), the highest degree, which denotes an equation with an equal number of letters in both members; e.g.,
(40 + 5 + 200 + 2 + 1) =
(30 + 1 + 10 + 7 + 200) = 248; each member having 5 letters.(b)
or
("degree of addition," or "degree of consolidation"); e.g., when
, it is necessary to add the ײ and obtain a ב—both having the value of 20—to make the equation identical.(c)
or
("degree of separation," or "degree of division"), when one letter is resolved into smaller values, the reverse of the preceding.
. A dot and a line are fancied to resemble י and ו respectively. Accordingly, the vowel-signs consisting of one dot amount to 10; pataḥ, being a line (
), is 6; the ḳameẓ, composed of a line and a dot (
), is 16, etc.(c) Letters may be dissolved to form groups of things or of other letters; e.g., the letter י is considered as consisting of three dots or strokes ("'uḳẓin"), and therefore amounting to 3. The letter ו amounts to 10 in the following way: its head is י = 3; its body is a line = 6; its tail is a point = 1; sum 10. The א is dissolved into
or
, the middle stroke being ו. In the first case it may amount to (10 + 6 + 10) = 26, or, since ו may amount to 10, to 30. In the latter case it may equal 20 or 24. By a similar process might be obtained the equation א = ט = ל = 26; namely,
,(comp.
, 56a, 60b).
or
. The number 1, for instance, involved to the first decade (
,
) will amount to 10; when involved to the second decade (
), to 100. Thus, the four supramundane worlds,
, are the 310 worlds promised to the righteous in the world to come (comp. Sanh. 100a). As each of these four worlds contains 10 sefirot, the three worlds,
, raised to the first decade give the amount 300; the world of
counts only as 10, because, being on its upper side endless, the more it contained the nearer it would approach unity. Decadal involution usually affects the word as a whole.(b) Geometric Involution: According to the sameprinciple, a number may be raised to the second or the third power. Here the sum of the whole word may be so dealt with, or each of its letters may be raised separately and the sums then added (comp. § III. E 5 and 6, below).(c) Comprehension: Creation is but an unbroken chain of cause and effect. The latter is potentially contained in the former, and the former partly in the latter (comp. § III. D, above). Every effect, i.e., everything that can be subsumed under a higher term, is the species (
); every cause is the genus (
), comprehending the species. The Universal Comprehender (
) is God; the General Comprehender, the γλη. The alphabet is the comprehender of the whole Torah; the א, that of the whole alphabet, i.e., of all numbers. The numerical value of a word is the comprehender of its conceptional contents. In short, any generic concept may be counted and added to the equation.
To elucidate the principle involved the following example may be taken: [(a+b+c)+(d+e)+(f+g+h)] =(i+j+k) =
S
. Let α, the first member of the equation, consist of 3 words, or of 8 letters, and β, the second member, of 1 word, or 3 letters. Let
S
be the numerical value of each member. Suppose that α actually amounts only to (
S
- 1), (
S
- 2), etc. To make up the deficiency, if it is (
S
- 1), there is added the comprehender of α,
i.e.
, the comprehender of (
S
- 1), which is 1. This would be expressed by
. If α = (
S
- 2), there must be added the comprehender of α+ that of β,
. If α = (
S
- 3), the comprehenders of α + β + (α + β),
, may be taken. Or there may be added to α its 3 words,
. If α = (
S
- 8), one may add the 8 letters
. If α = (
S
- 14), the 3 comprehenders + the 3 words + the 8 letters, etc., may be added.
Instead of addition, subtraction may be used;
e.g.
,
. The Divine Name, by double integration (comp. § III. D e, below), yields 34 letters; deduct from this number the 4 letters of the integral + the comprehenders of both terms, and the result will be 28. The
has a different value in the following example:
= the letters
in the name
, which are the essential parts of that name, corresponding to the comprehenders of
and
; namely,
= 170,
= 170. The abstract noun of
is
; of
it is
.
= (5 X 6 X, 5 X 10) = 1,500. Similarly, one of the terms may be a quotient of the other; e.g., the world was created by means of
("truth"), these being the final letters of
(Gen. i. 1). The end of all creation is
("man"); for the latter is a tithe of the former: ם = 1/10 ת, ר-1/10 ם, א is indivisible.(e) Integration: Just as in the sefirot all things are contained in a latent state, potentially, so in a number there are latent ramifications. The letter ל, for instance, amounts on the face of it to 30; but it contains also its alphabetic name
, and therefore really amounts to 74. The word
, on the face of it amounting to 32, may be integrated (
) to
, and would then amount to 486. This integral (
) may again be integral to
, and this double integration (
or
) would raise the value of
to 1,436. In the above example
is the integral (
,
,
the integrant (
), the doubly integrated number
, the process of integration
. The numerical value of the integral is the
, that of the integrant the
.Some of the names of the letters may be spelled in various ways, so as to affect the numerical value of the word. Hence, one and the same word may, when integrated, yield several values. The Tetragrammaton
, for example, may be integrated in many forms, but the following four are the usual ones: (1)
= 45; (2)
= 52; (3)
= 63; (4)
= 72.(f) Quaternion: The quaternary term (
, τετρακτύς) 10 = (1+2+3+4) shows that ר = 10, as 4 includes all the preceding lower numbers. If the above equation, 4 = 10, be put in the form (1+1 +1+1) = [1+ (1+1) + (1+1+1) + (1+1+1+1)] it becomes evident why a word like
, for instance, is equivalent to (
) = 72. This process is called
; the term itself,
. The simple form
is the
("face"); the quaternated form
("back"). Quaternation may be combined with integration, and the process is extended to words having more or less than four letters.(g) Spatiality: A word may also be considered under the aspect of dimension, and expressed in terms of spatiality. Thus,
in terms of space would have a
("width") of 4, and a
or
("height") of 10; the height being the extent of the integral (comp. § III. D e, above).
, counting א—ט as units, א—ע as tens, ק—ת as hundreds. The 5 final letters have here the same values as their respective initial forms.2. Cyclical or Minor Value,
,
, where the tens, hundreds, and thousands are reduced to units; e.g.,
, i.e., (40+4+1) = (400+40+1). This procedure is also called
("return of the cycle"), since with 1,000 the alphabet must be begun anew, symbolizing that the beginning is connected with the end (
). This value is assigned to Enoch, who isidentified with Mattatron (a differentiation of Metatron), who, like the gnostic demiurge, has neither knowledge of nor understanding for involution, the pneumatic nature of things.3. Inclusive Value,
, a development of the quaternion, where each number includes all the other numbers that precede it in the order of the alphabet; e.g., ה = (5+4+3+2+1) = 15; ב = (20 +10+9+8+7+6+5+4+3+2+1) = 75.4. Additory Value,
, when the external number of words or of letters is added (comp. § III. D c, above).5. Square Value of the Word,
. The numerical value of the word is successively multiplied by the value of each letter, and the products are added; e.g.,
= [(14 X 4) + (14 X 6) + (14 X 4)] = 196, or, in short, 142. The reason for such a procedure is that inasmuch as 14 branches are contained in 3 powers, each power must be contained in the other two.6. Square Value of the Letter,
; e.g.,
= (42+62+42) = 68.7. Nominal Value,
, taking the alphabetical name of the letter for the letter itself (comp. § III. D e, above).8. Numeral Value,
, substituting the numeral noun for the number; e.g.,
= (40+10+300+30+300+5+1+ 40+40+10+70+2+200+1)=1,049. The principle is the same as in the preceding.9. Major Numeral Value,
, the preceding combined with integration; e.g., י =
=
= 620.10. External Value,
, when the con tents are disregarded, every letter counting for 1. The Tetragrammaton can not be taken in this value ("Asis Rimmonim," 36b).11. Major Value,
. In this value the final letters count as hundreds (
). In contradistinction to the minor or cyclical value (see § III. E 2, above), the values 10—400 (see § III. E 1, above) also belong under this head.12. Multiple Value,
(comp. § III. D d).13. Quotient Value,
(comp. § III. D d).14. Cube Value of the Word,
,
.15. Cube Value of the Letter,
(comp. "Ḥayyaṭ," in "Minḥat Yehudi," iii.).16. First Decadic Involution Value,
(comp. § III. D a, above).17. Second Decadic Involution Value,
.18. Double Integration Value,
.19. Permutation Value,
, when the values of the permutated letters are taken (comp. § II. 2 c, above).20-22. Quaternion Values,
, either of the simple word or of the singly and doubly integrated forms (comp. § III. D f, above).Considering that the procedures and values explained above may be used in various combinations, it will easily be seen that a word may be made to yield an almost unlimited number of values.
to Ṭur Oraḥ Ḥayyim, 24, 63), Leo di Modena ("Ari Nohem," ch. xiv.), Milsahagi (
15c et seq.), and Zweifel ("Kerem Ḥemed," ix. 80 et seq.).
Categories: [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
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