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golem[gO´lum] Pronunciation Key [Heb.,=an undeveloped lump], in medieval Jewish legend, an automatonlike servant made of clay and given life by means of a charm, or shem [Heb.,=name, or the name of God]. Golems were attributed in Jewish legend to several rabbis in different European countries. The most famous legend centered around Rabbi LOw, of 16th-century Prague. After molding the golem and endowing it with life, Rabbi LOw was forced to destroy the clay creature after it ran amok.
See J. Trachtenberg, Jewish Magic and Superstition (1939, repr. 1961); M. Idel, Golem (1989).
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