Samuel's systematic treatises on many portions of the Talmudic law surpassed in number those of his predecessors. They were composed in Arabic, although some bore corresponding familiar Hebrew titles. They are: •
Aḥkām Shar‘ al-Ẓiẓit, ten chapters, on rules concerning
tzitzit •
Lawāzim al-Aḥkām, known from a citation, from the catalogue of a book-dealer of the twelfth century (this catalogue was found among the
genizah fragments of
Fostat, and was published by E. N. Adler and I. Broydé, and from fragments recently (1906) discovered and published by Schechter • ''Al-Bulūgh wa'l-Idrāk,'' in six chapters, on the attainment of one's majority (
bar mitzvah) •
Fī al-Ṭalāq (appears in the above-mentioned catalogue under the title
Kitāb al-Ṭalāq), on divorce •
Naskh al-Shar‘ wa-Uṣūl al-Dīn wa-Furū‘ihā (i.e., "Abrogation of the Law and the Foundations of Religion and Its Branches"), cited by
Judah ibn Balaam and
Moses ibn Ezra •
Fī al-Nafaqāt, concerning taxes •
Al-Shuf‘a, twenty chapters, concerning boundary disputes •
al-Risālah al-Shakīrīyah (= Hebrew, , mentioned by
Moses ibn Ezra), probably concerning the hiring of persons •
Al-Sharā’i‘, concerning commandments; divided into "gates" or chapters ("she‘arim") with separate titles, e.g.,
Sha‘arei Sheḥiṭut;
Sha‘ar shel Bediḳut haBasar min ha-Ḥelev;
Sha‘arei Berakhot. The last-mentioned part has been edited in Hebrew by I. H. Weiss, and partially translated into
German. •
Shurūṭ, concerning contracts •
Ha-Mattanah, concerning gifts •
Ha-Shuttafut, concerning partnership The above-mentioned catalogue contains in addition the following titles of works by Samuel on the same subjects of Talmudic law: •
Kitāb Aḥkām al-Piqqadon, concerning deposits •
Kitāb al-Mujāwara, concerning neighborhood •
Kitāb al-Bay‘, concerning sales The catalogue ascribes to Samuel ben Ḥofni likewise a commentary on the tractate
Yebamot. Moreover, Schechter's genizah fragments contain the beginning of an Arabic commentary by Samuel on a Hebrew "reshut" of
Saadia's. == As Bible exegete ==