About IsaacbenMoses of Vienna the author of Akeidat Yitzchak IsaacbenMoses Arama NOTOC IsaacbenMoses of Vienna , also called Isaac Or Zarua or the Riaz , was one of the greatest rabbi s of the Middle Ages . He was probably born in Bohemia and lived between 1200 and 1270. He attained his fame in Vienna ..., G.S. iii.128 et seq. Weiss, Dor, v.73 References JewishEncyclopedia article ISAACBENMOSES OF VIENNA ... Persondata name Vienna, IsaacBenMoses of alternative names short description date of birth 1200 place of birth date of death 1270 place of death DEFAULTSORT Vienna, IsaacBenMoses Of Category ... of information on his life, IsaacbenMoses mentions as his teachers two Bohemian scholars, Jacob ha Laban and Isaacben Jacob ha Laban author of Arugat ha Bosem . Led by a thirst for Talmud ic knowledge ... ben Joseph , and was composed at the order of Isaac s teacher Eleazar ben Judah of Worms . Isaac ... he stopped for a long time at Vienna , and became closely identified with the city, as he is usually quoted as Isaac of Vienna. From among the many scholars at Ratisbon he selected for his guide the Mysticism mystic Judah ben Samuel of Regensburg Yehuda ben Samuel HaChasid . About 1217 he went to Paris , where the great Talmudist Judah benIsaac Sir Leon became his chief teacher. He also visited for a short time the yeshiva of Jacob ben Meir in Provins . Then he returned to Germany, and studied under the mystic Eleazar ben Judah at Worms, Germany Worms , and, at Speyer , under Simchah ben Samuel , his intimate friend, and Eliezer ben Joel ha Levi , author of Abi ha Ezri and Abi asaf . At W rzburg , where Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg was his pupil c. 1230 , he became rosh yeshiva . Later on Isaac returned to Ratisbon, and then settled for some time in Vienna, where he held the position of Av Beth Din and rosh yeshiva. Finally, he went to Saxony and Bohemia. Isaac lived a long but unsteady ... upon them by the nobles of Austria. His son in law was Samuel ben Shabbethai of Leipzig his ... more details
Orphan date November 2006 MosesbenIsaac Bonems of Lublin died 1668 was a Poles Polish rabbi born in Cracow . He was a great grandson of Moses Isserles , and later became the son in law of Samuel Eliezer Edels . He was successively rabbi at Liuboml Volhynia and Lublin . In the approbations to works given by the members of the Council of Four Lands at the Gramnitza candlestick fair on 6 April 1664, Moses signed first. He was the author of novell on the Talmud , published with the iddushe Halakot , last recension Mahdura Batra , of R. Samuel Edels Lublin, 1670 . He died in Lublin on 25 November 1668. Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Haim Nathan Dembitzer Dembitzer , Kelilat. Yofi, i.27a Nissenbaum, Le orot ha Yehudim be Lublin, p.  61, Lublin, 1899 Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. col. 1825. JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Bonems, MosesBenIsaac ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Rabbi DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH Cracow , Poland DATE OF DEATH 25 November 1668 PLACE OF DEATH Lublin , Poland DEFAULTSORT Bonems, MosesBenIsaac Category 1668 deaths Category Year of birth unknown Category Polish rabbis poland reli bio stub rabbi stub ... more details
IsaacbenMoses Arama c. 1420 &ndash 1494 was a Spain Spanish rabbi and author. He was at first principal of a rabbinical academy at Zamora, Spain Zamora probably his birthplace then he received a call as rabbi and preacher from the community at Tarragona , and later from that of Fraga in Aragon . He officiated finally in Calatayud as rabbi and head of the Talmudical academy. Upon the expulsion of the Jews in 1492, Arama settled in Naples , where he died in 1494. Arama is the author of A edat Yi a Offering of Isaac , a lengthy philosophical commentary on the Pentateuch , homiletic in style. From this work he is frequently spoken of as the Ba al A edah author of the A edah . He also wrote a commentary upon the Five Scrolls , and a work called azut ashah A Burdensome Vision , upon the relation of philosophy to theology also Yad Abshalom The Hand of Absalom , a commentary on Book of Proverbs Proverbs , written in memory of his son in law, Absalom, who died shortly after his marriage. As Talmudist and Philosopher Arama was the very prototype of the Spanish Jewish scholar of the second half of the fifteenth century. First of all he was a Talmudist . The study of the Talmud was of the utmost importance to him so that he lamented deeply when his rabbinical pupils could not follow him from Zamora to Tarragona, because the latter community was unable to support them. In the next place, he was a philosopher. The study of philosophy was so universal in Spain at that period that no one could assume a public position who had not devoted himself to it. Arama had paid particular attention to Maimonides but independent philosophical thought is hardly to be found in his work. His remarks ... References JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME IsaacBenMoses ... DEFAULTSORT IsaacBenMoses Arama Category 1420s births Category 1494 deaths Category Spanish ... upon their appearance, to such an extent indeed that Isaac Abravanel , a younger contemporary ... more details
MosesbenIsaac ha Nessiah of London was an English grammarian and lexicographer of the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries. His mother probably was a Jewess named Comitissa of Cambridge. In his youth he wrote a work now lost on Hebrew grammar entitled Leshon Limmudim it is referred to in his Sefer ha Shoham , or Onyx Book, the title of which is an anagram of his name. The latter work part of which was published at Oxford in 1882 shows some knowledge of Arabic and of the works of Joseph Kimhi . The tombstone of a Rabbi Moses, son of Rabbi Isaac, was found at Ludgate , London, in the time of Elizabeth I of England Elizabeth John Stow , in his Survey of London stated that it came from the Jewish cemetery in Jewin Street at the time of the First Barons War barons revolt against John of England King John in 1215. If this is his tombstone MosesbenIsaac must have died before that date. Sources JewishEncyclopedia article MosesbenIsaac ha Nessiah author Crawford Howell Toy and Joseph Jacobs url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 869&letter M small Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Renan Neubauer, Les Rabbins Fran ais, pp.  484 487 Winter and W nsche, Die J dische Litteratur, ii. 205, 233 Rosin, in Monatsschrift, xxxii. 232 240 Jacobs, Jews of Angevin England, pp.  251, 253, 420. small Bibliography Klar, Benjamin & Cecil Roth Roth, C . http openlibrary.org b OL17227497M Sefer ha shoham Sefer ha shoham, The Onyx Book . Jewish Historical Society of England 1947 . DEFAULTSORT MosesBenIsaac Ha Nessiah Category Rishonim Category English Jews of the Medieval and Tudor period Category 13th century rabbis Category 13th century English people Category 13th century in London Category Orthodox Jews in London Category English Medieval rabbis Category Medieval Hebraists Category Article Feedback 5 ... more details
MosesbenIsaac ha Levi Minz 15th century was a German rabbi and contemporary of Israel Isserlein , whom he frequently consulted. He was successively rabbi at Mainz , Landau , Bamberg , and Pozna Posen . In his responsa No. 114 he mentions a certain Jacob Margolioth of Lucca ? , and refers to a case of divorce in Posen in 1444 Steinschneider gives 1474 . Fr nkel Zeitschrift, iii. 387 doubts that Moses ever was at Posen. He suggests that Posen is a printer s mistake for Pesaro . Moses responsa Cracow, 1617 mention also Joseph Colon , Israel Isserlein , and his cousin Judah Minz . Responsum No. 46 contains a dispute over a philological point with Eliezer Treves comp. M. Wiener in Monatsschrift, xvi. 390 . Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Chaim Joseph David Azulai Azulai , Shem ha Gedolim, i.140 David Conforte , ore ha Dorot, p.  27b Julius F rst , Bibl. Jud. ii.380 Moritz Steinschneider , Cat. Bodl. cols. 1946 1947. References JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT Minz, MosesBenIsaac Ha Levi Category 15th century rabbis Category German rabbis de Mose ben Isaak M nz ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 MosesbenIsaac Judah Lima c. 1615 c. 1670 was a Lithuanian Jews Lithuanian rabbinical scholar, one of the Acharonim . Lima is not the family name, but a nickname for Yehudah Harv Goldworm 1989 p 161 . When a comparatively young man he successively occupied the rabbinates of Brest Litovsk and Slonim . His fame as a scholar soon reached Vilna , whither he was called, in 1650, to fill the office of chief rabbi. Lima was of a retiring and diffident disposition, which probably accounts for the paucity of his writings. He left a manuscript commentary on Shulchan Aruch , Eben Ha Ezer , which his son Raphael published 1670 under the title of el at Me o e , and which, while betraying profound erudition, was so condensed that the editor deemed it necessary to provide it with explanatory notes. Lima did not carry even this work to completion it covers only the first 126 chapters of the Eben Ha Ezer . Bibliography cite book last Goldworm first H. authorlink coauthors year 1989 title The Early Acharonim Biographical Sketches of the Prominent Early Rabbinic Sages and Leaders from the Fifteenth Seventeenth Centuries publisher Mesorah Publications location New York id Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Chaim Joseph David Azulai Azulai , Shem ha Gedolim, i. and ii., s.v. el at Me o e S. B ck, in Winter and W nsche, Die J dische Litteratur, ii. 519 Gans, ema Dawid , p.  596 Gr tz, Gesch. x. 61 et seq. Jost, Gesch. des Judenthums und Seiner Sekten, iii. 244. JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Lima, MosesBenIsaac Judah ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1615 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1670 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Lima, MosesBenIsaac Judah Category 1615 births Category 1670 deaths Category Lithuanian Orthodox rabbis rabbi stub ... more details
Infobox person name IsaacMoses image alt caption birth date 1742? birth place death date 16 April 1818 death place nationality other names known for occupation IsaacMoses 1742? 16 April 1818 was a merchant. ref Cite book chapter Moses, Isaac title American National Biography url http www.anb.org articles 10 10 02251.html publisher Oxford University Press Subscription needed. ref References Reflist Further reading cite book title United States Jewry, 1776 1985, Volume 12 last Marcus first Jacob Rader chapter The traditional economy IsaacMoses and Moses Myers pages 142 145 url http books.google.co.uk books?id tmLHBWVxfeoC&lpg PA142&ots FNU kxQBUX&dq 22isaac 20moses 22 201818&pg PA142 v onepage&q 22isaac 20moses 22 201818&f false accessdate 2010 10 30 Use dmy dates date October 2010 Persondata name Moses, Isaac alternative names short description merchant date of birth 1742? place of birth date of death 16 April 1818 place of death DEFAULTSORT Moses, Isaac Category 18th century American businesspeople Category 19th century American businesspeople Category 1742 births Category 1818 deaths US business bio stub ... more details
Israel benMoses Najara c. 1555, Damascus &ndash c. 1625, Gaza Hebrew language Heb. Yisrael ben Moshe Najarah was a Jewish liturgy liturgical poet, preacher, Biblical commentator, kabbalist , and rabbi of Gaza. sfn Abrahams 1911 Biography According to Franco Histoire des Isra lites de l Empire Ottoman, p.  79, Paris, 1897 , there is another account which declares that Najara was born about 1530 and that he lived for some years at Adrianople . From his secular poems, which he wrote in the meters of various Turkish language Turkish , Spanish language Spanish , and modern Greek songs, it is evident that he knew well several foreign languages. He travelled extensively in the Near East , had lived in Safed , where he came under the extensive influence of Kabbalah Lurianic Kabbalah in Early Modern history Luria nic Kabbalah . After an attack on the Jews of Safed in 1579, Najara left with his family and settled in Gauhar, a town near Damascus. ref name Benardete1953 cite ... web url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 48&letter N title Israel benMoses Najara work ... Attribution JewishEncyclopedia Cite EB1911 wstitle Najara, Israel benMoses first Israel last Abrahams ... benMoses ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Najara, Israel benMoses Category 1550s births Category 1620s deaths Category ... , Yom ob ahalon , Moses Hamon , and Menahem efe . His poetic effusions were exceptionally numerous ... upon a poet whose name is not mentioned, but who some take to be Israel Najara. Nevertheless, Isaac ... in the ancient Jewish cemetery in Gaza. His son, Moses Najara was also a poet, who succeeded his ... of the world Sho a e ha Yeladim printed with Moses Ventura s Yemin Mosheh, Amsterdam, 1718 , Hebrew verse on the laws of slaughtering and porging, composed at the request of his son Moses Ketubbat ... for the Feast of Pentecost A collection of hymns published by M. H. Friedl nder Vienna, 1858 under ... more details
Use dmy dates date April 2012 Orphan date December 2007 Automatically added by User SoxBot. If this is an error, please contact User Soxred93 Shalom Ben Moses Buzaglo lang he , 1700 1780 was a Morocco Moroccan kabbalist born in Marrakesh , student of R. Avraham Azulai , Yaakov Pinto and Yeshayahu HaKohen . He was tortured by the Sultan of Morocco Sultan and left for England in 1745, where he remained until his death. He authored a number of commentaries on Zohar Mikdash Melech published in Amsterdam in 1750 etc. Hadrat Melech published in Amsterdam 1766 in London 1770 etc. Kiseh Melech published in Amsterdam in 1769 etc. Pnei Melech published in London in 1773 etc. This is the first systematic commentary on the Zohar to be published. These were based mainly on Lurianic Kabbalah, including all the scattered work of Isaac Luria s disciples, which Buzaglo usually copied word for word, occasionally quoting other opinions. Although this book does not convey the literal meaning of the Zohar, it has continuing value for scholars. Encyclopaedia Judaica. Scholem, Bib. Kabbalistica, 188 15. Vinograd, Amsterdam, 1633. Zedner 163. External links http www.mysefer.com product.asp?numPageStartPosition 931&P ID 680&strPageHistory &strKeywords &strSearchCriteria &PT ID 86 Mikdash Melech HaShalem al HaZohar Rabbi Shalom Buzaglo 5 Vol. http www.discountseforim.com CR102233 pr 45826.html Reprint of Kiseh Melech with title page http chabadlibrary.org catalog index1.php?field AUTHOR&search E1 E5 E6 E0 E2 EC E5&mode browse&catalog hcatalog&frame content&search mode simple&do submit E7 F4 F9 All books by Buzaglo in CHABAD library Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Buzaglo, Shalom Ben Moses ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1700 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1780 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Buzaglo, Shalom Ben Moses Category 1700 births Category 1780 deaths Category People from Marrakech Category Moroccan ra ... more details
distinguish Hanoch benMosesMosesben Hanoch or Mosesben Enoch in Hebrew language , Moshe ben Hanoch was a medieval rabbi who inadvertently became the preeminent Talmud ic scholar of Spain . He died about 965. Moses was one of the four scholars who went from Sura city Sura , the seat of a once flourishing but then declining Talmudic academies in Babylonia Talmudic academy , in order to collect contributions for that school. During a voyage from Bari , on the coast of Italy , they were captured by the Moorish Spanish people Spanish admiral Ibn Rumahis , who, according to the legend, became enamored of the beautiful young wife of Moses. In distress she asked her husband in Hebrew whether those who were drowned in the sea could look forward to resurrection, and when he answered, in the words of the psalm , The Lord saith, I will bring again from Bashan , I will bring them again from the depths of the sea, she cast herself into the waters and was drown ed. Moses was taken to C rdoba, Spain Cordova with his little son Hanoch benMoses Hanoch , where he was redeemed by the Jews Jewish community, about 945 or 948. While there he went to the schoolhouse, took his seat in a corner, and listened quietly to the Talmudic discourse of the judge and rabbi, Nathan, not a very learned man. Some ... Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME MosesBen Hanoch ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Talmud ic scholar of Spain DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 965 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT MosesBen Hanoch Category 965 deaths Category Year of birth unknown Category 10th century rabbis Category Spanish rabbis Category Talmudists ca Mois s ben Hanokh fr Moshe ben Hanokh ..., therefore, on that very day voluntarily resigned his office and confessed himself Moses pupil. The wealthy community of Cordova showed Moses much honor and immediately elected him rabbi. Hasdai ibn ... to forgo the higher ransom which he, in consequence, was demanding for Moses. Moses organized an important ... more details
otheruses Moses Galante disambiguation Mosesben Jonathan Galante 1621 &ndash February 4, 1689 Jerusalem , grandson of Mosesben Mordecai Galante Moses Galante , was a 17th century rabbi at Jerusalem. He served as the first Chief Rabbinate of Israel Rishon L.27Tzion 1665 1842 Rishon Le Zion and was called Magen with reference to the initials of his name. Hezekiah da Silva was among his disciples. He wrote Zeba ha Shelamim, a harmonization of contradictory Biblical passages and of Biblical with Talmudical statements edited by his grandson Moses agis , Amsterdam, 1707 08 , and orban agigah, halakic and kabalistic novell Venice, 1714 . Some of his responsa are found in the works of contemporaries, and a volume of his responsa exists under the title Elef ha Magen, but has never been published as of 1906 . See also Galante pedigree Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. s.v. Azulai, Shem ha Gedolim References JewishEncyclopedia Chief Rabbinate of Israel Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Galante ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1621 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH February 4, 1689 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Galante, Mosesben Jonathan Category 1621 births Category 1689 deaths Category Rabbis in Ottoman and British Palestine Category Rabbis in Jerusalem Category 17th century rabbis he ... more details
Abraham benIsaac of Granada also Abraham Merimon was a Kabbalist of the thirteenth century. Works Abraham wrote A work on the Kabbalah Kabbala , under the title of Sefer ha Berit. This is quoted by Moses Botarel in the introduction to his commentary on the Sefer Ye irah, which passage contains a reference to Maimonides Moreh. Another work on the Kabbala, under the title Berit Menuchah Berit Menu ah , valued highly by Isaac Luria for its profound comments. Its language, as well as the manner in which Simon ben Yohai is introduced as speaker, shows striking resemblance to the Zohar , and it may be that the author had a larger version of the Zohar before him than is now extant. A work entitled Megalle ha Ta alumot, quoted by the author in the work previously mentioned. Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Adolf Jellinek , Auswahl Kabbalistischer Mystik, i.9 German part Heimann Joseph Michael , Or ha ayyim, No. 146 Isaacben Jacob Benjacob , O ar ha Sefarim, pp.  84, 86, 292. References JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Granada, Abraham BenIsaac Of ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Granada, Abraham BenIsaac Of Category Kabbalists Category People from Granada Category Spanish rabbis Category Jews of Al Andalus Category 13th century rabbis Category Year of death unknown spain reli bio stub Rabbi stub Kabbalah stub ... more details
Orphan date May 2011 Michael benMoses Kohen was a Palestinian rabbi and liturgist who lived at Jerusalem in the seventeenth century. He wrote Moreh Tzedek Salonica, 1655 , an index to the laws contained in the Shulchan Aruch , showing where they may be found in other works of the poskim as well as in the responsa of later rabbis. There is also ascribed to him another work, Et le Chenanah Venice, 1708 , consisting of prayers to be recited at the Western Wall of the ancient Second Temple Temple . Source JewishEncyclopedia article Michael benMoses Cohen author Cyrus Adler and M. Seligsohn url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?letter M&artid 566 ixzz1LWZ2aQLS small Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography F. Delitzsch, Gesch. der J dischen Poesie, pp.  56 57 F rst, Bibl. Jud. i. 182 Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. No. 3271 idem, Jewish Literature, p.  242.A. small DEFAULTSORT Michael BenMoses Kohen Category 17th century rabbis Category Rabbis in Jerusalem Category Rabbis in Ottoman and British Palestine ... more details
Isaacben Abraham can refer to Isaac , patriarch in the Bible and son of Abraham Isaac Gorni , late 13th century Hebrew troubadour from Gascony Isaac of Troki , 16th century Karaite Jewish theologian disambig ... more details
Mosesben Joshua , also known as Moses of Narbonne , Maestro Vidal Blasom , and Moses Narboni , was a medieval Catalonian philosopher and physician . He was born at Perpignan at the end of the thirteenth century and died sometime after 1362. He began studying philosophy with his father when he was thirteen and then studied with Moses Caslari Moses and Abraham Caslari . He studied medicine and eventually became a successful physician, and was well versed in Biblical and rabbinical literature . Eventually he traveled to Spain, where he is known to have lived and studied in Toledo, Spain Toledo , Soria , and Valencia, Spain Valencia . During the outbreak of the Black Death when persecution of Jews was widespread, ben Joshua was forced to flee Cervera when an angry mob attacked the Jewish community there. Moses was an admirer of Averroes he devoted a great deal of study to his works and wrote commentaries on a number of them. Perhaps ben Joshua s best known work is his Treatise on the Perfection of the Soul. He believed that Judaism was a guide to the highest degree of theoretical and moral truth. In common with others of his era he believed that the Torah had both a simple, direct meaning accessible to the average reader as well as a deeper, metaphysical meaning accessible to thinkers. He rejected the belief in miracle s, instead believing they could be explained, and defended man s free will by philosophical arguments. He died at an advanced age as he was returning to his native ... Genesis 11 2 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME MosesBen Joshua ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT MosesBen Joshua Category Catalan philosophers Category 13th century births Category 14th century deaths de Mose ben Josua von Narbonne fa fr Mo se Narboni he ru , ... Orbis Ketab ai ben Ya an, commentary on the philosophical novel of Ibn ufail Ora ayyim ... more details
Bahiel benMoses was a Jew ish physician of the thirteenth century. He was court physician to King James I of Aragon , and in that capacity was present at the conquest of Majorca , where he rendered valuable service as interpreter between the Arabic speaking Majorcan Moors and the conqueror, who understood only the Limousin language Limousin dialect . In the dispute concerning Maimonides writings, Bahiel made himself by his zeal the leading representative of the philosopher s defenders. In 1232 he wrote the appeal to the Jewish congregations of Aragon to recognize the excommunication pronounced upon Solomon ben Abraham of Montpellier and his associates. Bahiel was the brother of Solomon Bahiel benMoses . Sources http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 125&letter B Gottheil, Richard and Mayer Kayserling. Bahiel . Jewish Encyclopedia . Funk and Wagnalls, 1901 1906 citing Meyer Kayserling , Gesch. der Juden in Spanien und Portugal , i. 160, 218 Iggerot ha Rambam , ed. Prag, pp. 34a, 35b Br ll , Jahrb cher, iv. 22 Heinrich Graetz , Gesch. der Juden , vii. 33, 57 Jacobs, Sources , pp. 285, 286. JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Bahiel BenMoses ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Physician DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Bahiel BenMoses Category Medieval Jewish physicians of Spain Category 13th century Spanish people Category Interpreters Category Year of death unknown Category Medieval Catalan Jews Judaism bio stub ... more details
File 2.JPG thumb 250px Cordovero s grave in Safed Mosesben Jacob Cordovero , 1522 1570 lang he , was a central figure in the historical development of Kabbalah , leader of a mystical school in 16th century Safed , Israel . He is known by the Hebrew acronyms acronym the Ramak . After the Medieval flourishing of Kabbalah , centered around the Zohar , attempts were made to give a complete intellectual system to its theology, such as by Meir ibn Gabbai . Influenced by the earlier success of Jewish philosophy in articulating a rational study of Jewish thought, Moshe Cordovero produced the first full integration of the previous differing schools in Kabbalistic interpretation. While he was a mystic inspired by the opaque imagery of the Zohar, Cordoverian Kabbalah utilised the conceptual framework of Emanationism evolving Ohr cause and effect from the Ein Sof Infinite to the Four Worlds Finite in systemising Kabbalah, the method of philosophical style discourse he held most ... Wikipedia Persondata . NAME MosesBen Jacob Cordovero ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1522 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1570 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Cordovero, MosesBen Jacob ... www.inner.org ref Immediately after him in Safed, Isaac Luria articulated a subsequent system of Kabbalistic .... ref The Jewish Religion A Companion , Louis Jacobs, Oxford. Entries on Moshe Cordovero and Isaac Luria ... in Pardes Rimonim ref Cordovero, M., Or Ne erav , in Moses Cordovero s Introduction to Kabbalah ... Vital , who later became the official recorder and disseminator of the teachings of Rabbi Isaac ... after the Ramak According to tradition, Isaac Luria known by the acronym Ari or Arizal arrived ... of the Zohar and the Ramak s system, but the new system of Isaac Luria revealed completely new doctrines ... s classic text http www.tabick.abel.co.uk 10days.meditation.html Moses Cordovero s Meditations for the Ten ... Category Rabbis in Safed Category Sephardi rabbis Category People known by acronyms de Moses Cordovero ... more details
Solomon Bahiel benMoses was the brother of Bahiel benMoses like his more famous brother, was also a physician and interpreter in the suite of King James I of Aragon . He was the author of the Arabic proclamation in which the Moors were notified of the conquest of Majorca and summoned to acknowledge their submission. ref Chronica del Glorios. e Invict. Rey En. Jaeme, Valencia, 1557, xl. ref In the Maimonides Maimonidean controversy Solomon sided with his brother and joined the faction of Maimonides supporters. He died in 1264. The Confirmacion en Favor de Mosse hijo de Bahiel and Favor de Salomon Bahiel, in regard to the legacy of Solomon Alfaquin, may perhaps refer to two sons of Solomon Bahiel. They are dated 3 Kalends April, 1264, and 6 Ides calendar Ides May, 1264. Notes references Sources http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 125&letter B Gottheil, Richard and Mayer Kayserling. Bahiel . Jewish Encyclopedia . Funk and Wagnalls, 1901 1906 citing Kayserling, Gesch. der Juden in Spanien und Portugal , i. 160, 218 Iggerot ha Rambam , ed. Prag, pp. 34a, 35b Br ll, Jahrb cher, iv. 22 Heinrich Graetz Gr tz , Gesch. der Juden , vii. 33, 57 Jacobs, Sources , pp. 285, 286. JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Solomon Bahiel BenMoses ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Physician and interpreter in the suite of King James I of Aragon DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1264 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Solomon Bahiel BenMoses Category Medieval Jewish physicians of Spain Category 1264 deaths Category 13th century Spanish people Category Medieval Catalan Jews Judaism bio stub ... more details
Mosesben Jacob of Coucy Hebrew was a French people French tosafists Tosafist and authority on Halakha Jewish law . He is best known as author of one of the earliest Halakha Codes of Jewish law codifications of Halakha , the Sefer Mitzvot Gadol . Biography Moses of Coucy lived in the first half of the thirteenth century. His name suggests he was born or raised in Coucy le Ch teau Auffrique Coucy in Northern France. He was a descendant of a family of distinguished scholars. He studied under Judah ben Samuel of Regensburg Yehudah HeHasid . In 1240 he was one of the four rabbis who were required to defend the Talmud , in a public Disputation of Paris disputation in Paris , and it is likely that the need for a work like the Sefer Mitzvot Gadol was driven by the Talmud External attacks on the Talmud decrees against the Talmud which had been promulgated in France, and had led to the confiscation and burning of all Talmud manuscripts in 1242. Works The Sefer Mitzvot Gadol hebrew language Hebrew Large Book of the Mitzvah Commandments abbreviated SeMaG deals with the 365 negative mitzvah commandments and the 248 positive commandments, separately discussing each of them according to the Talmud and the posek decisions of the Rabbis. SeMaG also contains much non legal, moralistic teaching. References to the SeMaG are by section positive or negative commandments and a number for each commandment within its section. Rabbi Moses arrangement and presentation ...?artid 881&letter M&search coucy MosesBen Jacob of Coucy SeMaG , jewishencyclopedia.com http www.acs.ucalgary.ca ... Halacha section 38.html faqs.org Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Coucy, MosesBen Jacob Of ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Mosesben Jacob of Coucy Category 13th century deaths Category French Tosafists ... codification of the Halakha in the Mishneh Torah . However, unlike Maimonides, Rabbi Moses presents ... more details
Distinguish Isaacben Samuel of Dampierre Isaacben Samuel of Acre floruit fl. 13th 14th century Hebrew , Yitzhak ben Shmuel d min Akko was a Jewish Kabbalah kabbalist who fled to Spain. ref http books.google.co.uk books?id cM9AAAAIAAJ&pg PA69&dq 22 Acre was a Palestinian kabbalist ... Page 69. Isaac of Acre was a Palestinian kabbalist of the thirteenth century who fled to Spain after the city of Acre was taken. ref According to Abraham Azulai , ref In Shem ha Gedolim ref Isaacben Samuel was a pupil of Nahmanides . View of the Zohar Isaacben Samuel was at Acre, Israel Acre when ... in his Yu asin, that Moses de Leon discovered the Zohar in the time of Isaac of Acre. However, Isaac ... about it of Na manides pupils, without, however, any satisfactory result. When Isaac met Moses ..., No. 1088. JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT IsaacBen Samuel Of Acre Category 14th century rabbis Category ... to vila, and Isaac, more than ever desirous of obtaining the truth, consulted at vila a man named David Rafan. Rafan told Isaac that Moses of Leon s wife and daughter had revealed to the wife of a certain R. Joseph the fact that Moses of Leon had written the book himself. Historian Heinrich Graetz ... and works in Kabbalah Isaac of Acre is frequently quoted by Eliyahu de Vidas Elijah de Vidas in his ... in the Nobelot okmah of Joseph Solomon Delmedigo Ketem Paz, a kabbalistic work mentioned by Moses Botarel in his commentary to the Sefer Yezirah , and the author of which he calls Isaacben Samuel, identified by Michael Or ha ayyim, No. 1088 with Isaacben Samuel of Acre Li u e Shoshanim, possibly a compendium of the Sefer ha Sodot. It appears from the Reshit okmah that Isaac of Acre wrote ... the remainder of Isaac s works are still in manuscript. Theory of age of the Universe Isaac states that the universe is actually 15,340,500,000 years old. Isaac arrived at this conclusion by distinguishing ... is equal to a thousand earthly solar years, then a divine year would be 365,250 years long. Isaac then makes ... more details
otheruses Moses Galante disambiguation Mosesben Mordecai Galante small lang he Hebrew small d. 1608 in Safed , was a 16th century rabbi. He was a disciple of Joseph Caro , and was ordained by him when but twenty two years of age. He wrote sermons for a Jewish wedding wedding , for Passover , and for a thanksgiving service, printed with the younger Obadiah Bertinoro s commentary on the Book of Esther Venice, 1585 . He also wrote Mifta ha Zohar, an index of Biblical passages found in the Zohar and additions from old manuscripts ib. 1566 , Kehillat Ya a ob, a cabalistic commentary on Ecclesiastes ib. 1577 78 , and responsa with additions by his son Jedidiah Galante ib. 1608 . See also Galante pedigree References JewishEncyclopedia Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Galante, Moses ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1608 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Galante, Moses Category 16th century births Category 1608 deaths Category Rabbis in Safed Category Kabbalists Category Rabbis in Ottoman and British Palestine Category 16th century rabbis rabbi stub he ... more details
distinguish Mosesben Hanoch R. Hanoch benMoses Hebrew d. 1014 CE or 1024 CE was a al Andalus Spanish rabbi . Almost all of the information we have about him comes from the Sefer ha Qabbalah by R. Abraham ibn Daud . ref Hebrew text online at http www.daat.ac.il daat vl ravad ravad01.pdf Daat . ref Along with his parents, R. Mosesben Hanoch and his wife name unknown , R. Hanoch was captured by the Moorish pirate Ibn Rumahis and brought to C rdoba, Spain Cordova . R. Hanoch eventually succeeded his father as rabbi and Rosh Yeshivah there, although for a time he faced opposition by R. Joseph ibn Abitur and by the latter s patron, Yaakov ibn Jo, the lay leader of the Jewish community of the Caliphate of Cordoba . His best known student was R. Samuel ibn Naghrela Shmuel ha Nagid . Ibn Daud reports that relations between R. Hanoch and R. Hai Gaon were strained, since the increasing stature of the Spanish yeshivot led to a lessening of their communities financial contributions to the Talmudic Academies in Babylonia . Indeed, R. Hanoch seems to have corresponded only rarely with the Talmudic Academies in Babylonia Babylonian Geonim . However, R. Hai demonstrated his respect for R. Hanoch, by honoring his Herem censure excommunication of Ibn Abitur and refusing the latter an audience. R. Hanoch left no written works, although there are some extant responsa between him and Rav Hai Gaon , as well as between him and the then Gaon in the Land of Israel , Rav Shmuel ha Kohen. He died of injuries following a fall, when the bimah in the Cordova synagogue collapsed on Simchat Torah . Ibn Daud dates this incident to 4775 1014 CE , but also states that it was thirteen years ... references Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Hanoch BenMoses ALTERNATIVE ... BenMoses Category 11th century rabbis Category 11th century deaths Category Year of birth unknown ... ben Moshe fr Hanokh ben Moshe ... more details
Mosesben Avraham Avinu died ca. 1733 34 was an Czech people Czech Austrians Austrian printer and author who was a Christian convert to Judaism . His father, Jacob , was also a convert. Moses was born at Nikolsburg now Mikulov . He became a native of Prague , and was circumcised at Amsterdam . In 1686 87, he worked for two printers of Amsterdam, but from 1690 to 1694 seems to have owned a printing establishment and to have printed several Hebrew books,NOT including his own Judeo German translation of Nathan benMoses Hannover Hannover s Yewen Mezulah . He assisted with the engravings for the 1695 Haggadah of Pesach Passover Haggadah , which was printed by Kosman Emrich. In 1709, Moses established a printing office at Disambiguation needed Halle, Germany date June 2011 , where in 1712 he printed his Tela ot Moshe or Weltbeschreibung , a Judeo German work on the Ten Lost Tribes Ten Tribes , having collected the material from a number of sources, particularly from Abraham Farissol and Gedaliah ibn Yahya ben Joseph Gedaliah ibn Yahya . He continued printing in Halle until 1714, in which year he printed Tefillat Moshe , a prayer book, and Berechiah Baruch s Zera Berak . Owing to anti Christian passages in these two works, his printing office was closed by royal order. He was imprisoned, and his books were confiscated. His coreligionists, however, helped him to escape to Amsterdam, where he printed in the same year 1714 Rosh Hashanah Talmud Mesechtas Rosh ha Shanah . He died in Amsterdam in 1733 or 1734. His children also became printers in Amsterdam. References Jewish Encyclopedia http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 835&letter M http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 372&letter T 1628 Persondata NAME Abraham, MosesBen ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Printer, author DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Abraham, MosesBen Category Converts to Judaism from Christianity Category Dutch publishers people Category German publishers ... more details
Isaacben Joseph of Corbeil 13th century Hebrew was a French rabbi and Tosefist who flourished in the second half of the thirteenth century. He was the son in law of R. Jehiel ben Joseph of Paris , whose school he attended, and the pupil of the Great Men of vreux, notably of Samuel of vreux Samuel , whom he calls the Prince of vreux . Isaac s conspicuous piety drew toward him many disciples, the best known of whom were Perez ben Elijah of Corbeil, Baruch ayyim ben Menahem of Niort, and his fellow citizen Joseph ben Abraham. He was induced by his pupils to publish in 1277 an abridgment of Mosesben Jacob of Coucy s Sefer Mitzvot Gadol called Semag from its initials , under the title Ammude ha Golah or Sefer Mitzvot a an generally called Sema from the initials . This work was most favorably received by the communities of France and Germany , and has often been edited and annotated. Isaac also published Li u im collectanea , and several small compilations containing his ritual decisions. The Kol Bo No. 128 contains a long fragment of a Talmudic work of R. Isaac, with this superscription . Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Eliakim Carmoly , Biographics des lsra lites de France, p.  45 Rev. Et. Juives, iv. 213, vi. 168 Gross, Gallia Judaica, pp.  563 565. JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT IsaacBen Joseph Of Corbeil Category 13th century rabbis Category French Tosafists he ... more details
Hagin benMoses or Hagin filus Mossy transliteration from Hebrew language Hebrew , Hayyim ben Moshe was Presbyter Judaeorum or chief rabbi of the Jews of England and agent of Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall Richard of Cornwall . He appears to have been the chirographer of the Jew s of London , and obtained great wealth, but he lost it under Edward I of England Edward I . In 1255 he was appointed presbyter on the expulsion of Elyas English rabbi Elias from that office. It seems probable that he was a brother of Elias Tovey, Anglia Judaica, p.  58 . During the riots preceding the battle of Lewes in 1264 he fled to Europe the Continent . His wife, Antera, and his son, Aaron, seem to have held possession of the only remaining synagogue in London at the time of the Edict of Expulsion in 1290. References Papers of the Anglo Jewish Historical Exhibition , pp.  28, 178, 179, 193, 194. JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT Hagin BenMoses Category English Medieval rabbis Category 13th century rabbis Category 13th century English people Category Orthodox Jews in London Category English Jews of the Medieval and Tudor period ... more details