Distinguish Tosefta Eras of the Halakha Tosafists were medieval rabbi s from France and Germany who are among those known in Talmudical scholarship as Rishonim there were Rishonim in Spain also who created critical and explanatory gloss es questions, notes, interpretations, rulings and sources on the Talmud . These were collectively called Tosafot additions , because they were additions on the commentary of Rashi . The Tosafists lived from the 12th century to the middle of the 15th century and the Tosafot are a compilation of the questions, answers and opinions of those rabbis. The Tosafot are very important to the practical application of Jewish law because the law will differ depending on how the Talmud is understood and interpreted. Each generation of the Tosafists would add to those compilations ... of the Tosafos did not contain everything that was said by the Tosafists on the subject so compilations will differ in what they say. For this reason some things that were said by the Tosafists will be found ... of Rabbi Moshe of Spires Shapiro who was of the last generation of Tosafists and who initiated a project ... France to the schools where the Tosafists learned and gathered all of the different manuscripts ... of Rashi and is an integral part of the study of the Talmud. During the period of the Tosafists ... the Tosafists devised a system where they could study the Talmud without the existence of a text ... at hand. Thus an important aspect of the scholarship of the Tosafists is to use texts in different ... 150 Colors id aaa value red legend Era of the Rishonim timeline div Alphabetical list of Tosafists Of the great number of tosafists only forty four are known by name. The following is an alphabetical ... . Isaac ben Jacob ha Laban Pupil of Jacob Tam and one of the earlier tosafists ba ale tosafot yeshanim ... url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 276&letter T DEFAULTSORT List Of Tosafists Category Tosafists Category Lists of theologians and religious studies scholars Tosafists fr Tossafistes it Tosafisti ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Eliezer ben Yoel HaLevi died 1225 was a noted rabbi and Talmud ic scholar. He was a grandson of Eliezer ben Nathan Ra avan , and authored Sefer Avi Ezri which is more commonly known by its author s acronym as Sefer Ra avyah . He had a significant influence on Asher ben Jehiel the ROSH . As a rishonim Rishon , he was prominent amongst the Tosafot Tosafists of the middle ages, and was a signatory to the Takkanot Shum . Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Halevi, Eliezer Ben Joel ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1225 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Halevi, Eliezer Ben Joel Category 1225 deaths Category 13th century rabbis Category Tosafists Category Levites Category Year of birth unknown Euro writer stub Rabbi stub he ... more details
Moses of vreux was a French tosafist , and author of a siddur , ref Sema No. 154 ref who flourished at vreux in Normandy in the first half of the thirteenth century, and was the older brother and teacher of the tosafist Samuel of vreux . ref Tos. to Be ah 21b, to Er. 6b, and to So ah 22a ref Gross identifies him with Moses ben Shneor , the teacher of the author of Sefer ha Gan , a commentary on the Pentateuch. Others have generally supposed to him to be the son of Yom ov, referred to in Elijah Mizra i s responsa No. 82 . The Tosafot of vreux , much used by tosafists, was his work. He is quoted in the tosafot on Berakot , and his name is frequently written. ref Tos. to So ah. 22a Shi ah Me ubbe et on B. . 3a et passim ref His tosafot are called also Shi ah of vreux . ref Teshubot Mahram , No. 608 ref Moses wrote his tosafot on the margin of a copy of Isaac Alfasi , whose authority he invoked. ref Tos. to Ber. 26b ref Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Michael, Or ha ayyim , No. 1118 Zunz, Z. G. p.  39 Carmoly, Ben Chananja 1861, p.  195 Gross, Gallia Judaica , p.  40 Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. col. 1814. References reflist JewishEncyclopedia article Moses of Evreux author Wilhelm Bacher and M. Seligsohn url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 860&letter M Category French Tosafists Category 13th century rabbis fr Mo se d vreux ... more details
Eras of the Halakha Rabbi Isaac ben Jacob or Yitzhak ben Yaakov , nickname d ha Lavan or the white was a 12th century rabbi of Bohemia . He was a Tosafist and liturgical poet who flourished at Prague in the late 12th century. He was the brother of the renowned traveler Petachiah of Regensburg . He was among the earliest of the tosafists ba ale tosafot yeshanim , a contemporary of Rabbi Eleazar of Metz , and a pupil of Rabbenu Tam Sefer ha Yashar 704 Solomon Luria , responsa 29 . According to Recanati Responsa, No. 168 , Isaac directed the yeshibah of Ratisbon. He also lived at Worms, Germany Worms for a time Agur, 71b . Isaac is mentioned in the Tosafot Yeb. 5a, 71a Ket. 38b Zeb. 73b and frequently elsewhere , and Isaac ben Moses , in his Or Zarua , No. 739, quotes Isaac ben Jacob s commentary on Ketubot , a manuscript of which exists in the Munich Library No. 317 . He is also mentioned in a commentary to the Pentateuch written in the first half of the 13th century Zunz, Z. G. p.  80 . There is a piyyu signed Isaac b. Jacob, whom Zunz Litcraturgesch. p.  313 supposes to be lsaac ben Jacob ha Laban. Sources Azulai, Shem ha Gedolim, i. Heimann Joseph Michael Michael , Or ha ayyim, p.  507 Zunz, Z. G. pp.  33, 42, 45, 80 Gr tz, Gesch. 3d ed., vi. 236 Fuenn, Keneset Yisrael, p.  627. References JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT Isaac Ben Jacob Ha Lavan Category 12th century rabbis Category Tosafists cs Jicchak ha Lavan ... more details
margin and opposite Rashi s notes. The authors of the Tosafot are known as Tosafists ba ale ha tosafot for a listing see List of Tosafists . Meaning of Name The word tosafot literally means additions ... his commentary the first tosafists were Rashi s sons in law and grandsons, and the Tosafot consist mainly ... characteristic of the Tosafot is that in spite of the great respect in which Rashi was held by the Tosafists ..., and does not conflict with the fact that the writings of different tosafists differ in style and method ..., tosafot began to be written in Germany at the same time as in France, but the French tosafists ... Isaac ben Asher ha Levi RIBA , leader of the German tosafists, who wrote numerous tosafot, which ... to Abodah Zarah are extant in manuscript. Among the many French tosafists deserving special mention ... tosafists of the thirteenth century 1 Moses of vreux , 2 Eliezer of Touques , and 3 Perez ben Elijah ..., 1783 is attributed to the Tosafists. In form this commentary follows the style of the Tosafot Rashi is often discussed, and sometimes corrected. Schools of Tosafists See also List of Tosafists Tosafot ... prolific tosafists, furnished glosses to the whole Talmud they form a distinct group known ... they were revised afterward and supplemented by the glosses of later tosafists. Gershon Soncino ... active of the later tosafists. Besides supplying tosafot to several treatises, which are quoted by many ... than Samson of Sens leads to the supposition that the glosses indicated are those of previous tosafists ... instead of the normal Tosafot. Tosafists main Tosafists Of the great number of tosafists, only forty ... Tosafists . Bibliography Tosafot collections The The Edited Tosafot called also Our Tosafot Tosafot ... secondary literature Urbach, E. E., Ba alei HaTosafot The Tosafists in Hebrew Perlmutter, Haim, Tools ... literature Category Talmud Category Tosafists de Tosafot he ja it Tosafot ... more details
Rabbi Isaac ben Asher HaLevi or Riva is the earliest known Tosafist , son in law of Eliakim ben Meshullam and pupil of Rashi . He flourished in Speyer during the 11th century. He is cited under the name of Tosafot Riva, in the Temim De im, in the printed tosafot Sotah 17b , and in the Tosafot Yeshanin Yoma 15a . They are frequently quoted without the name of their author. Isaac ben Asher also wrote a commentary on the Pentateuch , which is no longer in existence. It is cited in the Minchat Yehudah, and Jacob Tam made use of it in his Sefer haYashar Rabbenu Tam Sefer ha Yashar p.  282 . References JewishEncyclopedia article Isaac ben Asher ha Levi Riva url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?letter I&artid 184 author Solomon Schechter and Isaac Broyd DEFAULTSORT Isaac Ben Asher Ha Levi Category Tosafists Category People from Speyer Category Bible commentators Category Levites Category 11th century rabbis ... more details
You may be looking for Eliezer ben Samuel of Verona Eliezer ben Samuel of Metz died 1175 was a Tosafist and the author of the halachic work Sefer Yereim Vilna 1892 . An abridgment of this work was produced by Benjamin ben Abraham Anaw . References Finkel, Avraham Yaakov 1990 . The Great Torah Commentators, Jason Aronson, Northvale, New Jersey. External links http www.daat.ac.il encyclopedia value.asp?id1 1592 Moshe Reich s biographical sketch Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Samuel, Eliezer Ben ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1175 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Samuel, Eliezer Ben Category 12th century rabbis Category 1175 deaths Category People from Metz Category French Tosafists france reli bio stub rabbi stub de Elieser ben Samuel he ... more details
Eliezer ben Samuel of Verona lived about the beginning of the thirteenth century was an Italian Jewish tosafist . He was a disciple of Rabbi Isaac the elder , of Dampierre , and grandfather of the philosopher and physician Hillel of Forli . He had sanctioned the second marriage of a young woman whose husband had probably, though not certainly, perished by shipwreck. But Eliezer ben Joel ha Levi refused to endorse the permission, and a protracted controversy resulted, into which other rabbis were drawn. Eliezer ben Samuel is often quoted on Biblical and halakic questions. Mordecai, in speaking of Eliezer, calls him Eliezer of Verdun, though undoubtedly meaning Verona. References Azulai, Shem ha Gedolim, i. 28 Zunz , G. S. iii. 250 Monatsschrift, xxxiv. 520 Gross, Gallia Judaica, p. 207. External links http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 237&letter E Source JewishEncyclopedia Category Italian rabbis Category 13th century rabbis Category 13th century Italian people Category Tosafists Category People from Verona it Eliezer di Verona ... more details
Judah of Melun was a French rabbi, a tosafist of the first half of the 13th century he was son of the tosafist David of Melun from the area of Seine et Marne . In Perez of Corbeil s tosafot to Baba amma ed. Leghorn, p.  53a he is quoted under the name Judah of Melun. After 1224 he took charge of the Talmud school at Melun He was one of the four rabbis who defended the Talmud against Nicholas Donin in the public disputation at Paris in 1240 . References R. E. J. i. 248 Leopold Zunz , Z. G. p.  48 Henri Gross , Gallia Judaica , p.  354 Heinrich Gr tz , Gesch. vii. 96. External links http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 621&letter J Source JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT Judah Of Melun Category French Tosafists Category 13th century French people Category 13th century rabbis category Jewish apologists ... more details
, is also one of the prominent tosafists. He wrote some liturgical poems piyutim and a commentary on the Pentateuch ... Commentaries on the Mishnah Category Rabbis in Jerusalem Category French Tosafists Category Jews in the Land ... more details
in 1224 Solomon Luria , Responsa, No. 29 . See also Tosafists References JewishEncyclopedia url ... rabbis Category 13th century rabbis Category French Tosafists Category 13th century French people ... more details
unreferenced date December 2010 Image Talmud.jpg thumb The first page of the Vilna Edition of the Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Berachot, folio 2a. The Vilna Edition of the Talmud , printed in Vilna now Vilnius , Lithuania , is by far the most common Printing printed edition of the Talmud still in use today as the basic text for Torah study in yeshiva s and by all scholars of Judaism . It was typeset by the Romm publishing house Widow Romm and Brothers of Vilna. This edition comprises 37 volumes and contains the entire Babylonian Talmud . In its entirety there are 5,894 wikt folio folio s. The typical page is printed with the Gemara and or Mishnah centered with Rashi s commentary on the inner margin and Tosafists Tosafot on the outer margin, flanked by other various marginal notations from various prominent Category Talmud rabbis Talmudists . This edition was first printed in the 1870s and 1880s, but it continues to be reproduced photomechanically all around the world. See also Lithuanian Jews Vilna Gaon External links http www1.yadvashem.org yv en exhibitions vilna before publishing houses.asp?WT.mc id wiki Publishing Houses in Vilna in the Interwar Period on the Yad Vashem website http chareidi.shemayisrael.com archives5763 EMR63features2.htm The Story of the Romm Publishing House and the Vilna Shas Category Talmud Category Judaism in Lithuania Category History of Vilnius Category Jewish printing and publishing Judaism stub fr dition de Vilna du Talmud he ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Jacob of Orl ans died September 3, 1189 was a noted Jew ish scholar, considered by many to be one of the most learned men of his age. Jacob was a tosafist in Orl ans , France , who studied under Rabbenu Tam . He remained in Orl ans until at least 1171, leaving at a later date to go to London , most likely to become a teacher. Jacob was killed during the antisemitic riots that swept through London during the coronation of King Richard I . Persondata name Jacob of Orleans alternative names short description date of birth place of birth date of death September 3, 1189 place of death DEFAULTSORT Jacob Of Orleans Category Year of birth missing Category 1189 deaths Category People from Orl ans Category English Jews of the Medieval and Tudor period Category English Medieval rabbis Category Rishonim Category 12th century French people Category 12th century rabbis Category Jewish martyrs Category 12th century English people Category French Tosafists France reli bio stub UK reli bio stub Rabbi stub he no Jacob av Orl ans ... more details
Isaac ben Meir c. 1090 &ndash c. 1130 , also known as the Rivam after his Hebrew acronym , was a French rabbi and one of the Tosafot Baalei Tosafos . He was the grandson of Rashi , and brother of the Rashbam and the Rabbeinu Tam . His father was Meir ben Samuel and his mother was Yocheved, the Rashi s daughters daughter of Rashi . He died before his father, leaving four children. ref Jacob Tam, Sefer ha Yashar, No. 616, p. 72b, Vienna, 1811. ref Although he died young, the Rivam contributed to Tosafot Tosafos , mentioned by Eliezer ben Joel HaLevi Abi ha Ezri, 417 , to several Tract literature tractates of the Talmud . Isaac himself is often quoted in the edited Tosafos Shab. 138a Ket. 29b et passim . References Reflist Further reading The Rishonim , published by Artscroll , ISBN 0899064523 contains short biographies of the Rishonim including the Rivam Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Rivam ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category 12th century rabbis Category 1090s births Category 1130s deaths Category French Tosafists ... more details
Baruch ben Isaac fl. 1200 was a Tosafist and codifier who was born at Worms, Germany Worms , but lived at Regensburg he is sometimes called after the one and sometimes after the other city. A pupil of the great Tosafist Isaac ben Samuel of Dampierre , Baruch wrote Tosafot to several treatises e.g., Nashim , Nazir Talmud Nazir , Moed Shabbat , Hullin nearly all those extant on the order Zevahim are his. A. Epstein believes that the commentary on the Sifra contained in the Munich MS. No. 59 is the work of this Baruch. He is the author also of the legal compendium, Sefer ha Terumah Book of the Heave Offering, Venice, 1523 Zolkiev, 1811 , containing the ordinances concerning slaughtering, permitted and forbidden food, the Shabbat Sabbath , tefillin , etc. The book is one of the most important German codes, and was highly valued by contemporaries and successors. It is noteworthy by reason of the author s attempt to facilitate its use by presenting a synopsis of its contents, the first attempt at making a practical ritual codex in Germany. References JewishEncyclopedia small Jewish Encyclopedia Bibliography Chaim Joseph David Azulai Azulai , Shem ha Gedolim , i. 38, ed. Wilna Kohn , Mardochai ben Hillel , p. 102 Michael, Or ha ayyim , No. 627 Epstein , in Monatsschrift , xxxix. 454 Leopold Zunz , Z. G. p. 36. small Category Tosafists Category 13th century rabbis Category People from Worms, Germany Category People from Regensburg Category German Orthodox rabbis he ... more details
Samuel ben Solomon of Falaise was a French rabbi, a tosafist of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. His French name was Sir Morel , by which he is often designated in rabbinical literature. He was a pupil of Judah Sir Leon of Paris and of Isaac ben Abraham of Sens . In 1240 he took part in the renowned controversy instigated by the baptized Jew Nicholas Donin . Samuel was the author of the following works Tosafot to several Talmud ical treatises, among which those to the Abodah Zarah were published, together with the text, according to the redaction of his disciple Perez ben Elijah A commentary, no longer in existence, on the laws concerning Passover composed in verse by Joseph ob Elem , quoted by ayyim Or Zarua Or Zarua , ii. 114 Ritual decisions, frequently cited by Me r of Rothenburg , Mordecai ben Hillel , and other rabbinical authorities of that time. References Loeb, in R. E. J. i. 248 Gross, Gallia Judaica, pp. 478 479 Berliner s Magazin, iv. 179 194 Heinrich Gr tz , Gesch. vii. 130 Lropold Zunz , Z. G. p. 37 Jacobs, Jews of Angevin England , pp. 53, 146, 421. External links http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 199&letter S Source JewishEncyclopedia Category 13th century rabbis Category French Tosafists ... more details
Expand French date December 2008 Ramerupt Infobox French commune name Ramerupt region Champagne Ardenne department Aube arrondissement Troyes canton Ramerupt INSEE 10314 postal code 10240 mayor G rald Tarin term 2008&ndash 2014 intercommunality longitude 4.2931 latitude 48.52 elevation m 101 elevation min m elevation max m area km2 13.6 population 385 population date 2008 Ramerupt is a Communes of France commune in the Aube Departments of France department in north central France . Population D mographie 1962 368 1968 370 1975 329 1982 362 1990 347 1999 357 2008 385 Personalities Rashbam , medieval rabbi and scriptural commentator Rabbeinu Tam , medieval rabbi See also Communes of the Aube department Tosafists References http www.insee.fr en home home page.asp INSEE reflist Aube communes Category Communes of Aube Aube geo stub ca Ramerupt Aube ceb Ramerupt de Ramerupt es Ramerupt eu Ramerupt fr Ramerupt it Ramerupt mg Ramerupt ms Ramerupt nl Ramerupt oc Ramerupt pms Ramerupt pl Ramerupt pt Ramerupt sk Ramerupt sl Ramerupt sv Ramerupt uk vi Ramerupt vo Ramerupt war Ramerupt ... more details
Shemariah ben Mordecai was a Germans German rabbi and tosafist of the first half of the 12th century, who was a pupil of the tosafist Isaac ben Asher . He was considered an especially eminent authority on religious rites ba al ma asim , and seems to have written pos im decisions no less a person than Jacob b. Me r Tam consulted him on a difficult question Or Zarua on B. B. 199 . Those of Shemariah s pupils most deserving mention are Judah b. Kalonymus b. Me r , author of Yi use Tannaim va Amoraim , and Judah b. Kalonymus , father of Eleazar of Worms . The former usually calls him mori ha yashish my aged teacher , which seems to indicate that Shemariah died at an advanced age. It is, however, not true that Eleazar of Worms also was his pupil, as has been asserted by some. Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Epstein, Das Talmudische Lexicon , in Monatsschrift , xxxix. 453 454 also printed separately Kohn, Mardochai b. Hillel , p.  15 JewishEncyclopedia article Shemariah b. Mordecai url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?letter S&artid 608 author Wilhelm Bacher and Louis Ginzberg DEFAULTSORT Shemariah Ben Mordecai Category 12th century rabbis Category Tosafists Category German rabbis he ... more details
Samuel of vreux was a French tosafist of the thirteenth century, the younger brother and student of Moses of vreux , author of the tosafot of vreux . He is identified by Gross with Samuel ben Shneor not ben Yom ov, as given by Zunz in Z. G. p. 38 , whose explanations of Nazir Talmud Nazir are cited by Solomon ben Adret , ref Solomon ben Adret , Responsa, iii., No. 345 ref and whose authority is invoked by Jonah Gerondi . Samuel directed a rabbinical school at Ch teau Thierry , and had for disciples R. ayyim brother of Asher ben Jehiel of Toledo , R. Perez ben Elijah Perez , and R. Isaac of Corbeil . He carried on a correspondence on scientific subjects with Jehiel of Paris ref Or ot ayyim , i. 110c ref and with Nathaniel the Elder . ref Mordekai on ul. vii., No. 681 ref Samuel s Talmudic interpretations are often quoted in the Tosafot. ref Be ah 14b, 20b, 24b id. 27b, 39a Ned. 90b Ab. Zarah 68a Tem. 19b. ref From the fact that the author of the tosafot to So ah mentions there the name of Moses of vreux as being his brother, it is inferred that these tosafot were written by Samuel. Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Michael, Or ha ayyim , p. 593, No. 1202 Gross, Gallia Judaica , p. 258. References reflist JewishEncyclopedia article Samuel of Evreux author Isaac Broyd url http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 149&letter S&search evreux Category French Tosafists Category 13th century rabbis fr Samuel d vreux ... more details
Moses ben 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 are heavily influenced by Maimonides discussion of the commandments in the Sefer Hamitzvot and by his codification of the Halakha in the Mishneh Torah . However, unlike Maimonides, Rabbi Moses presents lengthy discussions of the different interpretations and legal opinions. He also makes extensive use of other Halakha Codes of Jewish law codes , and particularly of the commentaries of Rashi and the Tosafot ... OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Moses ben Jacob of Coucy Category 13th century deaths Category French Tosafists ... more details
See also Provence disambiguation The term Hachmei Provence refers to the Jewish rabbis of Provence , a province in southern France , which was a great Torah center in the times of the Tosafists . The phrase literally means the wise of Provence . In matters of Halacha , as well as in their traditions and custom, the Proven al rabbis occupy an intermediate position between the Sephardic Judaism Sephardic tradition of the neighboring History of the Jews in Spain Spanish scholars, and the Old French similar to the Ashkenazic tradition represented by the Tosafists. The term Provence in Jewish tradition is not limited to today s administrative region of Provence but refers to the whole of Occitania . This includes Narbonne which is sometimes wrongly transliterated as Narvona as a result of the back and forth transliteration between Hebrew and French language French , Lunel which is wrongly transliterated as Lunil , and the mountain city of Montpellier . It also included cities which at that time formed part of the Catalonia Catalan political and cultural domain, such as Perpignan . In some ways the Jewish traditions of Catalonia were closer to those of Provence than to those of Kingdom of Castile Castile and southern Spain. There was a distinctive Proven al liturgy, used by the Jews of the Papal enclave of Comtat Venaissin , who remained following the History of the Jews in France Expulsions and returns expulsion of the Jews from the rest of France . ref For this liturgy, see http aleph500.huji.ac.il nnl dig books bk001326450.html Seder ha Tamid , Avignon 1776. ref This liturgy was intermediate in character between the Sephardic Judaism Liturgy Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews Ashkenazi rites, and was in some ways closer to the Italian Jews Italian rite Jews Italian rite than to either. After the French Revolution, when Venaissin was annexed by France, the Proven al rite was replaced by the Spanish and Portuguese Jews Portuguese liturgy, which is used by the Jews of Carpentras ... more details
and the Rivam, as well as other Tosafists, were buried in Ramerupt. The unmarked, ancient cemetery in which ... Tosafot and Tosafists The Jewish History Resource Center Project of the Dinur Center for Research ... 1170s deaths Category 12th century rabbis Category French Tosafists Category Jewish law Category ... more details
Simha ben Samuel of Speyer 13th century was a German rabbi and tosafist . Neither the year of his birth nor that of his death is known. He was one of the leading signatories of the Takkanot Shum comp. Moses Minz, Responsa, No. 202 . He was a nephew of the director parnas Kalonymus , a pupil of R. Eliezer of Metz , and a colleague of Eliezer ben Joel ha Levi . Sim ah was the author of the following works 1 commentary on the treatise Horayot , quoted in Tos. Hor. 4b, s.v. eri 2 tosafot and novell on the Talmud 3 Seder Olam, a work divided into paragraphs and containing decisions, comments on Talmudic passages, and regulations for religious practise quoted in Haggahot Maimoniyyot, on Ishut, vi. 14 and Tefillah, ix. all the responsa and decisions which the earlier authors quote in the name of R. Sim ah were probably taken from this work 4 Ti un She arot, on agreements and documents quoted in Haggahot Maimoniyyot, on Gerushin , iv. 12 5 sections she arim on the regulations referring to the benedictions quoted in the same work, on Berakhot Talmud Berakot , viii. Aside from these works decisions and responsa by Sim ah are mentioned in the responsa collection of R. Meir of Rothenburg Nos. 573, 927, 931, 932 and in the works of several older authors. Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography Leopold Zunz , Literaturgesch. pp.  309 311 Heimann Joseph Michael , Or ha ayyim, Nos. 12, 15 JewishEncyclopedia Category 13th century rabbis Category German rabbis Category Tosafists Category People from Speyer Category Year of death unknown Germany reli bio stub rabbi stub he ... more details
Isaac ben 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 Moses ben 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 Isaac Ben Joseph Of Corbeil Category 13th century rabbis Category French Tosafists he ... more details
Joseph ben Baruch was a French rabbi, a tosafist of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Gross identifies him with Joseph of Clisson . Joseph resided for some time in Paris, where he associated with Judah Sir Leon and instructed Samuel of Falaise in special subjects. In 1211 he emigrated with his brother Me r to Palestine by way of Egypt. It was probably Joseph who took to England the Hebrew translation of the Kuzari which had been made by Judah Cardinal . Judah al arizi met Joseph and his brother as heads of the new congregation of Jerusalem Ta kemoni, xlvi. . Joseph is cited in the Tosafot as Joseph of Jerusalem Pes. 15a , Joseph, inhabitant of Jerusalem Meg. 4a , and R. Joseph of Palestine id. 34a . Explanations of his are quoted by Bezaleel Ashkenazi in his Shi ah Me ubbe et, and in various commentaries on the Pentateuch. To Joseph of Clisson are attributed consultations Maimoniyyot, , No. 31 and divers ritual decisions Mordecai on ul. iii., No. 635 idem on Gi . iv., No. 465 . Joseph was also the author of liturgical poems a confession of sins for the Day of Atonement written by him, has been preserved in the ritual. He is referred to as Joseph in a manuscript tosafist commentary to the Pentateuch belonging to E. N. Adler but in the parallel passages in Min at Yehudah, 21b, Da at Ze enim, 20b, and Hadar Ze enim, 18a, he is cited as the man of Jerusalem. Berliner Zeit. f r Hebr. Bibl. iv. 148 identified him with Joseph ben Johanan the Jerusalemite see Gross in Monatsschrift, xlv. 370 . References Leopold Zunz , Z. G. p.  52 idem, to Asher s Benjamin of Tudela, ii. 256 idem, Literaturgesch. p.  324 Gross, in R. E. J. iv. 178 idem, Gallia Judaica, p.  595 Fuenn , Keneset Yisrael, p.  495 External links http www.jewishencyclopedia.com view.jsp?artid 457&letter J Source JewishEncyclopedia DEFAULTSORT Baruch, Joseph Ben Category 13th century rabbis Category French Tosafists Category Rabbis in Jerusalem ... more details