- Gerondi, Samuel ben Meshullam
- (fl. ?12th-13th cent)Spanish scholar. He lived in Gerona. He wrote a code of laws, Ohel Moed, which have practical applications.
Dictionary of Jewish Biography. Dan Cohn-Sherbok.
Dictionary of Jewish Biography. Dan Cohn-Sherbok.
GERONDI, SAMUEL BEN MESHULLAM — (c. 1300), scholar of Gerona, Catalonia. Hardly any biographical details are known of him. Gerondi s fame rests primarily on his Ohel Mo ed (1 (Jerusalem, 1886); 2 (Jerusalem, 1904), a comprehensive code consisting only of such laws as are of… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
GAGIN, SHALOM MOSES BEN ḤAYYIM ABRAHAM — (d. 1883), talmudist and emissary of Ereẓ Israel. He was the son of , from whom he inherited a large library, of which frumkin made use in his Toledot Ḥakhmei Yerushalayim. Shalom was a member of the kabbalist circle of scholars at the yeshivah… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Abraham ben Isaac of Narbonne — (c. 1110 ndash; 1179) was a Provençal rabbi, also known as Raavad II, and author of the halachic work Ha Eshkol ( The Cluster ).Abraham ben Isaac was probably born at Montpellier. His teacher was Moses ben Joseph ben Merwan ha Levi, and during… … Wikipedia
ALFASI, ISAAC BEN JACOB — (known as Rif; 1013–1103), author of the most important code prior to the Mishneh Torah of Maimonides. In a sense, Alfasi brought the geonic period to a close. The last of the Babylonian geonim, Hai Gaon, died when Alfasi was 25 years old. Alfasi … Encyclopedia of Judaism
JONATHAN BEN DAVID HA-KOHEN OF LUNEL — (c. 1135–after 1210), talmudic scholar of Provence, the leading rabbi of Lunel after the death of meshullam b. jacob . He was a pupil of Moses b. Joseph Merwan in Narbonne and possibly of Meir ibn Migash – the son of joseph ibn migash – in Spain … Encyclopedia of Judaism
EZRA BEN SOLOMON — (d. 1238 or 1245), one of the leading kabbalists of his day in Gerona, Spain. For a long time scholars thought him identical with Azriel b. Menahem of Gerona, since various authors attributed to Azriel works written by Ezra and vice versa.… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SOLOMON BEN ABRAHAM OF MONTPELLIER — (13th century), talmudic scholar, initiator of the Maimonidean controversy that took place in the third decade of the 13th century (see maimonidean controversy and criticism ). While he admired Maimonides as a talmudist and always spoke of him… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
NAḤMANIDES — (Moses b. Naḥman, also known as Naḥamani and RaMBaN – an acronym of Rabbi Moses Ben Naḥman; 1194–1270), Spanish rabbi and scholar and one of the leading authors of talmudic literature in the Middle Ages; philosopher, kabbalist, biblical exegete,… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
MAIMONIDEAN CONTROVERSY — MAIMONIDEAN CONTROVERSY, a vast complex of disputed cultural, religious, and social problems, focusing around several central themes. Some of the elements of this controversy considerably antedate maimonides (1135–1204); and of the questions… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
LITERATURE, JEWISH — Literature on Jewish themes and in languages regarded as Jewish has been written continuously for the past 3,000 years. What the term Jewish literature encompasses, however, demands definition, since Jews have lived in so many countries and have… … Encyclopedia of Judaism