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  1. Aaron Ben Moses Ben Asher (Commonly Called Ben Asher; Arabic, Abu Said): A distinguished Masorite who flourished in Tiberias in the first half of the tenth century. He was descended from a family of Masorites which can be traced back through six generations to Asher the Elder, who flourished in the last ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [100%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  2. Aaron ben Moses ben Asher: Aaron ben Moses ben Asher (Hebrew: אַהֲרוֹן בֶּן משֶׁה בֶּן אָשֵׁר‎; Tiberian Hebrew: ʾAhărōn ben Mōše ben ʾĀšēr; 10th century, died c.960) was a sopher (Jewish scribe) who lived in Tiberias. He perfected the Tiberian system of writing vowel sounds in Hebrew. (Jewish scribe who refined the Tiberian system of writing vowel sounds in Hebrew) [100%] 2024-08-14 [10th-century rabbis] [Grammarians of Hebrew]...
  3. Moses Ben Aaron (Called Also Moses Lwow; Moses Lemberg Or Lemberger): Moravian and German rabbi; born at Lemberg about 1705; died at Nikolsburg, Moravia, Dec. After having studied in the yeshibah of Nikolsburg, Moses, then a youth of twenty, was appointed rabbi of Leipnik, Moravia. A few years later, when the ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [83%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  4. Moses Ben Samuel Ben Asher: French Talmudist; flourished at Perpignan in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Both Moses and his father possessed great influence in Perpignan, and obtained from James I., King of Majorca, permission for the Jews who had been expelled from France in ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [77%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  5. Aarón Ben-Asser: Biblia hebrea[editar] Escribió un tratado que se imprimió en 1517, sobre acentuación de la lengua hebrea y de las variantes del texto hebreo de la Biblia. Examinó los manuscritos existentes en las bibliotecas de Occidente, mientras que su colaborador, Ben Nephtali de ... [76%] 2023-05-17
  6. Aarón-Ben-Asser: Aarón-Ben-Aser (en Hebreo אהרון בן משה בן אשר; en hebreo tiberiano ʾAhărôn ben Mōšeh benʾĀšēr; Tiberíades, siglo X–960) fue un rabino y gramático judío que refinó el sistema tiberiano de escribir sonidos vocales en hebreo, el cual todavía se usa hoy en día ... [76%] 2024-01-10
  7. Aarón Ben Asser: Biblia hebrea[editar] Escribió un tratado que se imprimió en 1517, sobre acentuación de la lengua hebrea y de las variantes del texto hebreo de la Biblia. Examinó los manuscritos existentes en las bibliotecas de Occidente, mientras que su colaborador, Ben Nephtali de ... [76%] 2023-05-17
  8. Ben Asher: Biblia hebrea[editar] Escribió un tratado que se imprimió en 1517, sobre acentuación de la lengua hebrea y de las variantes del texto hebreo de la Biblia. Examinó los manuscritos existentes en las bibliotecas de Occidente, mientras que su colaborador, Ben Nephtali de ... [73%] 2023-06-01
  9. Ben Asher (surname): Ben Asher is a Jewish surname meaning "son of Asher". (Surname) [73%] 2024-01-06 [Hebrew-language surnames] [Surnames of Jewish origin]...
  10. Mosessohn, Aaron Ben Moses: German rabbi; born probably in Glogau; died at Ansbach, Bavaria, 1780; was a descendant of the Ẓebi family. In 1763 he was elected rabbi of Berlin, having previously been rabbi of Dessau. Mendelssohn put his name on the title-page ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [72%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  11. Aaron Ben Moses Teomim: Rabbinical scholar; born about 1630, probably in Prague, where the Teomim-Fränkel family, from Vienna, had settled; died in Chmelnik, Poland, July 8, 1690. In 1670 he was called as rabbi to Worms, where he succeeded Samson Bacharach. Prior to ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [72%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  12. Aaron Moses Ben Mordecai: One of the few cabalistic writers of recent times in East Prussia: author of a work, "Nishmat Shelomoh Mordecai" (The Soul of Solomon Mordecai; Johannisberg, 1852), so called in remembrance of his son, who died in early childhood. On the ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [72%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  13. Aharon ben Moshe ben Asher: Pour les articles homonymes, voir Aaron. modifier - modifier le code - modifier Wikidata Aharon ben Asher (hébreu : אהרון בן משה בן אשר Aharon ben Moshe ben Asher, arabe : Abū Saʿīd Hārūn) est un scribe juif. [72%] 2024-08-14
  14. Asher, Anshel Ben Moses Baer: Talmudist; lived in the second half of the eighteenth century. He wrote two works: "Ben Emunim" (Son of Faith), Fürth, 1785: and "Ḥiddat Shimshon" (Samson's Riddle), Fürth, 1785. The former is a homiletic commentary on the Bible; the latter ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [69%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  15. Hausen, Moses Ben Asher Anshel: Danish Talmudic scholar: born at Copenhagen 1752; died June 28, 1782. He wrote a work entitled "Ḳaran Or Pene Mosheh," a homiletic commentary to Genesis (Hamburg, 1787). Zedner and Benjacob attribute the authorship of this work to a Meïr b. (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [69%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  16. Aaron Ben Asher Of Karlin (Rabbi Aaron Ii. Of Karlin): One of the most famous rabbis of the Ḥasidim in northwestern Russia; born in 1802; died June 23, 1872. He had an immense number of followers, and many thousands of them used to visit him annually, about the time of ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [68%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  17. Ben Aaron: Benjamin Aron Colonomos (born September 10, 1981) is a New York City-based media personality formerly for NBCUniversal's LXTV and WNBC's New York Live, and for the nationally syndicated Crazy Talk television series. From 2017 to 2019, he ... (New York City-based media personality) [66%] 2023-11-26 [1981 births] [Living people]...
  18. Moser, Moses: German merchant known as a friend of Heine; born 1796; died at Berlin Aug. He was educated for a business career, and was for a time an assistant of the banker Moses Friedländer in Berlin. Afterward he became the confidential ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [65%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  19. Moses B. Asher: Masorite; father of Aaron; generally called Ben Asher; lived at Tiberias in the second half of the ninth century. His father, Asher, was a great-grandson of Asher the Great (or the Elder), one of the earliest Masorites of Tiberias ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [64%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  20. Günzburg, Mordecai Aaron Ben Judah Asher: Russian Hebrew writer; born at Salanty, government of Kovno, Dec. Having studied Hebrew and Talmud under his father, he continued their study at Shavly, until 1816, under his father-in-law. Thence he went to Polangen and Mitau, Courland, where ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]

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