Search for "Menahem ben Saruḳ" in article titles:

  1. Menahem Ben Saruḳ (Menahem B. Jacob Ibn Saruḳ): He was a native of Tortosa, and went, apparently at an early age, to Cordova, where he found a patron in Isaac, the father of the subsequent statesman Ḥasdai ibn Shaprut. At Isaac's death Menahem eulogized his protector's ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [100%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]

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  1. Menahem ben Saruq: Menahem ben Saruq (also known as Menahem ben Jacob ibn Saruq, Hebrew: מנחם בן סרוק) was a Spanish-Jewish philologist of the tenth century CE. He was a skilled poet and polyglot. [92%] 2023-12-22 [Jewish poets] [Medieval Hebraists]...
  2. Menahem: MENAHEM men'-a-hem (menachem, "one who comforts"; Manaem; 2 Kings 15:14-22): 1. Accession and Reign: Son of Gadi and 16th king of Israel. He reigned 10 years. Menahem was probably the officer in charge of the royal ... [64%] 1915-01-01
  3. Menahem: Menahem (Hebrew for "consoler"), a king of Israel. He was the son of Gadi (i. perhaps, a man of Gad), and during the disturbances at the death of Jeroboam II. [64%] 2022-09-02
  4. Menahem: Menahem (Hebrew מְנַחֵם, comforter) (r. 771-761BC by Ussher, or r. [64%] 2023-02-04 [Kings of Israel]
  5. Menahem: , had at the end of six months' reign been slain by Shallum, a usurper. went from Tirzah, one of the government fortresses, to Samaria, cut down the usurper, and occupied the throne (II Kings xv. Immediately thereafter he smote Tiphsah ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [64%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  6. Menahem Ben Ẓebi: Heschel and of Aaron Samuel Kaidanover (author of "Birkat ha-Zebaḥ"). He wrote: "Ẓinẓenet Menaḥem" (Berlin, 1719), an elucidation of difficult passages in the Haggadah; "Leḥem Menaḥem," responsa, and explanations of various Talmudic passages; and "Ṭa'ame Menaḥem," on Rashi's ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  7. Judah Ben Menahem: Italian liturgical poet; lived, probably at Rome, in the middle of the twelfth century; father of the Roman dayyan Menahem ben Judah. He was the author of fourteen piyyuṭim, of which some are to be found in the printed Roman ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  8. Menahem Ben Eliakim: German scholar of the fourteenth century; a native of Bingen. He was the author of "'Aruk Goren," a dictionary of the Talmud, with German translations of all the difficult words, particularly those taken from Arabic and Greek. The basis of ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  9. Moses Ben Menahem (Präger): David Oppenheim; lived in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He wrote: "Wa-Yaḳhel Mosheh," cabalistic treatises on various passages of the Zohar, with a double commentary ("Masweh Mosheh" and "Tiḳḳune ha-Parẓufim"; Dessau, 1699; Zolkiev, 1741-75); "Zera' Ḳodesh," on ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  10. Menahem Ben Elijah: Turkish liturgist of the fifteenth century; a native of Kastoria. He composed the following piyyuṭim: (1) "Mah yaḳeru re'im be-ḳum ashmoret," a "petiḥah"; (2) "Me'on ehyeh asher ehyeh," a "tokaḥah"; both giving in acrostic the names of ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  11. Abigdor Ben Menahem: German Talmudist; lived at the beginning of the fifteenth century. The Bodleian collection of manuscripts contains responsa by him. Abigdor ben Menahem, to judge from the place assigned to him in the collection, seems to have been a contemporary of ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  12. Menahem ben Hezekiah: In the Babylonian Talmud Menahem ben Hezekiah was a quasi-messianic Jewish teacher born on the day the Second Temple was destroyed (AD 70). He may be the same as Menahem ben Judah; also see Menahem ben Ammiel. (Quasi-messianic Jewish teacher born on the day the Second Temple was destroyed) [62%] 2023-12-22 [70 births] [Date of death unknown]...
  13. Hanina Ben-Menahem: Hanina Ben-Menahem is an Oxford trained scholar at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem who specializes in Jewish law (Halakha). Ben-Menahem is critical of the legal positivist approach that dominates Mishpat Ivri, a comparative legal approach to Halakha. [62%] 2023-11-23 [Israeli jurists] [Israeli scientists]...
  14. Menahem Ben Simeon: French Biblical commentator at the end of the twelfth century; a native of Posquières and a pupil of Joseph Ḳimḥi., 1-2), contains Menahem's commentary to the books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel; the commentary to the former was completed ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  15. Menahem Ben Jair: He was a grandson of Judas of Galilee, the founder of the Zealot party, of which the Sicarii were a branch. Menahem checked the lawlessness of the Sicarii, who, under his leadership, in 66 C., stormed the fortress of Masada ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  16. Menahem Ben Machir: German liturgist of the eleventh century; a native of Ratisbon. Machir, was a nephew of Gershom b. Judah, and he himself was a cousin of Isaac b. (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [62%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]
  17. Yemima Ben-Menahem: Yemima Ben-Menahem (Hebrew: ימימה בן-מנחם‎, born 23 December 1946) is a professor (Emerita) of philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her main area of expertise is philosophy of science, in particular philosophy of modern physics. (Biography) [62%] 2023-09-27 [Analytic philosophers] [Philosophers of science]...
  18. Rina Ben-Menahem: Sara Rina Ben-Menahem (Hebrew: רינה בן מנחם; 26 June 1935 – 12 June 2004) was an Israeli writer, author of the first Hebrew language book to describe the homosexual and lesbian scene in Israel, "הדווקאים", published in 1960, and the first Hebrew lesbian novel ... (Israeli writer) [62%] 2024-11-26 [1935 births] [2004 deaths]...
  19. Lonzano, Menahem Ben Judah Ben Menahem De: Palestinian Masoretic and midrashic scholar, lexicographer, and poet; died after 1608 in Jerusalem. His nativity is unknown, but it has been supposed that he was born in Italy. According to Jellinek, who identified Lonzano ( or ) with Longano, a seaport of ... (Jewish encyclopedia 1906) [57%] 1906-01-01 [Jewish encyclopedia 1906]

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