Английская Википедия:Aaron Samuel Kaidanover

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Версия от 17:15, 27 декабря 2023; EducationBot (обсуждение | вклад) (Новая страница: «{{Английская Википедия/Панель перехода}} {{Short description|Lithuanian rabbi}} '''Aaron Samuel ben Israel Kaidanover''' ({{lang-he|אהרן שמואל קאידנוור}}; 1614 – December 1676) was a Polish-Lithuanian rabbi. Among his teachers were Jacob Hoeschel and his son Joshua Hoeschel (or Hescehel). ==Biography== Kaidanover was born in 1614, in Vil...»)
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Шаблон:Short description

Aaron Samuel ben Israel Kaidanover (Шаблон:Lang-he; 1614 – December 1676) was a Polish-Lithuanian rabbi. Among his teachers were Jacob Hoeschel and his son Joshua Hoeschel (or Hescehel).

Biography

Kaidanover was born in 1614, in Vilna, according to Deutsch and Mannheimer (1904),Шаблон:Sfn but according to Tamar (2007)[1] in Koidanovo, near Minsk, from whence his surname was taken.Шаблон:Efn During the Khmelnytsky Uprising (1648–1649), Kaidanover fled to Vilna[1] (or, possibly, returned there), where he became a member of the bet din. In 1656, as a result of the Russian-Swedish War and Sweden's invasion of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, he was forced to flee once again, taking refuge in Kurów. While living at Kurów, violence visited the household: Kaidanover's home was pillaged by Cossacks, his possessions stolen, his valuable library and manuscripts among them, and his two young daughters were killed.[1]

He arrived in Moravia an impoverished fugitive. He was elected rabbi successively of Langenlois in Lower Austria, Nikolsburg, Glogau, Fürth, and Frankfurt am Main, and then returned to Poland in 1671 to become the rabbi of Kraków,[2] a position he held until his death on 1 December 1676, while attending the Vaad (council) HaGalil of Kraków that took place in Chmielnik.[2][3]Шаблон:Efn

Шаблон:Cn span

Kaidanover's son Tzvi Hirsch Kaidanover, was a rabbi at Frankfurt and author of Kav ha-Yashar. He printed many of his father's works.[4]

Works

He wrote:

  • Birkat ha-Zebaḥ, annotations to the Talmudical tractates of Kodashim (except Hullin and Bekorot), with a preface in which he narrated the remarkable events of his life (edited by his son-in-law Nahum Kohen, brother of Shabbethai Kohen (Шаблон:Lang), Amsterdam, 1669; another edition, with the commentary Omer Man, appeared in 1773 [location of publication uncertain, but possibly Berlin]).
  • Birkat Shemuel, derashot on the Pentateuch, partly kabbalistic, with additions by his son Zebi Hirsch Kaidanover (often "Zevi" Hirsch Kaidanover), its editor (Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1682)
  • Emunat Shemuel, sixty responsa on matrimonial cases, edited by his son (Frankfort, 1683)
  • Tiferet Shemuel, novellæШаблон:Efn to various Talmudic tractates, also edited by his son (Frankfort, 1692). The annotations to Hoshen Mishpat contained in the last-named work were printed in Ture Zahav (Hamburg, 1692).

Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography

Notes

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Attribution

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References

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