- Meir
Eisenstaedter (Meir ben
Judah Leib Eisenstädter, 1780–1852) was a
Hungarian rabbi, Talmudist, and
paytan (liturgic poet). He is best
known as the...
- EisenstadtPoland, Germany, c. 1670–1744 Meir
Eisenstaedter (Maharam Ash, 1780–1852),
Rabbi Meir
Eisenstaedter (Hungary, 1780–1861) Meir
Lublin (Maharam Lublin...
-
attended the
yeshiva of
Rabbi Meir
Eisenstaedter in Ungvár,
Hungary (now Uzhhorod, Ukraine). When Meir
Eisenstaedter died in 1852,
Weiss continued his...
-
Eisenstadt (1670–1744),
rabbi and
author also
known as Meir Ash Meir
Eisenstaedter (1780–1852), rabbi, Talmudist, and
paytan (liturgic poet) also known...
- the
Roman Catholic Diocese of
Eisenstadt Eisenstadt (also Ajzenstat,
Eisenstaedter, Asch, etc.), a
Jewish surname,
derives from this city. Some people...
- new cir****stances:
Twenty years before, in 1851,
Orthodox leader Meir
Eisenstaedter petitioned the
authorities to
restore the old
coercive powers of the...
-
coercion to
enforce them,
whether by
legal or
social means.
Rabbi Meir
Eisenstaedter,
representing the Orthodox,
opposed public education and
wished that...
-
author of
Meore Esh and
teacher of
Rabbi Jonathan Eybeschutz Meir
Eisenstaedter (1780–1852),
author of Imre Esh and
student of the
Chasam Sofer This...
-
distinguished student". He also
attended the
yeshiva of
Rabbi Meir
Eisenstaedter in Ungvar,
Hungary (now Uzhhorod, Ukraine). In 1844, aged 23, he was...
-
having been
dismissed by the ****s[citation needed]. He is
buried in the
Eisenstaedter family grave (plot 12G) in the
Doeblinger Cemetery, Vienna, with his...