-
Solomon ben
Judah Ghayyat (Hebrew: שלמה בן יהודה גיאת, romanized: Shelomo ben
Yehuda Giyat; fl. 12th century) was a
medieval Hebrew poet. He was possibly...
-
Isaac ben
Judah ibn
Ghayyat (1030/1038–1089),
commonly mispronounced ibn Ghiyyat, was a rabbi,
Biblical commentator,
codifier of
Jewish law, philosopher...
-
celebration and
dancing arose in the
early Rishonic period.
Isaac ibn
Ghayyat (1030–1089)
writes in his Me'ah She'arim that he
asked Hayy ben Sherira...
- like Levi al-Tabban of Zaragoza, the aged poet
Judah ben Abun,
Judah ibn
Ghayyat of Granada,
Moses ibn Ezra and his
brothers Judah, Joseph, and Isaac, the...
- century, when it was
quoted by
Nathan of Rome, by R.
Isaac ben
Judah ibn
Ghayyat, and by Rashi, who
quoted it in his
commentary on I
Samuel 17:49, and on...
-
alteration which was made by Meïr ben Samuel, who
concurred with
Isaac ibn
Ghayyat's view, was
accepted in the German,
northern French, and
Polish rituals...
-
Alfasi founded a
large Talmudic academy in Lucena, and here also
Isaac ibn
Ghayyat,
Isaac ibn Albalia, and
Joseph ibn
Migash were prominent. Jews in Lucena...
- and is
believed to have died
around 1058 in Valencia.
Solomon ben
Judah Ghayyat (fl. 12th century)
Shlomo ha-Levi
Alkabetz author of
Lekhah Dodi Joseph...
- II p. 97 and Albeck's notes, and the
parallels noted there and in Ibn
Ghayyat's Shaarei Simcha vol. I p. 62. שו"ת הרשב"א חלק א סימן רכ חלמיש, משה; Hallamish...
-
Berachot 8b
Nissim ben Jacob, Mafteaḥ, p. 13 See Arukh, s.v. בר;
Isaac ibn
Ghayyat,
Hilkhot Lulav, ed. Bamberger, p. 113 This has been
published by Firkovich...