-
Ishtori Haparchi (1280–1355), also
Estori Haparchi and
Ashtori ha-Parhi (Hebrew: אשתורי הפרחי) is the pen name of the 14th-century
Jewish physician, geographer...
- Issachar.
Ishtori Haparchi,
differing in view,
thought that the old
namesake is
represented in the
nearby village of
Kefrah (see:
Ishtori Haparchi,
Kaftor wa-Ferach...
- 1983, p. 358;
Conder and Kitchener, SWP II,
London 1881 p. 251;
Ishtori Haparchi,
Kaphtor u'ferach (ed.
Avraham Yosef Havatzelet), vol. II (third edition)...
-
medieval Jewish traveller Ishtori Haparchi identified as the
Talmudic Tzrifin, but
other scholars believe Haparchi was
referring to
Sarafand al-Amar,...
-
Haparchi (2004).
Avraham Yosef Havatzelet (ed.).
Kaftor wa-Ferach (in Hebrew). Vol. 1 (chapter 7) (3 ed.). Jerusalem:
Ha-makhon le-limudei
mitzvot ha-aretz...
- the
Jezreel Valley. In the 14th century, the
Jewish geographer Ishtori Haparchi identified Ain
Jalut with the
biblical "Spring
which is in Jezreel", as...
- "Teshuvot
HaRadbaz
Volume 2 691:2". www.sefaria.org.
Retrieved 2022-02-10. Rav
Ishtori Haparchi (14th Century),
Kaftor VeFerach, Provence, France. Emek
HaMelech...
- were
captured by Shishak, king of Egypt. A
tradition reported by
Ishtori Haparchi (1280–1355) and
other early Jewish writers is that
Ramla was the biblical...
- Churak, a site
proposed by 14th-century
topographer and
traveller Ishtori Haparchi, aka
Astori Pharchi,
being eight miles northeast of the
ancient ruins known...
- over the next two centuries,
among them
Nachmanides (1270) and
Ishtori HaParchi (1322) who
noted the old
Jewish cemetery there. **** imam Ibn
Qayyim Al-Jawziyya...