-
interpretations within Judaism. A
traditional Kabbalist is
called a
Mekubbal (מְקוּבָּל, Məqūbbāl, 'receiver').
Jewish Kabbalists originally developed their own transmission...
-
something the
orthodox churches have
always refused to do".
Christian Kabbalists sought to
transform Kabbalah into "a
dogmatic weapon to turn back against...
- The Last
Kabbalist of
Lisbon is a
novel by American-Portuguese
author Richard Zimler. It was
first published in
Portuguese translation in 1996, after...
-
Hebrew acronym RaMCHaL (or RaMHaL; רמח"ל), was an
Italian Jewish rabbi,
kabbalist, and philosopher.
Moshe Chaim Luzzatto was born in 1707 in the Jewish...
- El
Kabbalist yeshiva (Beit El
means "House of God") (also:
Midrash Hasidim 'School of the Devout' or
Yeshivat haMekubalim, 'Yeshiva of the
Kabbalists')...
- The Ladder") in
reference to his
magnum opus, was an
Orthodox rabbi,
kabbalist and
anarchist born in Łuków,
Congress Poland,
Russian Empire, to a family...
- 1475 – 1550),
Italian scholar and
rationalist Chaim Vital (1543–1620),
Kabbalist and
primary disciple of
Rabbi Isaac Luria David ben
Solomon ibn Abi Zimra...
- Men****eh or
Menashe ben
Israel (מנשה בן ישראל), was a
Jewish scholar, rabbi,
kabbalist, writer, diplomat, printer, publisher, and
founder of the
first Hebrew...
- Kedourie; "Yitzhak" (c. 1898 – 28
January 2006), was a
Haredi rabbi and
kabbalist. He
taught and
practiced the
kavanot of the Rashash. His
supposedly magic...
- Four of
these were
based on
ilanot that had been
designed by
Jewish kabbalists over the
preceding half century; one (his
figures 8–12) was
designed by...