- "Kaliric", (or "Kalliri").
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to
Eleazar ben
Killir.
While some of his
hymns have been lost, more than 200 of them
appear in...
-
Nehemiah ben
Hushiel was as a
leader of the
Jewish revolt against Heraclius and the last
Jewish leader to
control Jerusalem until the
modern state of Israel...
- and Arator.[citation needed]
Jewish poets included Yannai,
Eleazar ben
Killir and Yose ben Yose.[citation needed]
Byzantine Empire Peter Brown Henri Pirenne...
- Elia del
Medigo Joseph Solomon Delmedigo Ahimaaz ben
Paltiel Eleazar ben
Killir Elijah Mizrachi,
Hakham Bashi of the
Ottoman Empire Judah Leon ben Moses...
- to be a
cryptogram for Heraclius.
Three piyyut attributed to
Eleazar ben
Killir are
thought to be
based on an
early version of the
Sefer Zerubbabel.: 168–169 ...
- residence.
Historian and geographer,
Samuel Klein (1886–1940),
thinks that
Killir's poem
proves the
prevalence of this
custom of
commemorating the courses...
- of
Shabbat Az Baḥata'enu (אז בחטאנו חרב מקדש),
composed by
Eleazar ben
Killir The
years since the
destruction of the
Temple are then
counted (מניין שנות...
- the
priestly course in Beth Maʿon. The seventh-century poet,
Eleazar ben
Killir,
echoing the same tradition, also
wrote a
liturgical poem
detailing the...
-
their respective villages, and who were
first named in a poem
composed by
Killir (c. 570 – c. 640).
Historical geographer, Klein,
thinks that one of the...
- "the
center of the Jewish,
Samaritan and
Karaite scholarship".
Eleazar ben
Killir a
Byzantine Jew from a Gr****-speaking area
wrote his
famous piyutim, which...