- Saʿăḏyā ben Yōsēf ʾal-Fayyūmī Gāʾōn;
alternative English names:
Rabbeinu Saʿadiah Gaon ("our
Rabbi [the]
Saadia Gaon"),
often abbreviated RSG (RaSaG); Saadia...
-
professionally as
Saadiah was a
Malaysian actress and director, who was
famous in the 1950s and 1960s
during the
golden era of the
Malay films.
Saadiah became interested...
-
Saadiah ben
Joseph ha-Levi was a
rabbi who
lived in
Yemen in the 16th century. He
lived in
Sanaa in 1568 at the time of ****cution of Jews there, and...
-
standard version of the
Bible in Judeo-Arabic. The best
known was
produced by
Saadiah (the
Saadia Gaon, aka the Rasag), and
continues to be in use today, "in...
-
Saadiah Mufarreh (Arabic: سعدية المفرح; born 1964) is a
Kuwaiti poet, critic, and
journalist working as an arts
editor of
Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Qabas,...
-
period Saadia Ibn
Danan (died 1493), rabbi, poet, and
Dayan in
Grenada Saadiah ben
Joseph ha-Levi (16th century),
rabbi in
Yemen Saadia Marciano (1950–2007)...
- used by the
Parthian kings in the 1st
century CE. In
Jewish tradition,
Saadiah (d. 942), Ibn Ezra (d.
circa 1164),
Maimonides (1135–1204) and Obadiah...
- 2024-11-03 Vollandt, Ronny. "'The
Arabic Pentateuch of the
Paris Polyglot:
Saadiah Gaon's
advent to the
republic of letters'".
Linguistic and
Cultural Aspects...
- influence, as well as a more
cosmopolitan outlook from
Jewish thinkers such as
Saadiah Gaon, who now
deeply engaged with
Western philosophy for the
first time...
- 537–542. See also Job 16:16
where Saadiah uses ṣafrā to
describe a red-flushed face.
Yosef Qafih,
Perushei Rabbeinu Saadiah Gaon al haTorah,
footnote to Numbers...