-
Solomon (/ˈsɒləmən/), also
called Jedidiah, was the
fourth monarch of the
Kingdom of
Israel and Judah,
according to the
Hebrew Bible and the Old Testament...
- ISBN 978-0-85303-680-7. Elior,
Rachel (2010). "Spira,
Natan Note ben
Shelomoh". YIVO
Encyclopedia of Jews in
Eastern Europe.
Translated by Green, Jeffrey...
-
Solomon Joachim Halberstam –
Austrian scholar and
author of the Ḳehillat
Shelomoh catalog This
disambiguation page
lists articles about people with the same...
- ומקבילות (in Hebrew).
Makhon le-ḥeḳer
Torat ha-ḳadmonim she-ʻa.y. k.k. Even
Shelomoh. p. 500. מאמאן, רפאל (2006). ספר עם ר״ם: תולדות משפחת מאמאן ק"ק צפרו ושושלת...
-
Shirim li-
Shelomoh (Vilna, 1842),
containing poems adaptated from
other languages, as well as Ḳol
Shelomoh (Vilna, 1858) and Shema'
Shelomoh (Vilna, 1866)...
- vol. 5, vol. 6.
Shelomoh Ibn Gabirol,
shirei ha-ḥol, ed. by H.
Brody and J.
Schirmann (Jerusalem 1975)
Shirei ha-ḥol le-rabbi
Shelomoh Ibn Gabirol, ed...
- 128–136. A more
recent facsimile edition of this book,
Sepher Maphteah Shelomoh (Book of the Key of Solomon)(2008), was
published by
Teitan Press in 2008...
- Mishnayot) (in Hebrew). Vol. 7 (Neziqin - part I) (9 ed.). Jerusalem:
Hekhal Shelomoh. pp. 259–260. OCLC 18026605., s.v. Baba
Bathra 3:1 (Introduction) Maimonides...
- (the Ramban) and
Rabbenu Bahya ben Asher, Levi ibn
Habib (the Ralbah),
Shelomoh Alkabez,
Moses Cordovero,
Moses Chaim Luzzatto;
early Hasidic masters such...
- inspired.
According to a 12th-century
Rabbinic account, in
approximately 760,
Shelomoh ben Ḥisdai II, the
Exilarch in
Babylon died, and two
brothers among his...