- Rashi's notes. The
authors of the
Tosafot are
known as
Tosafists; for a
listing see List of
Tosafists.[citation needed] The word
tosafot literally means "additions"...
-
Tosafists were
rabbis of France, Germany,
Bohemia and Austria, who
lived from the 12th to the mid-15th centuries, in the
period of Rishonim. The Tosafists...
-
thirteenth centuries produced different kinds of
writing in Hebrew. Many were
Tosafists;
others wrote legal material, and some
wrote liturgical poetry and literary...
-
century Tosafist Eliezer ben
Samuel of Metz (Yereim), 13th
century Tosafist. (c. 1140-1237)
Eliezer ben
Samuel of Verona, 13th
century Tosafist. Judah...
-
explicitly permits this
foreign ejaculation with
Rabbeinu Asher siding with the
Tosafist opinion. This
opinion is
likewise quoted in Tur
Shulchan Aruch, Even Ha'ezer...
-
Semitic root משׁה, m-š-h,
meaning "to draw out". The eleventh-century
Tosafist Isaac b.
Asher haLevi noted that the
princess names him the
active participle...
-
noblewoman and poet (b. 1130) Joel ben
Isaac ha-Levi,
German rabbi and
Tosafist (b. 1115) Liu Wansu,
Chinese physician of the Jin
Dynasty (b. 1110) Nicholas...
- ben
Judah HaLevi (Hebrew: יצחק בן יהודה הלוי) was a
French exegete and
tosafist;
lived at Sens, probably, in the
second half of the
thirteenth century...
-
Kammuna Positions: Maimonidean / Anti-Maimonidean
Kabbalist Karaism Talmudic Tosafist Modern Positions:
Orthodox Sephardic Chabad Ch****idic
Conservative Reform...
-
Isaac of
Corbeil as the "Prince of Évreux", one of the most
celebrated tosafists;
Moses of Évreux,
brother of Samuel,
author of the
Tosafot of Évreux;...