-
Samuel ha-Zaḳen (RI) of Dampierre,
whose tosafot form a part of the
Tosafot Yeshanim (see below).
Isaac was
succeeded by his
pupil Samson ben
Abraham of Sens...
- ei'neicha Saruq, Mĕnaḥem ben (1854). Maḥberet Menaḥem (in Hebrew). Ḥoveret
Yeshanim. Phylacteries,
Jewish Encyclopedia (1906). The
Cambridge Bible for schools...
- Landshuth, "'Ammude ha-'Abodah", p. 106; comp. also Harkavy, "Ḥadashim gam
Yeshanim",
supplement to the
Hebrew edition of Graetz, "Hist." v. 39; Brody, "Ḳunṭras...
- also the
focus of two
collection of essays,
Yehudim Hadashim,
Yehudim Yeshanim (New Jews, Old Jews), and Yehudim,
Tziyonim Umah
shebeinehem (Jews, Zionists...
- 5b ִHadashim gam Ye shamim, vii. 38
Ginze Oxford, p. ix. ִHadashim gam
Yeshanim, vii. 35 Travels, ed. Benisch, p. 53 Sambari, in
Medieval Jewish Chronicles...
- Abulwalid," p. 87. In "Mitzpah" (St. Petersburg, 1886), in
Hadashim Gam
Yeshanim (No. 7), and in Mi-Mizrah umi-Ma'Arab (1896, iii. 94 et seq. see his commentary...
- conclusion.
Commentaries of
other early Rishonim include the following:
Tosafot Yeshanim,
which appear as
comments in the
margins of the
Vilna edition of the Talmud...
- so far as is known,
flourished about 1054 (see Harkavy,
Hadashim gam
Yeshanim, vii. 17). This date
points to the
second half of the
eleventh century...
- Amsterdam, 1698).
Shabbethai B****, in the
introduction to his "Sifte
Yeshanim" (p. 8a, ib. 1680),
describes this
Talmud Torah and
wishes it
might serve...
- Regensburg. He was
among the
earliest of the
tosafists ("ba'ale
tosafot yeshanim"), a
contemporary of
Rabbi Eleazar of Metz, and a
pupil of
Rabbenu Tam...