-
Solomon (/ˈsɒləmən/), also
called Jedidiah, was the
fourth monarch of the
Kingdom of
Israel and Judah,
according to the
Hebrew Bible. The
successor of...
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conclusively they do not form a hexagram. See,
Hatakh ha-Zahav,
Hotam Shelomoh u-Magen-David (Poalim, Hebrew) 1990:156. G. S. Oegema,
Realms of Judaism...
- best
known for his three-part
study of
Hebrew synonyms entitled Yeri'ot
Shelomoh.
Solomon Pappenheim was born into a
rabbinic family in Zülz, Silesia, the...
- (the Ramban) and
Rabbenu Bahya ben Asher, Levi ibn
Habib (the Ralbah),
Shelomoh Alkabez,
Moses Cordovero,
Moses Chaim Luzzatto;
early Hasidic masters such...
- 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...
- 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...
- authorities, in 1622, he
wrote a
commentary on the Mishnah,
entitled Melekhet Shelomoh (The Work of Solomon). Only a few
fragments of this have been published...
-
Solomon ha-Levi
Alkabetz (Hebrew: שלמה הלוי אלקבץ, romanized: Shlomo ha-Levi Alkabetz; c. 1505 – 1584) was a rabbi,
kabbalist and poet. He is
perhaps best...
-
Solomon Joachim Halberstam –
Austrian scholar and
author of the Ḳehillat
Shelomoh catalog This
disambiguation page
lists articles about people with the same...
- (Smyrna, 1665; Amsterdam, 1703) Raẓuf
Ahabah (Inlaid with Love), or
Apirion Shelomoh (Solomon's Palanquin),
notes on the
Tosafot to the
haggadic p****ages in...