LANDAU, ELEAZAR BEN ISRAEL
- LANDAU, ELEAZAR BEN ISRAEL
- LANDAU, ELEAZAR BEN ISRAEL (1778–1831), rabbi, talmudic
scholar, and author. Eleazar Landau, a grandson of ezekiel landau
of Prague, was educated in the home of his stepfather Moses Ḥasid of
Ropshitz. He took up residence in Lemberg and then in Brody, where he
first engaged in business. In 1829, however, he was appointed rabbi of
Brody while aryeh leib teomim , the incumbent rabbi of the town,
was still alive but sick and bedridden. Teomim was not told of the
appointment so as not to aggravate his illness. Landau died before
Teomim, however, during an outbreak of cholera in Brody.
He was the author of Yad ha-Melekh, novellae on the
Mishneh Torah of Maimonides (parts 1, 2, and 4, Lemberg 1826;
part 3 remained unpublished). His novellae on the Babylonian Talmud were
published in the Vilna Talmud. Of his many unpublished manuscripts the
following may be noted: Kunteres Kelalim, on the methodology
of the Talmud, and Kedushah ve-Tohorah, on the orders
Kodoshim and Tohorot. His responsa to Samuel
Landau, the son of Ezekiel Landau, were published in the Noda
bi-Yhudah Second Series, Even ha-Ezer, nos. 120–2;
other responsa are found in the Mei Be'er (Vienna, 1829) of
Beer Oppenheimer (45b–47a) and in the Zekher Yeshayahu
(Vilna, 1881) of Zechariah Isaiah Jolles (nos. 17–18). Landau was also
in halakhic correspondence with moses sofer .
His grandson, ELEAZAR BEN JUDAH LANDAU (1842–1905), was
the author of Zikhron Eleazar (Brody, 1906), novellae to the
Mishnah and Jerusalem Talmud of the tractate Shekalim.
(Itzhak Alfassi)
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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