TEOMIM, AARON BEN MOSES

TEOMIM, AARON BEN MOSES
TEOMIM, AARON BEN MOSES (c. 1630–1690), rabbi. Teomim was a member of the well-known Teomim-Fraenkel family of Vienna, which had settled in Prague. In 1670 he succeeded   samson bacharach as rabbi of Worms. After refusing a call to Lissa in 1677, he accepted one from the Cracow community in 1687. At that time the French army was besieging Worms and it was only with the greatest difficulty that Teomim succeeded in leaving, and for three years he had to travel from place to place before reaching Cracow in March 1690. A few months later, on his way to a meeting of the council of the four lands , he was arrested at Chmielnik on a Sabbath on the orders of a Polish nobleman, probably in order to blackmail the Cracow congregation. As a result of the ill-treatment to which he was subjected, he died before reaching prison. Teomim's best-known work is a commentary on the Haggadah, Matteh Aharon ("the rod of Aaron"; Frankfurt, 1678) which he wrote in fulfillment of a vow should he recover from a serious illness which had befallen him on Passover 1675. It has been reprinted many times (26 entries in Ya'ari's bibliography of Haggadot). Teomim also wrote Bigdei Aharon (Frankfurt, 1710), sermons, and a volume of unpublished responsa, some of which are quoted in contemporary works. These writings found a severe critic in Jair Ḥayyim Bacharach , son of Samson. His motives were probably not disinterested, as he claimed the rabbinate, which had been held by both his father and grandfather. He accused Teomim of distorting the import of the Talmud and falsifying the true meaning of the aggadah. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: J.M. Zunz, Ir ha-Ẓedek (1874), 128–50; Fuenn, Keneset, 88f.; H.N. Dembitzer, Kelilat Yofi, 2 (1893), 71b; D. Kaufmann, R. Jaïr Chajjim Bacharach (Ger., 1894), 54f.

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • BACHARACH, JAIR ḤAYYIM BEN MOSES SAMSON — (1638–1702), German talmudic scholar, with an extensive knowledge in the general sciences. Bacharach was the son of R. Moses Samson b. Abraham samuel bacharach . Born in Leipnik, where his father officiated as rabbi, Bacharach, in his childhood,… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • OPPENHEIM (Oppenheimer), DAVID BEN ABRAHAM — (1664–1736), rabbi. Born in Worms, his teachers were gershon ashkenazi of Metz, Jacob Ashkenazi, Benjamin Wolf Epstein of Friedberg, and isaac benjamin Wolf b. Eliezer Lipman of Landsberg. While he was still a boy, he maintained a scholarly… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ISRAEL BEN ELIEZER BA'AL SHEM TOV — (known by the initials of Ba al Shem Tov as Besht; c. 1700–1760), charismatic founder and first leader of Ḥasidism in Eastern Europe. (See Chart: Ba al Shem Tov Family). Through oral traditions handed down by his pupils (jacob joseph of Polonnoye …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • FRAENKEL — (also Frankel, Fraenckel, Frankl, etc.), family widely scattered throughout Central and Eastern Europe. The name first appears in non Jewish records as a designation for those who had immigrated to Vienna from Frankenland, in the West. The family …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • AḤARONIM — (Heb. אַחֲרוֹנִים; lit. the later (authorities), a term used to designate the later rabbinic authorities, in contrast to the rishonim , the earlier authorities. Although scholars differ as to the exact chronological dividing line between the two …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ḤASIDISM — ḤASIDISM, a popular religious movement giving rise to a pattern of communal life and leadership as well as a particular social outlook which emerged in Judaism and Jewry in the second half of the 18th century. Ecstasy, mass enthusiasm, close knit …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • WOMAN — This article is arranged according to the following outline: the historical perspective biblical period marriage and children women in household life economic roles educational and managerial roles religious roles women outside the household… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Milk and meat in Jewish law — Halakhic texts relating to this article: Torah: Exodus 23:19 Exodus 34:26 Deuteronomy 14:21 …   Wikipedia

  • Yaakov Lorberbaum — Yaakov ben Moshe Lorberbaum of Lissa (1760 1832) (known in English as Jacob ben Jacob Moses of Lissa or Jacob Lorberbaum or Jacob Lisser, Hebrew: יעקב בן משה מליסא) was a Rabbi and Posek. He is known as the Ba al HaNesivos for his most well known …   Wikipedia

  • Shlomo Kluger — Solomon ben Judah Aaron Kluger (1783–June 9, 1869) ( he. שלמה קלוגר), born at Komarow, Russian Poland, was chief dayyan and preacher of Brody, Galicia. He was successively rabbi at Rawa (Russian Poland), Kulikow (Galicia), and Józefów (Lublin),… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”