YIẒḤAKI, ABRAHAM BEN DAVID
- YIẒḤAKI, ABRAHAM BEN DAVID
- YIẒḤAKI, ABRAHAM BEN DAVID (1661–1729), rabbi, halakhic
authority, and kabbalist. Born in Jerusalem, Yiẓḥaki was the grandson of
the kabbalist, abraham b. mordecai azulai , and son-in-law of
Abraham Israel Zeevi, a scholar of Hebron. He studied Talmud under
moses b. jonathan galante , and Kabbalah together with Joseph
Bialer, grandfather of Ḥ.J.D. Azulai . He was chief rabbi of
Jerusalem, Rishon le-Zion, by 1708, and held the position
until his death. He also headed a yeshivah. Among his disciples were
Moses Ḥagiz , isaac ha-kohen rapoport , and Isaac Zerahiah
Azulai.
At the beginning of his rabbinate, the inhabitants of Jerusalem suffered
from the heavy burden of taxation placed upon them by the government. To
ameliorate the situation, Yiẓḥaki went to various European countries and
to Turkey as an emissary of the community (1709–16). In 1708, as head of
the Jerusalem rabbis, he signed a declaration against the Shabbatean
Nehemiah Ḥayon , and during his journey he vigorously opposed the
propaganda conducted by Ḥayon and miguel abraham cardozo . On
reaching Amsterdam in 1712, he encouraged Moses Ḥagiz and Ẓevi
Ashkenazi (Ḥakham Ẓevi) to oppose Ḥayon, who came to Amsterdam in
1713. His father, David Yiẓḥaki, on the other hand, was a foremost
supporter of Shabbetai Ẓevi . On returning to Jerusalem, Yiẓḥaki
devoted himself to teaching and writing. Some time later, when the
situation of Jerusalem deteriorated and his safety was endangered, he
was compelled to flee to Hebron, but later returned to Jerusalem, where
he died. He was the author of the responsa Zera Avraham (2
pts.; Smyrna and Constantinople, 1732–33).
-BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Frumkin-Rivlin, 2 (1928), 153–6: Yaari, Sheluḥei, 353 8; Benayahu, in:
KS, 28 (1952/53), 33; Toledano, in:
Yerushalayim, 4 (1953), 215–6; Scholem, Shabbetai Ẓevi, 1
(1957), 199–200; M. Benayahu, Rabbi Ḥayyim Yosef David Azulai
(Heb. 1959), index; Friedman, in: Sefunot, 10 (1966), 490–1.
(Avraham Yaari)
Encyclopedia Judaica.
1971.
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