- simhah
- sim·hah
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
SIMḤAH BUNEM OF PRZYSUCHA — (Pshiskha; 1765–1827), ḥasidic ẓaddik in Poland. He was born in Wodzislaw, Poland. His father, R. Ẓevi, was an itinerant preacher (maggid) in Poland and central Europe. R. Simḥah Bunem traveled to central Europe to learn from R. Jeremiah of… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SIMḤAH BEN JOSHUA OF ZALOZHTSY — (1711–1768), Polish author and Torah scribe. A preacher in the town of Zalozhtsy, near Brody, Poland, he was one of a group of ascetic Ḥasidim who had gathered around R. Naḥman of Kossov, many of whose teachings he cites. He composed two works… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SIMḤAH BEN SAMUEL OF SPEYER — (second half of the 12th and the beginning of the 13th century), German scholar. He may have been a descendant of Judah ha Kohen, author of the Sefer ha Dinim (see Aptowitzer). Simḥah was one of the rabbis and dayyanim of the Speyer bet din… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Simhah Pinsker — (March 17, 1801–October 29, 1864) (Hebrew: שמחה פינסקר) was a Polish Jewish scholar and archeologist born at Tarnopol, Galicia. He received his early Hebrew education in the cheider and from his father, Shebaḥ ha Levi, a noted preacher, who… … Wikipedia
Simhah Pinsker — (17 mars 1801 – 29 octobre, 1864) était un savant et archéologue juif polonais né à Tarnopol, en Galicie. Sommaire 1 Jeunes années 2 La renommée 3 Œuvres … Wikipédia en Français
Simhah ben Samuel of Vitry — Simhah ben Samuel of Vitry, (died 1105), (Hebrew: שמחה בן שמואל מויטרי) was a French Talmudist of the 11th and 12th centuries, pupil of Rashi, and the compiler of the Vitry Machzor. Contents 1 The Vitry Machzor 2 Extant manuscripts of the Machzor … Wikipedia
simhah — … Useful english dictionary
Simhah ben Samuel of Vitry — (d. 1105) French scholar. He was a pupil of Rashi. He compiled the Mahzor Vitry, which is regarded as an author itative source for the prayerbook, synagogue customs and the hymnology of medieval French Jewry … Dictionary of Jewish Biography
CALIMANI, SIMḤAH BEN ABRAHAM — (Simone; 1699–1784), poet, playwright, grammarian, translator; worked as a rabbi in Venice, his native city. As a poet, Calimani composed several wedding poems (e.g. Kol Simḥah ve Shirei Yedidut, ( The Voice of Happiness – or of Simḥah – and… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
MEIR SIMHAH HA-KOHEN OF DVINSK — (1843–1926), talmudic scholar. His brilliance was such that he is said to have annotated the halakhic work of a distinguished rabbi when only 13 years old. At the age of 17 he went to Eishishok where he studied under R. Moses Danishevsky. Meir… … Encyclopedia of Judaism