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The translation of the Talmud from Aramaic to non-Jewish languages stripped Jewish discourse from its covering, something that was resented by Jews as a profound violation. [172] The Disputation of Paris led to the condemnation and the first burning of copies of the Talmud in Paris in 1242. [173] [174] [c] The burning of copies of the Talmud ...
Solomon ben Meir, 12th century French rabbi; Elijah of Paris, 12th-century French rabbi; Judah ben Nathan, 12th century bible commentator, son-in-law of Rashi, also known as Rivan; Eliezer ben Nathan, (1090–1170) 12th-century poet and pietist; Haim ben Hananel HaCohen (Tosafist) Rabbenu Gershom, (c.960–c.1040) 11th-century German Talmudist ...
Twenty-four carriage loads of Jewish religious manuscripts were set on fire in the streets of Paris The Disputation of Paris ( Hebrew : משפט פריז , romanized : Mishpat Pariz ; French : disputation de Paris ), also known as the Trial of the Talmud (French: procès du Talmud ), took place in 1240 at the court of King Louis IX of France.
The Yeshiva of the Students of Paris (or the Hebrew Center for Study and Meditation) is a seminary of rabbinical studies (a yeshiva) that was founded in 1987 by the Rabbi Gerard Zyzek. His objective was the learning of the Jewish traditions and the Babylonian Talmud .
The Congregation Sherith Israel synagogue location was also the original site of the Akiva Jewish Day School, which Rabbi Zalman I. Posner founded in 1954. In 1999, Akiva School moved to the Gordon Jewish Community Center at 801 Percy Warner Blvd. [ 6 ] The classrooms on the ground floor are now used by the Sherith Israel Sunday School program ...
Nicholas Donin (French: Nicolas Donin) of La Rochelle, [1] a Jewish convert to Christianity in early thirteenth-century Paris, is known for his role in the 1240 Disputation of Paris, which resulted in a decree for the public burning of all available manuscripts of the Talmud. [2]
Congregation Ohabai Sholom, known as The Temple, is a Reform Jewish synagogue located at 5015 Harding Pike, in Nashville, Tennessee, in the United States.Founded in the 1840s, the congregation is notable for the elaborate, Moorish Revival Vine Street Temple that was its home from 1874 until its demolition in 1954; replaced by its current synagogue the following year.
Yechiel ben Joseph of Paris or Jehiel of Paris, called Sire Vives in French (Judeo-French: שיר ויויש ) and Vivus Meldensis ("Vives of Meaux") in Latin, [2] was a major Talmudic scholar and Tosafist from northern France, father-in-law of Isaac ben Joseph of Corbeil.