- male, deceased (1631)
- Samuel Eidels
- male
- Jehiel ben Solomon Heilprin was a Lithuanian rabbi, kabalist, and chronicler. He was a descendant of Solomon Luria, and traced his genealogy back...
- male, deceased (1762)
- David ben Naphtali(Hirsch) Fränkel, or David Hirschel Fränkel was a German Jewish rabbi. Born in Berlin, for a time he was rabbi of Dessau. He be...
- male
- Hayyim ben Isaac Raphael Alfandari the Younger was Rabbi in Constantinople during the latter half of the 17th and in the beginning of the 18th...
- male, deceased (1724)
- Samson Wertheimer (January 17, 1658, Worms - August 6, 1724, Vienna) was chief rabbi of Hungary and Moravia, and rabbi of Eisenstadt. He was also...
- male, deceased (1744)
- Meir ben Izsak Eisenstadt (also Meir Ash, c. 1670-1744) was the author of responsa and other works of rabbinic literature. An authority on Halakha,...
- male
- Rabbi Josef ben Isaac ibn Ezra was a oriental rabbi of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; descendant of the Ibn Ezra family of Spain. Brought...
- male, deceased (1689)
- Joseph Almosnino was the son of Isaac and grandson of Moses ben Baruch Almosnino. He was rabbi at Belgrade, and author of numerous responsa,...
- male, deceased (1660)
- Saul Levi Morteira was a Dutch rabbi of Portuguese descent. In a Spanish poem Daniel Levi de Barrios speaks of him as being a native of Germany...
- male, deceased (1585)
- Moses ben Joseph di Trani (the Elder) called מבי"ט or Mabit; Talmudist; born at Salonica 1505; died in Jerusalem 1585. His father had fled to Salo...
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