- male
- Judah ben Samuel of Regensburg (12th - 13th centuries), also called He-Hasid or 'the Pious' in Hebrew, was the initiator of the Chassidei Ashkenaz,...
- male, deceased (1893)
- Judah Cassuto (1808, Amsterdam-March 10, 1893, Hamburg) was "hazzan" (cantor) of the Portuguese-Jewish community of Hamburg. In 1827 he was elected...
- male
- Judah ibn Verga was a Spanish historian, kabalist, perhaps also mathematician, and astronomer, of the 15th century, born at Seville. He is supposed...
- male
- Judah of Melun was a French rabbi, a "tosafist" of the first half of the thirteenth century; he was son of the tosafist David of Melun (from the...
- male, deceased (299)
- Judah ben Ezekiel (Hebrew: יהודה בן יחזקאל) was a Babylonian amora of the 2nd generation. He was the most prominent disciple of Rav (Abba Arika),...
- male
- Judah ben Barzillai (Albargeloni) was a Spanish Talmudist of the end of the 11th and the beginning of the 12th century. Almost nothing is known of...
- male
- Judah ben Shalom (Hebrew: יהודה בן שלום), also known as Mori (Master) Shooker Kohail II or Shukr Kuhayl II (Hebrew: מרי שכר כחיל), was a Yeme...
- male, deceased (1000)
- Judah ben David Hayyuj was a Spanish-Jewish grammarian; born in Fez, Morocco, about 945. At an early age he went to Cordoba, where he seems to have...
- male
- Judah ben Tabbai was a Jewish tanna of the early first century BCE. He was a contemporary of Simeon ben Shetach. During the persecution of the...
- male
- Judah Leib Maimon (1876-1962) was a leader in the religious Zionism movement, born in Bessarabia. Judah Leib moved to Palestine in 1913, and was...
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