- male, deceased (1675)
- Benjamin Musaphia (also called "Benjamin ben Immanuel Musaphia" or "Mussafia" and "Dionysius"), Jewish doctor, scholar and kabbalist, was born...
- male, deceased (1991)
- Harry Everett Smith (29 May 1923, Portland, Oregon - 27 November 1991, New York City) was an American archivist, ethnomusicologist, student of...
- male
- Max Théon perhaps born Louis-Maximilian Bimstein, was a Polish Jewish Kabbalist and Occultist. In London while still a young man, he established T...
- male, deceased (1697)
- Moses ben Mordecai Zacuto was a kabalistic writer and poet. It is generally supposed that his birthplace was Amsterdam, although, like the...
- male, deceased (1891)
- Dr. Nathan Marcus Adler, a.k.a. Hillel Nissim Adler, was the Orthodox Chief Rabbi of Britain 1845–1891, probably the most prominent 19th century ra...
- male
- Kalonymus Haberkasten was a rabbi and Talmudist in sixteenth century Poland. He was rosh yeshiva in Lemberg, and was later the first rabbi of the...
- male, deceased (1440)
- Shem Tov ibn Shem Tov (Hebrew: שם טוב אבן שם טוב) was a Spanish kabbalist and fanatical opponent of rationalistic philosophy.
- male
- Solomon ibn Adret (d. 1310) was Jewish scholar and eminent Rabbi in Medieval Spain who lived in Barcelona in the thirteenth century. Considered an...
- male, deceased (1729)
- Mordecai Mokiach (Eisenstadt) was a Jewish Sabbatian "prophet" and false Messiah; born in Alsace about 1650; died at Pressburg May 18, 1729. The...
- male, deceased (1718)
- Naphtali Cohen (1649-1718) was a Russo-German rabbi and kabalist born in Ostrowo in the Ukraine. He belonged to a family of rabbis in Ostrowo,...
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