Shimon Lavi
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shimon_Lavi an entity of type: Thing
Shimon ibn Lavi (hébreu : שמעון אבן לביא) est un rabbin, poète liturgique et kabbaliste séfarade ayant vécu en Afrique du Nord au XVIe siècle. Auteur d’un commentaire du Zohar, le Sefer Ketem Paz, il est considéré par les Juifs de Libye comme le père de leurs traditions.
rdf:langString
Shimon Lavi (Hebrew: שמעון לביא, also Shimon ibn Lavi, Hebrew: שמעון אבן לביא, anglicized as Simeon Labi, 1486–1585) was a Sephardi Hakham, kabbalist, physician, astronomer, and poet. He is credited with the founding of religious institutions and the revival of Torah study in Tripoli, Libya, in the mid-sixteenth century, where he served as spiritual leader and dayan (rabbinical court judge) for more than three decades. He authored a commentary on the Zohar titled Ketem Paz and the piyyut, "Bar Yochai", a kabbalistic hymn which became widely popular in the Jewish world. Libyan Jews consider him their greatest scholar.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Shimon ibn Lavi
rdf:langString
Shimon Lavi
rdf:langString
Shimon Lavi
rdf:langString
Shimon Lavi
rdf:langString
Tripoli, Libya
rdf:langString
Spain
xsd:integer
55986551
xsd:integer
1118284242
xsd:integer
15
rdf:langString
Tripoli rabbinical court
xsd:integer
1549
rdf:langString
Shimon Lavi
rdf:langString
Title page of Ketem Paz, Part I,
rdf:langString
by Hakham Shimon Lavi
xsd:integer
1585
rdf:langString
Hakham
rdf:langString
Shimon ibn Lavi (hébreu : שמעון אבן לביא) est un rabbin, poète liturgique et kabbaliste séfarade ayant vécu en Afrique du Nord au XVIe siècle. Auteur d’un commentaire du Zohar, le Sefer Ketem Paz, il est considéré par les Juifs de Libye comme le père de leurs traditions.
rdf:langString
Shimon Lavi (Hebrew: שמעון לביא, also Shimon ibn Lavi, Hebrew: שמעון אבן לביא, anglicized as Simeon Labi, 1486–1585) was a Sephardi Hakham, kabbalist, physician, astronomer, and poet. He is credited with the founding of religious institutions and the revival of Torah study in Tripoli, Libya, in the mid-sixteenth century, where he served as spiritual leader and dayan (rabbinical court judge) for more than three decades. He authored a commentary on the Zohar titled Ketem Paz and the piyyut, "Bar Yochai", a kabbalistic hymn which became widely popular in the Jewish world. Libyan Jews consider him their greatest scholar.
rdf:langString
Tripoli
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
11979