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User:הסרפד/Joseph ben Yeḥiel

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Joseph, eldest son of Yehiel of Paris[a] named for Yehiel's father. A piyyut (liturgical poem) by Yosef is known; specifically, a bikkur or tosefet[2] (a supplement to the maaravit) for Shvi'i shel Pesach (the seventh day of Passover) in the French rite.[1][3] Add? [1] [2]

Yosef is best known for his journey to the Holy Land, which is well attested.[1]

Yehiel's journey began with his imprisonment. Reason for imprisonment.. Upon his release from prison, he made a neder ...[4]

Yosef and Dieu-le-sault/Délicieux, who may be identical.

(Armaille[5] Gross[6] Arles[7])

Delicieux: Asaf (interpreting תוצאות ארץ ישראל only)[8] Kook's reading דילשוש in Piske Landon, contradicted by Zaks[9]

Louis Isaac Rabinowitz,[10] notes that the דיל-‎ prefix is consistently interpreted as "Dieu-le", making Dieu-le-saut the more plausible reading, or, as Rabinowitz suggests himself, דלקרייש‎ Dieu-le-cresse, which he believes to be equivalent to Joseph, unlike though Cecil Roth who identifies Dieu-le-cresse as equivalent to Gedaliah or Solomon),[11] though he believes that the absolute equivalence of Medieval French and English Jews' Hebrew and Judeo-French, assumed by Roth and Herbert Loewe, is not supported by evidence.[12]

[b]

Colchester deed etc.[16]

Eliezer, proposed by Gross who suggested identity with Dieu-le-saut [6] (who noted Steinschneider's doubts[17]) but asserted by Emanuel to be the product of a cataloging error[18] by Giuseppe Simone Assemani.[19]

Notes

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  1. ^ Yosef is mentioned as Yehiel's bekhor (ritual firstborn) in the context of the Fast of the Firstborn in several sources. Yehiel's view—cited, but not accepted by poskim[citation needed]—was that the firstborn must not fast on the Eve of Passover, but only abstain from certain[which?] foods.[1]
  2. ^ Havatselet suggests an identification with Avraham ben Yehiel of Haifa, one of several signatories from Acco adding their consent to a responsum[13] of Avraham son of Maimonides in 1234,[14] but this possibility is excluded by Kohen, who shows that this is chronologically impossible.[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Emanuel (2008), p. 87.
  2. ^ Goldschmidt. Mahzor... p. 27.
  3. ^ Goldschmidt / Frankel. Mahzor. pp. 404–.
  4. ^ Emanuel (2008), pp. 87–88.
  5. ^ Carmoly, Eliakim (1842). "Vocabulaire de la géographie rabbinique de France". Revue Orientale (in French). 2. Brussels: 111.
  6. ^ a b Gross, Heinrich (1897). ארמלי [Armaillé]. Gallia Judaica (in French). Paris: L. Cerf. pp. 91–92. LCCN 51050586.
  7. ^ Kook, Vilnay (חיפה) 1936, p39‎
  8. ^ Assaf, Simha (1928). "תוצאות ארץ ישראל". In Sukenik, E. L.; Press, Y. (eds.). Yerushalayim ירושלם (in Hebrew). Jerusalem. p. 54. OCLC 233236265.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Sinai, vol 7 p 232
  10. ^ Transactions 21, p. 321 note 40
  11. ^ p. 317
  12. ^ pp. 316–317
  13. ^ Freimann, Abraham Hayyim, ed. (1937). תשובות רבנו אברהם בן הרמב"ם. Jerusalem. pp. 25–26. LCCN 57054260.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Havatselet, Avraham Y. (ed.). עניני ארץ ישראל לתלמיד הרמב"ן. p. 442, note 13.
    In Estori ha-Parhi (1994). Havatselet, Avraham Y.; Dubrovitser, Yerahmiel (eds.). Kaftor va-Feraḥ כפתור ופרח. Vol. 2. Jerusalem. Appendices. LCCN 95827185.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  15. ^ Kohen, Naftali Yaakov (1967–1970). Otsar ha-Gedolim Alufe Yaakov אוצר הגדולים אלופי יעקב. Vol. 2. p. 59, §185. OCLC 233096782.
  16. ^ Davis, M. D. (1888). "Colchester Deeds". Shetaroth: Hebrew Deeds of English Jews Before 1290. London: Jewish Chronicle. pp. 365–368. OCLC 838551508.
  17. ^ Steinschneider. Catalogus...
    Steinschneider (1900). Tehillah...
  18. ^ Assemani (1756). Bibliotheca...
  19. ^ Emanuel (2006), pp. 185–186.
  • Emanuel, Simha (2006). שברי לוחות [Fragments of the Tablets] (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Magnes Press. ISBN 9789654932738.