Jump to content

Elijah ben Solomon Abraham ha-Kohen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rabbi Eliyahu ben Solomon Abraham ha-Kohen ha-Itamari (1640–1729) was a Dayan, almoner and preacher. He was born in Smyrna, where he was educated by R. Benjamin Melamed (he records the eulogy in Midrash Eliyahu), a leading Rabbi of İzmir (Smyrna), and became a homiletic preacher. R. Eliyahu's opposition to Sabbatai Zevi and his associates earned him much grief at home. He apparently cared for orphans as his writings display an extremely detailed knowledge of the physical and psychological suffering of the poor. A prolific writer he is best remembered for his ethical work Shevet Mussar (Rod of Admonition), which has seen numerous editions and been translated into many languages. The first edition of Shevet Mussar was issued in Constantinople in 1712.

Works

[edit]

Eliyahu produced over 30 works, of which the principal, according to Ruwen Josef Wunderbar [pl] (Orient, Lit. p. 579), are as follows:

  • Midrash Eliyahu, eleven funeral sermons and a commentary on the Talmudic sayings relative to the Book of Esther (Constantinople, 1693)
  • Midrash ha-Izmiri, homilies (ib. 1695)
  • Midrash Talpiyyot, glosses and comments taken from 300 works and containing 926 (the numerical value of the word "Talpiyyot") paragraphs in alphabetical order: only the first part, from "alef" to "kaf," was published (Amsterdam, 1698)
  • Me'il Ẓedaḳah, a treatise on charity (ib. 1704)
  • Shebeṭ Musar, on ethics, the best known of his works, divided into fifty-two chapters corresponding to the weeks of the year, and taken for the most part from the Or Ḳadmon of Moses Ḥagis, the Tokaḥot of the Spanish poets, the Orḥot Ḥayyim, and the Roḳeaḥ of Eleazar of Worms (Constantinople, 1712)
  • Megalleh Ẓefunot, kabalistic treatises (Porizk, 1785)
  • She'elot u-Teshubot, responsa (Sudilkov, 1796)
  • Minḥat Eliyahu, sermons (Salonica, 1824)
  • Semukim le-'Ad, homiletic treatise on the parashiyyot (ib. 1826)
  • We-Lo 'Od Ella, a treatise on the Talmudic and Midrashic passages beginning with these words (Smyrna, 1853)
  • Ezor Eliyahu, a commentary to Abot (Jerusalem, 1981)

Elijah's other works are not yet published (as of 1906). They include:

Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSeligsohn, M.; Kohler, Kaufmann (1903). "Elijah ben Solomon Abraham Ha-Kohen". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 135.
[edit]