BAHYE

BAHYE
f. Dikiş, teyel

Yeni Lügat Türkçe Sözlük . 2009.

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  • Bahya ben Asher — Bahye ben Asher (Hebrew: בחיי בן אשר) or Bahye ben Asher ben Halawa also known as the Rabbeinu Behaye, born about the middle of the thirteenth century at Saragossa, died 1340, was a 13th century rabbi and scholar of Judaism. He was a commentator… …   Wikipedia

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  • Bachja ben Ascher — (Bachia ben Ascher * in der Mitte des 13. Jahrhunderts in Saragossa; † 1340) war ein Kabbalist im Spanien. Bekannt ist Bachja ben Ascher vor allem durch seinen Pentateuchkommentar. Er verfasste daneben u. a. Kad ha Qemach („Mehlkrug“), eine… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • BONSENYOR, JUDAH — (or Jafuda; d. 1331), physician and Arabic interpreter for the Aragonese court. Judah s father, Astruc b. Judah Bonsenyor (d. 1280), had previously served in the same capacity, originally as assistant to Bahye Alconstantini. Judah accompanied… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • ELCHE — ELCHE, city on the east coast of Spain, near Alicante; important in the late Roman period. Greek inscriptions discovered in 1905 on a mosaic floor in Elche dating to some time between the third and fifth centuries are believed to refer to a… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • JÁTIVA (Xátiva) — JÁTIVA (Xátiva), city in Valencia, E. Spain. Its community was probably second in size in the kingdom after that of the city of Valencia itself. After Játiva was captured from the Moors by James I in 1244, the quarter where Jews had lived under… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • MAJORCA — (Sp. Mallorca), largest and most important of the Balearic Isles. It is difficult to determine when Jews first arrived in Majorca, but it may be assumed that the settlement was ancient because of the island s location at the crossroads of the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • PIYYUT — (Heb. פִּיּוּט; plural: piyyutim; from the Greek ποιητής), a lyrical composition intended to embellish an obligatory prayer or any other religious ceremony, communal or private. In a wider sense, piyyut is the totality of compositions composed in …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

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