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・ Aaron ben Hayyim
・ Aaron ben Isaac of Rechnitz
・ Aaron ben Isaac Sason
・ Aaron ben Jacob ha-Kohen
・ Aaron ben Joseph ha-Levi
・ Aaron ben Joseph of Beaugency
・ Aaron ben Joseph of Buda
・ Aaron ben Joseph of Constantinople
・ Aaron ben Joseph Sason
・ Aaron ben Meir of Brest
・ Aaron ben Menahem Mendel
・ Aaron ben Meshullam ben Jacob of Lunel
・ Aaron ben Meïr
・ Aaron ben Mordecai of Rödelheim
・ Aaron ben Moses ben Asher
Aaron ben Moses Teomim
・ Aaron ben Perez of Avignon
・ Aaron ben Phinehas
・ Aaron ben Samuel
・ Aaron ben Samuel ha-Nasi
・ Aaron ben Solomon ben Hasun
・ Aaron ben Zerah
・ Aaron Ben-Ze'ev
・ Aaron Ben-zion ibn Alamani
・ Aaron Benjamin
・ Aaron Bentley
・ Aaron Benward
・ Aaron Berechiah ben Moses ben Nehemiah of Modena
・ Aaron Berkman
・ Aaron Bernstein


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Aaron ben Moses Teomim : ウィキペディア英語版
Aaron ben Moses Teomim

Aaron ben Moses Teomim was a Czech-Polish rabbinical scholar; born about 1630, probably in Prague, where the Teomim-Fränkel family, from Vienna, had settled; died in Chmelnik, Poland, July 8, 1690. In 1670 he was called as rabbi to Worms, where he succeeded Samson Bacharach. Prior to this he had been a preacher at Prague. In a serious illness which overcame him on Passover evening, 1675 he vowed he would write a commentary on the Haggadah if he should be restored to health. On his recovery he published this commentary under the title "Maṭṭeh Aharon" (Aaron's Rod), Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1678. Another work, "Bigde Aharon" (Aaron's Vestments), homilies on the Pentateuch, was published after the author's death at Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1710. His "Glosses on Shulḥan 'Aruk, Ḥoshen Mishpaṭ" remained in manuscript. Responsa of his are found in the collections of Jair Ḥayyim Bacharach, "Ḥawwot Yair," and in those of Eliakim Goetz b. Meir of Hildesheim, "Eben ha-Shoham." In 1677 Aaron received a call to Lissa in Poland, which he declined; but in 1690 he accepted a call to the rabbinical seat of Cracow. He was there but three months when a Polish nobleman, probably in order to blackmail the congregation, ordered his arrest in Chmelnik, whither he had gone to attend the congregational Meeting of the Four Lands (Arba' Araẓot). On Sabbath, July 8, 1690, he was arrested, placed on horseback, and hurried to prison. He fell off the horse several times and was as often remounted. Before the jail was reached he had died of fright and ill-treatment. He was buried at Pintchov.
As a character and as a rabbinical scholar, Aaron Teomim did not rise above the level of his contemporaries. In his rabbinical works, Teomim is a typical Pilpulist. His scholastic discourses are in accordance with the vogue of that age. That his theories, as exhibited in his treatment of the Haggadah, were appreciated by his contemporaries, is proved by the fact that his Haggadah was reprinted three times: at Amsterdam, in 1695; at Frankfort-on-the-Main, in 1710; at Amsterdam, in 1712.
A severe criticism which Jair Ḥayyim Bacharach wrote under the title "Maṭṭeh Aharon," and which he did not dare to publish, was certainly not free from personal motives. Bacharach, the son and grandson of former rabbis of Worms, living in that city after he had lost his position in Coblenz, had hoped to succeed his father; and he wished to show that the congregation had not chosen a better man. Bacharach's interesting criticism was published by Jellinek in the first volume of "Bikkurim," a periodical edited by Naphtali Keller.
==References==




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