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・ Meir Javedanfar
・ Meir Just
・ Meir KA F.C.
・ Meir Kahane
・ Meir Katzenellenbogen
・ Meir Lichtenstein
・ Meir Lublin
・ Meir Margalit
・ Meir Margalit (actor)
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Meir of Rothenburg
・ Meir Pa'il
・ Meir Park, Tel Aviv
・ Meir Pichhadze
・ Meir Porush
・ Meir railway station
・ Meir Randegger
・ Meir Rauch
・ Meir Rekhavi
・ Meir Rosenne
・ Meir Shahar
・ Meir Shalev
・ Meir Shamgar
・ Meir Shapiro
・ Meir Sheetrit


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Meir of Rothenburg : ウィキペディア英語版
Meir of Rothenburg

Meir of Rothenburg (c. 1220-1293)〔Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard, ''Shalshelet Ha-Kabbalah'', Jerusalem 1962, p. 134 (Hebrew)〕 was a German Rabbi and poet, a major author of the ''tosafot'' on Rashi's commentary on the Talmud. He is also known as Meir ben Baruch, the Maharam of Rothenburg. Rabbi Meïr ben Solomon of Perpignan, referred to Rab Meir of Rothenberg, as the "greatest Jewish leader of Zarfat" alive at the time, Zarfat is medieval Hebrew for France which was a reference to Charlemagne's rule of Germany.
==Biography==

Rabbi Meir was born between 1215 and 1220 in Worms . He comes from a long line of rabbis. His first teacher was his father. He continued his training in Würzburg under Isaac ben Moses of Vienna and in France, where he remained until 1242, his teachers being Yechiel of Paris, Samuel ben Solomon of Falaise, and Samuel of Evreux, witnessing the burning of the Talmud in Paris . He then settled in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, opening a yeshiva in his house. After the death of his father in 1281, he settled in Worms. In 1286, King Rudolf I instituted a new persecution of the Jews, declaring them ''servi camerae'' ("serfs of the treasury"), which had the effect of negating their political freedoms. Along with many others, Meir left Germany with family and followers, but was captured in the mountains of Lombardy having been recognized by a baptized Jew named Kneppe, and imprisoned in a fortress near Ensisheim in Alsace. Tradition has it that a large ransom of 23,000 marks silver was raised for him (by the Rosh), but Rabbi Meir refused it, for fear of encouraging the imprisonment of other rabbis. He ruled on his own abduction in light of Talmudic law. He died in prison after seven years. Fourteen years after his death a ransom was paid for his body by Alexander ben Salomon Wimpfen, who was subsequently laid to rest beside the Maharam in the Jewish cemetery of Worms.〔http://www.chabad.org/calendar/view/day.asp?id=265714&tDate=3/4/2006#265714〕

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