JaazerJE (JE | WP GWPG) A city east of the Jordan, in or near Gilead (Num. xxxii. 1, 3; I Chron. l.c.), and inhabited by the Amorites. It was taken...
Jabal ibn JawwalJE (JE | WP GWPG) Jewish Arabic poet of the seventh century; contemporary of Mohammed. According to ibn Hisham ("Kitab Sirat Rasul Allah," ed...
Abu al-Tayyib al-Jabali (JE | WP GWPG) Karaite scholar of the tenth century. His full name is said to have been Samuel ben Asher ben Manṣur. The surname "al-Jabali"...
Jabbok (JE | WP GWPG) One of the principal tributaries of the Jordan; first mentioned in connection with the meeting of Jacob and Esau and with...
Jabesh (JE | WP GWPG) Principal city of Gilead, east of the Jordan. It is first mentioned in connection with the war between the Benjamites and...
Jabez (JE | WP GWPG) Eponym of a clan of the Kenite family of the Rechabites, which clan was merged into the tribe of Judah. I Chron. ii. 55 refers...
Barzillai ben Baruch Jabez (JE | WP GWPG) Turkish Talmudist of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; son-in-law of Elijah Ḥako, author of "Ruach Eliyahu...
Joseph ben Hayyim JabezJE (JE | WP GWPG) Spanish theologian of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. He lived for a time in Portugal, where he associated with Joseph...
Jabin (JE | WP GWPG) King of Hazor; head of one of the great confederations which faced Joshua in his conquest of Canaan (Josh. xi.). He summoned...
Daniel E Jablonski (JE | WP GWPG) German Christian theologian and Orientalist; born Nov. 26, 1660, in Danzig; died May 25, 1741, in Berlin. After spending some...
Jabneh (JE | WP GWPG) Philistine city; taken by Uzziah, who demolished its wall (II Chron. xxvi. 6). Jabneh is mentioned with Gath and Ashdod, two...
Jaca (JE | WP GWPG) City of Aragon, Spain. Jews were settled here as early as the eleventh century, during which the city became the seat of a...
Jachin (JE | WP GWPG) 1. The righthand pillar of the two brazen ones set up in the porch of the Temple of Solomon, that on the left or north being...
Jäcklin (Jacob) (JE | WP GWPG) Jewish financier of Ulm in the fourteenth century; married the daughter of the "Grossjuden" Moses of Ehingen. Jäcklin...
Harry Jackson (JE | WP GWPG) English actor; born in London 1836; died there Aug. 13, 1885. At an early age he left England for Australia, where he adopted...
Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) Third patriarch; son of Isaac and Rebekah, and ancestor of the Israelites. Hewas born when his father was sixty years old...
Blessing of Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) Name given to the chapter containing the prophetic utterances of Jacob concerning the destiny of his twelve sons as the fathers...
21 – 40
Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the second century; probably identical with Jacob b. Korshai (= "the Korshaite," or "of Korsha")...
Jacob b. Aaron of KarlinJE (JE | WP GWPG) Russian rabbi and author; died at Karlin, government of Minsk, 1855. He was a grandson of Baruch of Shklov, the mathematician...
Jacob b. Abba (JE | WP GWPG) Babylonian scholar of the third century; junior to Rab (B. M. 41a). He was an expert dialectician, and prevailed in argument...
Jacob bar Abina (Abin; Bun) (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fourth century. He is known as having transmitted the haggadot of Samuel b. Nachman, Abbahu...
Jacob ben Abraham FaitusiJE (JE | WP GWPG) Tunisian scholar; died at Algiers July, 1812. He settled in the later part of his life at Jerusalem, whence he was sent as...
Jacob bar Aha (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the third generation (latter part of the third century); contemporary of R. Ze'era. He rarely gives...
Jacob ben Amram (JE | WP GWPG) Polemical writer of the seventeenth century. He wrote in 1634, in Latin, a book against the religion of the Christians, with...
Jacob ben Asher (JE | WP GWPG) German codifier and Biblical commentator; died at Toledo, Spain, before 1340. Very little is known of Jacob's life; and...
Jacob (Aberle, Abril) Benedict (Benet) (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi at Alt-Ofen at the beginning of the nineteenth century; son of Mordecai b. Abraham Benet (Marcus Benedict). Jacob was...
Jacob ben Benjamin Zeeb Sak (JE | WP GWPG) About 1665 Jacob was appointed rabbi of Trebitsch, later of Ungarisch-Brod, and after the death of Ephraim he officiated in...
Benno Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) German rabbi and Biblical scholar; born at Breslau Sept. 8, 1862; educated at the gymnasium, the university, and the theological...
Jacob Çadique (Zaddik) (JE | WP GWPG) Spanish physician and writer; born at Ucles in the second third of the fourteenth century. He devoted himself to the study...
Jacob of Chinon (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist; lived about 1190-1260. He was a pupil of Isaac ben Abraham of Dampierre and a teacher of Perez of Corbeil...
Jacob of Corbeil (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist of the twelfth century. He was the brother of Judah of Corbeil, author of tosafot to various treatises of...
Jacob of Coucy (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist of the thirteenth century; mentioned in tosafot to Kiddushin (43b, 67a), by Mordecai, and in Joseph...
Jacob ben David Provençal (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudist of the fifteenth century; not to be confounded with the astronomer Jacob ben David ben Yom-Tob Po'...
Jacob b. Eleazar (JE | WP GWPG) Spanish grammarian of the first third of the thirteenth century. The assumption that he lived in the first third of the twelfth...
Jacob ben EphraimUNR (JE | WP GWPG) Syrian Talmudist of the tenth century. From Salmon b. Jeroham's commentary to Psalms (cxl. 6) it appears that Jacob b...
Jacob ben Ephraim of LublinJE (JE | WP GWPG) Polish rabbi; died in Lublin 1648. At first he occupied the post of rabbi and instructor at the yeshibah of that city, whence...
Jacob the Galilean (JE | WP GWPG) Son of the Judah who caused an uprising against the Romans at the time of the taxation under Quirinius. Jacob followed his...
Jacob Gebulaah (Gebulaya) (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the third century; disciple of Johanan (Yer. Yeb. viii. 9b). He seems also to have sat at the feet...
Jacob b. Gershom ha-Gozer (JE | WP GWPG) German Talmudist of the twelfth century. He was a nephew of Ephraim b. Jacob of Bonn, with whom he carried on a scientific...
Jacob ben Hananeel Sekili (JE | WP GWPG) Bible commentator and cabalist; lived in the fourteenth century. He was the author of "Minchat ha-Bikkurim," the first...
Jacob ben Hayyim ben Isaac ibn AdonijahJE (JE | WP GWPG) Masorite and printer; born about 1470 at Tunis (hence sometimes called Tunisi); died before 1538. He left his native country...
Israel Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) German banker and philanthropist; born April 14, 1729, at Halberstadt; died Nov. 25, 1803. He was widely respected for his...
Jacob ben Israel ha-Levi (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of Zante; died on that island in 1634. He was a native of Morea, Greece, and passed the earlier part of his life at...
Jacob b. Jacob ha-Kohen (JE | WP GWPG) Spanish cabalist of the end of the thirteenth century; born at Soria; buried at Segovia; also called Gikatilla, according...
Jacob ben Jacob Moses of LissaJE (JE | WP GWPG) German Talmudist; died in Stryj, Galicia, May 25, 1832. He was a great-grandson of Zebi Ashkenazi and a pupil of Meshullam...
Jacob ben Jekuthiel (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudic scholar; born at Rouen; died at Arras in 1023. Jacob became known by the fact that he was the bearer of a...
Jacob ben Joel (JE | WP GWPG) Russian rabbi in Brest-Litovsk in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He wrote: "She'erit Ya'akob," containing...
Jacob ben Joseph Israel (JE | WP GWPG) French scholar; lived at Pont-Audemer in the twelfth century; pupil of Jacob Tam, with whom he carried on a correspondence...
Jacob Joshua ben Zebi HirschJE (JE | WP GWPG) Polish rabbi; born at Cracow in 1680; died at Offenbach Jan. 16, 1756. On his mother's side he was a grandson of Joshua...
Jacob ben Judah Hazzan of London (JE | WP GWPG) English codifier of the thirteenth century. His grandfather was one Jacob he-Aruk (possibly Jacob le Long). In 1287 Jacob...
Jacob ben Judah Löb (JE | WP GWPG) Polish rabbi; lived in the second half of the eighteenth century. Educated as a Talmudist, he became rabbi of Krasnopolie...
Julius Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) German landscape- and portrait-painter; born in Berlin April 25, 1811; died there Oct. 20, 1882. He studied under Wach at...
Jacob of Kefar Hanan (Hanin) (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the third generation (3d and 4th cent.). Jacob is especially known as a haggadist (Pesik. iv. 30b...
Jacob of Kefar HitTaya (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the second century; contemporary of Judah I. Jacob is said to have been in the habit of visiting his...
Jacob of Kefar Neburaya (JE | WP GWPG) Judæo-Christian of the fourth century. Neburaya is probably identical with Nabratain, a place to the north of Safed,...
Jacob of Kefar Sekanya (Simaï) (JE | WP GWPG) Judæo-Christian of the first century; mentioned on two occasions, in both Talmuds and in the Midrash. Meeting R. Eliezer...
Jacob ha-Levi He-hasid (JE | WP GWPG) French rabbi and cabalist; lived in the thirteenth century, at Marvège. It was said that by prayers and invocations he...
Jacob of LondonJE (JE | WP GWPG) First known presbyter of the Jews of England; appointed to that position by King John in 1199, who also gave him a safe conduct...
Jacob ben Meïr Tam (JE | WP GWPG) Most prominent of French tosafists; born at Ramerupt, on the Seine, in 1100; died at Troyes June 9, 1171. His mother, Jochebed...
Jacob ben Mordecai (JE | WP GWPG) German scholar; flourished in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. A native of Fulda, he was generally called "Jacob...
Jacob ben Mordecai ha-Kohen (JE | WP GWPG) Gaon of Sura from 801 to 815; succeeded Hilai ben Mari. He officiated fourteen years, according to a text of Sherira ("M....
Jacob ben Moses ben Abun (JE | WP GWPG) Head of the yeshibah of Narbonne, France. As Abraham b. David in his "Sefer ha-Kabbalah" (MS. quoted by Abraham Zacuto...
Jacob ben Moses of Bagnols (JE | WP GWPG) Provençal theologian of the second half of the fourteenth century; lived successively at Salon, Avignon, and Argon. He...
Jacob ibn Na'im (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of Smyrna toward the end of the seventeenth century. He corresponded with Ḥayyim Benveniste, author of "Keneset...
81 – 100
Jacob ben Naphtali (JE | WP GWPG) Talmudist of Gnesen; flourished about 1650. His father was clerk of the Jewry in Great Poland (), and died in 1646. Jacob...
Jacob ben Naphtali ha-Kohen (JE | WP GWPG) Italian printer; born in Gazolo; lived in the sixteenth century. For some time prior to 1556 he was the manager of Tobiah...
Jacob ben Nathanael ibn al-FayyumiJE (JE | WP GWPG) Rosh yeshibah of the Yemen Jews in the second half of the twelfth century. All that is known of him is that at the suggestion...
Jacob bar Natronai (JE | WP GWPG) Gaon of Sura (911-924). After the death of his predecessor, Shalom bar Mishael, the Academy of Sura became impoverished and...
Jacob Nazir (JE | WP GWPG) French exegete; flourished in the second half of the twelfth century; one of the five sons of Meshullam ben Jacob of Lunel...
Jacob ben Nissim ibn ShahinJE (JE | WP GWPG) Philosopher; lived at Kairwan in the tenth century; younger contemporary of Saadia. At Jacob's request Sherira Gaon wrote...
Jacob ben Obadiah Sforno (JE | WP GWPG) Italian scholar; lived at Venice in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He was the author of a work entitled "Iggeret...
Jacob of Orleans (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist; died as a martyr in London Sept. 3, 1189. He was one of the most distinguished pupils of Rabbenu Tam, being...
Jacob of Pont Saint-Maxence (JE | WP GWPG) French tax-farmer of the fourteenth century. With Manecier of Vesoul and his brother Vivant he was appointed (1360) by Charles...
Jacob ben ReubenJE (JE | WP GWPG) Karaite Bible exegete of the eleventh century. He wrote a brief Hebrew commentary on the entire Bible, which he entitled "Sefer...
Jacob ben Reuben ibn ZurJE (JE | WP GWPG) Talmudist and rabbi of Fez; born in the latter part of the seventeenth century; died after 1750. That his reputation as a...
Jacob ben Samson (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist and liturgist; flourished at Paris or at Falaise in the first third of the twelfth century. He is mentioned...
Jacob ben Sheshet Gerondi (JE | WP GWPG) Spanish cabalist of Gerona (whence his surname "Gerondi") in the thirteenth century. He was the author of "Sha'ar ha-Shamayim...
Jacob ben Solomon (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist; born at Courson, department of the Yonne; flourished between 1180 and 1250. He was a pupil of Samson of Sens...
Jacob ben Sosa (JE | WP GWPG) Idumean leader. In the great war against Rome, 67-70, when Simon bar Giora went on a raid through Idumæa to take provisions...
Jacob of Vienna (JE | WP GWPG) Austrian rabbi and Biblical commentator of the fourteenth century. The Munich MSS. (Hebrew) contain a commentary on the Pentateuch...
Jacob b. YakarJE (JE | WP GWPG) German Talmudist; flourished in the first half of the eleventh century. He was a pupil of Gershom b. Judah in Mayence, and...
Jacob ben Zabda (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fourth generation (4th cent.); junior contemporary, and probably pupil, of Abbahu, in whose name...
Abraham Jacobi (JE | WP GWPG) American physician; born at Hartum, near Minden, Westphalia, May 6, 1830; educated at the universities of Greifswald, Gö...
Heinrich Otto Jacobi (JE | WP GWPG) German philologist; born at Tütz, West Prussia, 1815; died in Berlin 1864. He studied at Berlin University, and received...
Karl Gustav Jakob Jacobi (JE | WP GWPG) German mathematician; born Dec. 10, 1804, at Potsdam; died at Berlin Feb. 18, 1851; brother of Moritz Hermaun Jacobi. He studied...
Moritz Hermann Jacobi (JE | WP GWPG) German physicist; born Sept. 21, 1801, at Potsdam; died March 10, 1874, at St. Petersburg. He was established as architect...
Samuel Jacobi (JE | WP GWPG) Danish physician; born in Yaroslav, Galicia, 1764; died in Copenhagen 1811. He studied the Talmud for some years, but later...
George Jacobs (JE | WP GWPG) American rabbi of English Sephardic descent; born in Kingston, Jamaica, Sept. 24, 1834; died in Philadelphia July 14, 1884...
Henry S Jacobs (JE | WP GWPG) American rabbi; born in Kingston, Jamaica, March 22, 1827; died in New York Sept. 12, 1893. He studied for the Jewish ministry...
Joseph Jacobs (JE | WP GWPG) Critic, folklorist, historian, statistician, communal worker; born Aug. 29, 1854, at Sydney, N. S. W.; educated at Sydney...
Joseph Jacobs (JE | WP GWPG) English conjurer; born at Canterbury 1813; died Oct. 13, 1870. He first appeared in London at Horn's Tavern, Kennington...
Simeon JacobsJE (JE | WP GWPG) Judge in the Supreme Court of the Cape of Good Hope; born in 1830; died in London June 15, 1883. He became a barrister of...
Paul Jacobsohn (JE | WP GWPG) German physician and hygienist; born in Berlin Sept. 30, 1868; educated at the gymnasium in Berlin and the universities of...
Jacobson (JE | WP GWPG) Danish family of engravers, of whom the first important member was Aaron Jacobson (1717-75), who, in the middle of the eighteenth...
Eduard Jacobson (JE | WP GWPG) German dramatist; born at Gross Strelitz, Silesia, Nov. 10, 1833 (M.D. Berlin, 1859); died in Berlin Jan. 29, 1897. He established...
Heinrich Jacobson (JE | WP GWPG) German physician; born Oct. 27, 1826, at Königsberg, East Prussia; died Dec. 10, 1890, at Berlin; educated at the gymnasium...
Heinrich Friedrich Jacobson (JE | WP GWPG) German jurist and writer on ecclesiastical law; born at Marienwerder June 8, 1804; died at Königsberg March 19, 1868...
121 – 140
Israel JacobsonJE (JE | WP GWPG) German philanthropist and reformer; born in Halberstadt Oct. 17, 1768; died in Hanover Sept. 14, 1828. Originally his father'...
Ludwig Lewin JacobsonJE (JE | WP GWPG) Danish surgeon; born in Copenhagen Jan. 10, 1783; died there Aug. 29, 1843. He received his early education at the German...
Nathan Jacobson (JE | WP GWPG) American surgeon; born in Syracuse, N. Y., June 25, 1857. He was graduated from Syracuse University, and took a postgraduate...
Johann Eduard Jacobsthal (JE | WP GWPG) German architect; born at Stargard, Pomerania, Sept. 17, 1839. He studied at the architectural academy in Berlin, and, after...
Johann Jacoby (JE | WP GWPG) German physician and statesman; born at Königsberg, Prussia, May 1, 1805; died there March 6, 1877. The son of a well-to-do...
Louis JacobyJE (JE | WP GWPG) German engraver; born June 7, 1828, at Havelberg, Brandenburg, Germany; pupil of the engraver Mandel of Berlin, in which city...
Jacopo (Jacomo) Sansecondo (JE | WP GWPG) Italian musician of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries; born about 1468. Jacopo was an eminent violinist; his reputation...
Heinrich Jacques (JE | WP GWPG) Austrian deputy; born in Vienna Feb. 24, 1831; shot himself Jan. 25, 1894. He studied philosophy and history at Heidelberg...
Jacques Pasha (Jacques Nissim Pasha) (JE | WP GWPG) Turkish army surgeon; born in 1850 at Salonica; died there Aug. 25, 1903. The son of a physician, he was sent at an early...
Josef Jadassohn (JE | WP GWPG) German physician; born at Liegnitz Sept. 10, 1863. He was educated at the universities of Göttingen, Breslau, Heidelberg...
Solomon Jadassohn (JE | WP GWPG) German composer and music teacher; born at Breslau, Prussia, Aug. 13, 1831; pupil at the Breslau gymnasium and of Hesse (pianoforte)...
Jaddua (JE | WP GWPG) High priest at the time of the Second Temple. According to Neh. xii. 11, his father's name was Jonathan, but according...
Jael, the Kenite woman (JE | WP GWPG) Wife of Heber, the Kenite (Judges iv. 17). Jabin, the king of Canaan, "that reigned in Hazor," had tyrannized over Israel...
Jaen (JE | WP GWPG) Capital of the province of Jaen in Andalusia, Spain. It possessed a flourishing Jewish community as early as the thirteenth...
Jaffa (JE | WP GWPG) City of Palestine and Mediterranean port, 35 miles northwest of Jerusalem. In ancient times it was Palestine's only point...
Jaffe (Joffe) >>Philipp JafféJE (JE | WP GWPG) Family of rabbis, scholars, and communal workers, with members in Germany, Austria, Russia, Great Britain, Italy, and the...
Abraham ben Hananiah dei Galicchi JagelJE (JE | WP GWPG) Italian catechist, philosopher, and cabalist; born at Monselice; lived successively at Luzzara, Venice, Ferrara, and Sassuolo...
Gamaliel ben Hananiah Jagel, of Monselice (JE | WP GWPG) Italian scholar; lived at Ferrara, later at Parma, in the seventeenth century. He filled the position of chief rabbi or head...
Jahrzeit (JE | WP GWPG) Judæo-German term denoting the anniversary of a death, commemorated by mourning and by reciting the Kaddish. The...
Jahvist (JE | WP GWPG) the name given in modern Bible criticism to the supposed author of those portions of the Pentateuch (or of the Hexateuch)...
Jair (JE | WP GWPG) A contemporary of Moses, called in the Pentateuch "son of Manasseh," who in the beginning of the conquest took from the Amorites...
Mordecai b. David Jalomstein (JE | WP GWPG) American journalist; born in Suwalki, Russian Poland, 1835; died in New York city Aug. 18, 1897. He was well versed in Talmudic...
Jamaica (JE | WP GWPG) Largest island in the British West Indies. It has a total population of 644,841 (1901), of whom about 2,400 are Jews. When...
James (JE | WP GWPG) Name of three persons prominent in New Testament history. (see image) Synagogue at Spanish Town, Jamaica.(From a photograph...
General Epistle of James (JE | WP GWPG) Letter of exhortation and instruction, written by "James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ," and addressed "to...
David James (David Belasco) (JE | WP GWPG) English comedian; born at Birmingham 1839; died in London Oct. 3, 1893. Under the auspices of Charles Kean, James made his...
Jannes and Jambres (JE | WP GWPG) Names of two legendary wizards of Pharaoh "who withstood Moses" (II Tim. iii. 8) by imitating "with their enchantments" the...
David Janowski (JE | WP GWPG) Russian chess-player; born May 25, 1868, in Russian Poland. He learned to play chess as a child, but did not make a serious...
Januarius (JE | WP GWPG) Talmudic name of a legendary hero; it is taken from the name of the first of the twelve Roman months. R. Johanan, in Yer....
Japheth (JE | WP GWPG) One of the sons of Noah, and the ancestor of a branch of the human race called "Japhetites." Japheth and his two brothers...
Japheth ha-LeviJE (JE | WP GWPG) Karaite Bible translator and commentator; flourished at Jerusalem between 950 and 980. He was one of the most able Bible commentators...
Japhia (JE | WP GWPG) 1. King of Lachish, and one of the five kings who, entering into a confederacy against Joshua (Josh. x. 3), were killed by...
Josef Jarno (Josef Cohen) (JE | WP GWPG) Austrian actor; born at Budapest Aug. 24, 1866. He was educated for a mercantile career, but went on the stage when nineteen...
Aaron JaroslawJE (JE | WP GWPG) One of the Biurists; a tutor in the house of Mendelssohn; afterward teacher at Lemberg. His commentary on the Book of Numbers...
Book of Jasher (JE | WP GWPG) A book, apparently containing heroic songs, mentioned twice in the Old Testament: in the account of the battle of Gibeon a...
Jason (JE | WP GWPG) High priest from 174 to 171 B.C.; brother of the high priest Onias III. During the absence of Onias, who had been summoned...
Jason of Cyrene (JE | WP GWPG) Judæo-Hellenistic historian. He wrote a history of the Maccabean revolt in five books, from which the author of II Maccabees...
Jassy (Jaschi) (JE | WP GWPG) City of Rumania. Jassy contains the oldest and most important Jewish community of Moldavia, of which principality it was formerly...
Ignaz Jastrow (JE | WP GWPG) German economist and statistician; born Sept. 13, 1856, at Nakel. Having studied at Breslau, Berlin, and Göttingen (Ph...
Joseph Jastrow (JE | WP GWPG) American psychologist; born Jan. 30, 1863, at Warsaw, Poland. He accompanied his father, Dr. Marcus Jastrow, to the United...
Marcus (Mordecai) JastrowJE (JE | WP GWPG) American rabbi and scholar; born June 5, 1829, at Rogasen, Prussian Poland; died Oct. 13, 1903, at Germantown, Pa.; fifth...
Morris Jastrow, Jr (JE | WP GWPG) American Orientalist and librarian; son of Marcus Jastrow; born Aug. 13, 1861, at Warsaw, Poland. His family removed to the...
Jativa (JE | WP GWPG) City in the kingdom of Valencia. The Jews of this locality were granted special privileges by Don Jaime, the conqueror of...
Emile Javal (JE | WP GWPG) French physician and deputy; born May 5, 1839, at Paris; son of Leopold Javal. Emile studied both medicine and mineralogy...
Ernest Leopold Javal (JE | WP GWPG) French administrative officer; born Sept. 25, 1843, at Paris; died there Sept. 1, 1897; son of Leopold Javal. He was a lieutenant...
Leopold Javal (JE | WP GWPG) French politician; born at Mülhausen Dec. 1, 1804; died at Paris March 28, 1872. The son of a wealthy merchant, he entered...
Javan (JE | WP GWPG) Name of one of the seven sons of Japheth, given in the list of nations (Gen. x. 2, 4; comp. I Chron. i. 5, 7), and as such...
Samuel Isaac Jawlikar (JE | WP GWPG) Beni-Israel; born about 1820 in Bombay. He enlisted in the Third Bombay Native Light Infantry April 4, 1840; was promoted...
JebusitesJE (JE | WP GWPG) One of the nations that occupied Palestine at the time of the invasion of the Israelites. In the list of the sons of Canaan...
Jedidah (JE | WP GWPG) Mother of Josiah, King of Judah; daughter of Adaiah. of Boscath, and wife of Amon (II Kings xxi. 26, xxii. 1). The name means...
Jedidiah (Gottlieb) ben Abraham Israel (JE | WP GWPG) Galician preacher and Masorite; lived at Lemberg in the seventeenth century. He wrote: "Ahabat ha-Shem," fifty haggadic expositions...
Jedidiah ben Moses of Recanati (JE | WP GWPG) Italian scholar; flourished in the second half of the sixteenth century. At the request of Immanuel di Fano, Jedidiah translated...
Jehiel ben AsherJE (JE | WP GWPG) Liturgical poet; flourished in Andalusia in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. He was the author of four liturgical poems...
Jehiel ben Joseph of Paris (JE | WP GWPG) Tosafist and controversialist; born at Meaux at the end of the twelfth century; died in Palestine in 1286. His French name...
Jehiel Michael ben Eliezer (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi at Nemirov, Russia; murdered May, 1648. When the hordes of Chmielnicki, taking Nemirov, began the work of pillage and...
Jehiel Michael ben Judah Löb (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of Berlin; died March, 1728. After filling the office of rabbi in several Polish communities he removed about 1701 to...
Jehiel Michael ben Uzziel of Glogau (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbinical author; died in Vienna 1730. He was well versed in the Midrashim, and was the author of "Nezer ha-Kodesh...
Jehiel of PisaJE (JE | WP GWPG) Philanthropist and scholar of Pisa; died there Feb. 10, 1492. The wealth he had acquired in the banking business he spent...
Jehoahaz (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Jehu; second king in the fifth dynasty of northern Israel; reigned 814-797 B.C. During the period of his rule Syria...
Jehoiachin (JE | WP GWPG) King of Judah; son and successor of Jehoiakim (II Kings xxiv. 6); reigned a little over three months. He was scarcely on the...
Jehoiada (JE | WP GWPG) High priest under Ahaziah, Athaliah, and Jehoash (Joash). By his marriage with the princess Jehosheba or Jehoshabeath, daughter...
Jehoiakim (JE | WP GWPG) King of Judah (608-597 B.C.); eldest son of Josiah, and brother and successor of Jehoahaz (Shallum), whom Pharaohnecho had...
201 to 300
201 – 220
Jehonadab (Jonadab) (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Rechab, a Kenite (I Chron. ii. 55), the founder of the so-called Rechabites (I Chron. ii. 55; Jer. xxxv. 6-7). The...
Jehoram (Joram) (JE | WP GWPG) King of Israel (852-842 B.C.); son of Ahab and Jezebel; brother and successor of Ahaziah. Like his predecessors, Jehoram worshiped...
Jehoshabeath (JE | WP GWPG) Daughter of Jehoram, King of Judah, and wife of the high priest Jehoiada, together with whom she saved her brother's son...
Jehoshaphat (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Asa; fourth king of Judah (873-c. 849 B.C.); contemporary of Ahab, Ahaziah, and Jehoram, kings of Israel. He inaugurated...
Valley of Jehoshaphat (JE | WP GWPG) A valley mentioned by the prophet Joel (Joel iv. [A. V. iii.] 2, 12), where, after the return of Judah and Jerusalem from...
JehovahJE (JE | WP GWPG) A mispronunciation (introduced by Christian theologians, but almost entirely disregarded by the Jews) of the Hebrew "Yhwh...
Jehovah-jireh (JE | WP GWPG) Name given by Abraham to the place where he sacrificed a ram instead of his son Isaac (Gen. xxii. 14). The name may be an...
Jehu (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Jehoshaphat and grandson of Nimshi, founder of the fifth Israelitish dynasty (842-743 B.C.); died 815 B.C., in the...
Jehudi b. Sheshet (JE | WP GWPG) Hebrew philologist of the tenth century; pupil of Dunash b. Labraṭ. He is known exclusively through the polemic in which...
Jeiteles (Jeitteles) (JE | WP GWPG) Austrian family of some importance, which can be traced back to the first half of the eighteenth century. Aaron (Andreas)...
Alois Jeiteles (JE | WP GWPG) Austrian physician and poet; born June 20, 1794 (or 1795), at Brünn, Moravia; died there April 16, 1858. He studied philosophy...
Jekuthiel ibn Hasan (JE | WP GWPG) Statesman and scientist of the eleventh century; lived in Saragossa. According to Geiger, he is identical with the astronomer...
Jekuthiel ben Judah ha-Kohen (JE | WP GWPG) Grammarian of Prague; lived in the second half of the thirteenth century. Baer claimed to have seen a manuscript which gave...
Jekuthiel ben Löb Gordon (JE | WP GWPG) Russian physician and cabalist; born at the beginning of the eighteenth century. Even as a young man he enjoyed a reputation...
Jekuthiel ben Solomon (JE | WP GWPG) French physician; lived at Narbonne in the second half of the fourteenth century. In 1387 he translated into Hebrew, under...
Aryeh Löb JelinJE (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of Byelsk, government of Grodno, Russia; born 1820; died April 2, 1886. He was one of the most prominent Russian rabbis...
Jellinek (JE | WP GWPG) Austrian family whose name has been rendered illustrious by the great preacher Adolf Jellinek. Adolf Jellinek: Austrian...
Jephthah (JE | WP GWPG) Judge of Israel during six years (Judges xii. 7); conqueror of the Ammonites. According to Judges xi. 1, he was a Gileadite...
JerahmeelJE (JE | WP GWPG) David, while he was a refugee at the court of Achish, King of Gath, is said to have made a raid against the "south of the...
Jeremiah (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Hilkiah; prophet in the days of Josiah and his sons. § I. Life: in the case of no other Israelitish prophet...
Book of JeremiahJE (JE | WP GWPG) Contents: At the beginning of the book is a superscription (i. 1-3) which, after giving the parentage of Jeremiah, fixes the...
Epistle of Jeremiah (JE | WP GWPG) A Greek apocryphon, being a fictitious letter which Jeremiah is supposed to have written to the Jews who were about to be...
Jeremiah (JE | WP GWPG) Polish rabbi in the second half of the eighteenth century; head of the yeshibah at Mattersdorf, Hungary, in which he devoted...
Jeremiah (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the fourth century; always quoted by the single name "Jeremiah," though sometimes that name is used...
Jeremiah b. Abba (JE | WP GWPG) Babylonian amora of the third century; disciple and fellow of Rab (Ber. 27b). In Yerushalmi his patronymic is often omitted...
Jeremiah of Difta (JE | WP GWPG) Babylonian amora of the fourth century; contemporary of Papi (B. B. 52a; 'Ab. Zarah 40a). Rabbina, who eventually assisted...
Jeremiah ben Eleazar (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the second century; contemporary of Simeon b. Gamaliel, the father of Judah I. He is known through...
Jeremiah ben Jacob ben Israel Naphtali (JE | WP GWPG) German Talmudist and philanthropist; died in Halberstadt before 1664. Like his father, Jacob (Jockel Halberstadt), Jeremiah...
Jericho (JE | WP GWPG) A city in the Jordan valley, opposite Nebo (Deut. xxxii. 49), to the west of Gilgal (Josh. iv. 19). Owing to its importance...
Jeridie-Terjume (JE | WP GWPG) Title of a Jewish periodical, written in Judæo-Spanish, and printed in rabbinic characters, which was published at Constantinople...
Jeroboam (JE | WP GWPG) Name of two kings of Israel. The meaning generally attached to the name is "[he] strives with [oppresses] the people," or...
Jeroham ben Meshullam (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudist; flourished in the first half of the fourteenth century. According to Gross, he lived in Languedoc, but on...
Jerome (Eusebius Hieronymus Sophronius) (JE | WP GWPG) Church father; next to Origen, who wrote in Greek, the most learned student of the Bible among the Latin ecclesiastical writers...
Jerubbaal (JE | WP GWPG) A name given to Gideon by his father, Joash (Judges vi. 32), because the men of the city of Ophrah demanded that he turn over...
Jerusalem (JE | WP GWPG) Capital at first of all Israel, later of the kingdom of Judah; chief city of Palestine; situated in 31° 46′ 45″...
Jeschurun (JE | WP GWPG) Periodical published in Frankfort-on-the-Main and subsequently in Hanover. Founded in Oct., 1854, it was issued as a monthly...
Jeshua ben JudahJE (JE | WP GWPG) Karaite exegete and philosopher; flourished, probably at Jerusalem, in the second half of the eleventh century; pupil of Joseph...
Jeshurun (JE | WP GWPG) Poetical name for Israel, occurring four times in the Bible (Deut. xxxii. 15, xxxiii. 5, 26; Isa. xliv. 2; in the last-cited...
Samuel JesiJE (JE | WP GWPG) Italian engraver; born at Milan 1789; died at Florence Jan. 17, 1853. He was a pupil of G. Longhi at the Academy of Milan...
Jesse (JE | WP GWPG) Father of David, son of Obed, and grandson of Boaz and Ruth. He is called "the Bethlehemite" (I Sam. xvi. 1, 18; xvii. 58)...
Sir George Jessel (JE | WP GWPG) English master of the rolls; born in London 1824; died there March 21, 1883; youngest son of Zadok Aaron Jessel. Educatedat...
Jesurun (JE | WP GWPG) A family whose members were descendants of the Spanish exiles, and are found mainly in Amsterdam and Hamburg. The earliest...
Jesus of Nazareth (JE | WP GWPG) Founder of Christianity; born at Nazareth about 2 B.C. (according to Luke iii. 23); executed at Jerusalem 14th of Nisan, 3789...
Jesus b. Phabi (JE | WP GWPG) High priest (c. 30 B.C.). He was deposed by Herod the Great, his office being given to Simon, the son of Boethus, the king'...
Jesus ben Zappha (JE | WP GWPG) General (στρατηγός) of Idumæa in the first century, appointed by the revolutionary...
Jethro>>Jethro in rabbinic literatureJE (JE | WP GWPG) Priest of Midian and father-in-law of Moses (Ex. iii. 1 et al.). In the account of the marriage of his daughter Zipporah to...
Jew (The Word) (JE | WP GWPG) Up to the seventeenth century this word was spelled in Middle English in various ways: "Gyu," "Giu," "Gyw," "Iu," "luu," "Iuw...
The Jew (JE | WP GWPG) Jewish monthly whose avowed object finds expression in its subtitle as "being a defense of Judaism against all adversaries...
Jacob Jewell (JE | WP GWPG) Owner of the largest traveling circus in England; died Sept., 1884; tenant, under W. Holland, of North Woolwich Gardens for...
Jewesses (JE | WP GWPG) Anthropologically considered, Jewesses present certain distinctive physiognomic and epidermic characteristics marking them...
Jewish Abend-Post (JE | WP GWPG) Yiddish newspaper, issued daily except Saturday and Jewish holidays, established in New York Feb. 3, 1899, by Jacob Saphirstein...
The Jewish Chronicle (JE | WP GWPG) Oldest and most influential Anglo-Jewish newspaper; published in London, England; next to the "Allgemeine Zeitung des Judenthums...
The Jewish Colonial Trust (Jüdische Colonialbank) (JE | WP GWPG) the financial instrument of the Zionist movement. Its establishment was suggested at the First Zionist Congress, held at Basel...
Jewish Colonization Association (JE | WP GWPG) Society founded by Baron de Hirsch Sept., 1891, and incorporated at London under the Companies' Acts of 1862-90, with...
Jewish Comment (JE | WP GWPG) A weekly published at Baltimore, Md., since May 29, 1895. Its first editor was Max Myers; he was succeeded by Louis H. Levin...
The Jewish Criterion (JE | WP GWPG) American weekly newspaper; established at Pittsburg, Pa., Feb; 8, 1895, by S. Steinfirst and Joseph Mayer. Rabbi Samuel Greenfield...
The Jewish Exponent (JE | WP GWPG) A weekly published in Philadelphia and Baltimore since 1887, when it was founded by the Jewish Exponent Publishing Company...
Jewish Historical Society of England (JE | WP GWPG) After the Anglo-Jewish Historical Exhibition in 1887, it was proposed by Lucien Wolf to form a historical society to continue...
Jewish Lads' Brigade (JE | WP GWPG) Military association of English Jewish boys, formed, organized, and directed by Col. Albert E. W. Goldsmid "to instil into...
281 – 300
The Jewish Ledger (JE | WP GWPG) Weekly journal; founded in New Orleans, La., Jan. 4, 1895, by A. Steeg, who is still (1904) its publisher. Its first editor...
The Jewish Messenger (JE | WP GWPG) Weekly; published in New York city; founded and edited by R. Samuel M. Isaacs (Jan., 1857). Upon his death his son Abram S...
Jewish Morning Journal (Morgen Journal) (JE | WP GWPG) the first Yiddish daily morning newspaper; established in New York July 2, 1901, by Jacob Saphirstein, who is still (1904)...
Jewish Publication Society of America (JE | WP GWPG) Society for "the publication and dissemination of literary, scientific, and religious works giving instruction in the principles...
Jewish Quarterly ReviewJE (JE | WP GWPG) Journal of Jewish science; founded in London Oct., 1888; edited by Israel Abrahams and C. G. Montefiore. While containing...
The Jewish Record (JE | WP GWPG) Weekly; published in Philadelphia, Pa., from 1874 until the spring of 1887. Alfred T. Jones was the editor, and later Henry...
The Jewish Review and Observer (JE | WP GWPG) American weekly newspaper; founded under the name "The Jewish Review" in Nov., 1893, by M. Machol and his son Jacob Machol...
The Jewish Spectator (JE | WP GWPG) the first Jewish weekly journal in the southern United States; founded in Memphis, Tenn., Oct. 19, 1885, by M. Samfield and...
Jewish Theological Seminary of America (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbinic seminary established in New York city under the auspices of the Jewish Theological Seminary Association; founded...
The Jewish Times; A Journal of Reform and Progress (JE | WP GWPG) A weekly published in New York city. The first number appeared on March 5, 1869, Moritz Ellinger being the publisher, and...
Jewish Voice (JE | WP GWPG) American weekly newspaper; published in St. Louis, Mo., since Jan. 1, 1888. The present editor, M. Spitz, founded on Aug....
The Jewish World (Die Yiddische Welt) (JE | WP GWPG) Yiddish daily paper; founded in New York city June 27, 1902, by the Lebanon Printing and Publishing Company (president, H...
The Jewish World (JE | WP GWPG) the fourth Jewish newspaper published in London, immediately on the passing of the "Jewish Record." Its first number was issued...
Abraham Jonah b. Isaiah Jewnin (JE | WP GWPG) Russian Talmudist; a native of Paritz, government of Minsk; died at Grodno June 12, 1848, while still young. He was the author...
JewryJE (JE | WP GWPG) Originally a designation for Judea and sometimes for the entire Holy Land. The term was afterward applied to any special district...
Jews' College (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbinical seminary in London, England; it owes its existence to the chief rabbi Dr. N. M. Adler; the first stone was laid...
Jews' Walk (JE | WP GWPG) Name given to the southeast corner of the colonnade in the Royal Exchange, London, owing to the fact that the Jewish brokers...
Jezebel (JE | WP GWPG) Daughter of Ethbaal, King of Sidon, and wife of Ahab, second king of the fourth dynasty of Israel, founded by Omri (I Kings...
Jezelus (JE | WP GWPG) 1. Father of Sechenias, the chief of a family that returned with Ezra from captivity (I Esd. viii. 32). In Ezra viii. 5 he...
Jezreel (JE | WP GWPG) See Esdraelon.2. A city of Issachar, mentioned with Chesulloth and Shunem (Josh. xix. 18). Owing to its importance, Jezreel...
Solomon Ballajce Jhiratkar (JE | WP GWPG) Beni-Israel soldier; enlisted in the 14th Regiment Bombay N. L. I. in 1818; promoted jemidar Jan. 10, 1839; subahdar Jan....
Joab>>Joab in rabbinic literatureJE (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Zeruiah, David's sister (II Chron. ii. 16), and commander-in-chief of David's army. Joab first appears after...
Joab (JE | WP GWPG) Jewish family to which belonged Aaron b. Samuel ha-Nasi, who lived for some time at Oria in Apulia in the second half of the...
Joab ben Jehiel (JE | WP GWPG) Liturgical poet; lived at Rome in the fourteenth century. He belonged to the Beth-El family, and was the author of five piyyuṭ...
Joseph Joachim (JE | WP GWPG) Hungarian violinist; born at Kittsee, near Presburg, Hungary, June 28, 1831. He began to study the violin when he was five...
Philip J Joachimsen (JE | WP GWPG) American jurist and communal worker; born in Breslau Nov., 1817; died in New York city Jan. 6, 1890. He emigrated to New York...
Ferdinand J JoachimsthalJE (JE | WP GWPG) German mathematician; born May 9, 1818, at Goldberg, Silesia; died April 5, 1861, at Breslau. In the year of his graduation...
Georg Joachimsthal (JE | WP GWPG) German physician; born at Stargard, Pomerania, May 8, 1863. He graduated as doctor of medicine from the University of Berlin...
JoashJE (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Ahaziah and Zibiah of Beer-sheba; eighth king of Judah (II Kings xii. 1, 2). Joash was the only descendant of the house...
Job>>Job in rabbinic literatureJE (JE | WP GWPG) Titular hero of the Book of Job. He was a native of Uz, rich, very pious, and upright, and he had seven sons and three daughters...
The Book of Job (JE | WP GWPG) A dramatic poem in forty-two chapters, the characters in which are Job, his wife (mentioned only once, ii. 9), his three friends—...
Testament of Job (JE | WP GWPG) Greek apocryphal book, containing a haggadic story of Job. It was first published by Angelo Mai in the seventh volume of the...
Well of Job (JE | WP GWPG) A deep well, situated just below the junction of the valley of Hinnom with that of Jehoshaphat, the channel of the Kidron...
Jobab (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Joktan the Shemite (Gen. x. 29; I Chron. i. 23).2. Son of Zerah of Bozrah; second king of Edom (Gen. xxxvi. 33, 34...
Joceus (Joce) of YorkJE (JE | WP GWPG) English Jew of the preexpulsion period; leader of the York community at the time of the massacre in 1190. He is mentioned...
Jochebed (JE | WP GWPG) Wife and aunt of Amram, and mother of Aaron, Moses, and Miriam (Ex. vi. 20). She was the daughter of Levi, and was born in...
Waldemar JochelsonJE (JE | WP GWPG) Russian explorer and ethnologist; born in Wilna Jan. 1, 1856. He graduated from the gymnasium of Wilna, and became identified...
Joel (JE | WP GWPG) the superscription of the second book of the so-called Minor Prophets names as the author of the book "Joel, the son of Pethuel...
341 – 360
Book of Joel (JE | WP GWPG) the prophecies of the Book of Joel are divided into two parts, comprising respectively (1) ch. i. 2-ii. 17 and (2) ch. ii...
David Joël (JE | WP GWPG) German rabbi and author; born Jan. 12, 1815, at Inowrazlaw, Posen; died Sept. 7, 1882, at Breslau; brother of Manuel Joë...
Joel b. Isaac ha-Levi (JE | WP GWPG) German tosafist of the twelfth century; born probably at Bonn; died at Cologne about 1200. Joel studied in his youth at Ratisbon...
Joel b. Judah Selki ha-Levi (Lämmel?) (JE | WP GWPG) Author of "Dibre ha-Iggeret," a description of the sufferings of the Jews of Glogau when that town was besieged by the Prussians...
Karl Joël (JE | WP GWPG) German philosophical writer; born March 27, 1864, at Hirschberg, Silesia; son of Rabbi H. Joël of that city and nephew...
Lewis Joel (JE | WP GWPG) British consul-general to Chile; born in Dublin 1824; died in London Feb. 28, 1899. He was educated at Bristol; in May, 1861...
Manuel Joël (JE | WP GWPG) German rabbi; born Oct. 19, 1826, at Birnbaum, province of Posen; died at Breslau Nov. 3, 1890; son of Rabbi Heimann Joë...
Johanan b. Baroka (JE | WP GWPG) Teacher of the second century (second and third tannaitic periods); disciple of Joshua b. Hananiah and colleague of Eleazar...
Johanan Gadi (JE | WP GWPG) Eldest of the five sons of Mattathias the Maccabee (I Macc. ii. 2; Josephus, "Ant." xii. 6, § 1), though the least important...
Johanan b. Gudgada (JE | WP GWPG) Scholar and chief gatekeeper at the Temple in the last years of its existence (Tosef., Shek. ii. 14); senior of Joshua...
Johanan ben ha-Horanit (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian tanna of the first generation; disciple of Hillel (according to Frankel, "Darke ha-Mishnah," p. 53, note 8, a...
Johanan ben Isaac of Holleschau (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of the German community of London at the beginning of the eighteenth century. He edited "Teshubot ha-Geonim," responsa...
Johanan ben Jehoiada (JE | WP GWPG) High priest under Artaxerxes Ochus (359-338 B.C.); perhaps identical with the one mentioned in Neh. xii. 11 ("Johanan" being...
Johanan ben Kareah (JE | WP GWPG) General of the Israelites at the time of Nebuchadnezzar (c. 586 B.C.). After the kingdom of Judea had been destroyed by the...
Johanan ben Meriya (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fifth or sixth generation (4th and 5th cent.). Johanan is frequently mentioned in the Talmud of Jerusalem...
Johanan b. Nappaha (ha-Nappah) (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar; born at Sepphoris in the last quarter of the second century; died at Tiberias 279. He is generally cited...
Johanan b. ha-Nazuf (JE | WP GWPG) Friend of Gamaliel II. (first and second centuries). It is related that Ḥalafta once went to Tiberias and found Gamaliel...
Johanan b. NuriJE (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the first and second centuries; junior of Gamaliel II. and senior of Akiba (Sifra, Kedoshim, iv. 9; 'Ar...
Johanan ha-Sandalar (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the second century; one of Akiba's disciples that survived the Hadrianic persecutions and transmitted the traditional...
361 – 380
Johanan b. Torta (JE | WP GWPG) Scholar of the first and second centuries; contemporary of Akiba. When Akiba hailed bar Kokba as the Messiah, the latter exclaimed...
Johanan b. Zakkai (JE | WP GWPG) the most important tanna in the last decade of the Second Temple, and, after the destruction of Jerusalem, the founder and...
Johannes Hispalensis (JE | WP GWPG) Baptized Jew who flourished between 1135 and 1153; his Jewish name is unknown and has been corrupted into "Avendeut," "Avendehut"...
Johannes Pauli (JE | WP GWPG) German humorist and convert to Christianity; born about 1455; died at Thann 1530. He became a distinguished preacher of the...
Johannesburg (JE | WP GWPG) Largest city in the Transvaal and principal center of Jewish life in South Africa. The Jewish community there is estimated...
Joseph Johlson (Asher ben Joseph Fulda) (JE | WP GWPG) German Bible translator and writer on educational topics; born in 1777 at Fulda; died atFrankfort-on-the-Main June 13, 1851...
John Albert (JE | WP GWPG) King of Poland (1492-1501). He ascended the throne of Poland in the same year in which his brother Alexander Jagellon became...
John the Baptist (JE | WP GWPG) Essene saint and preacher; flourished between 20 and 30 C.E.; fore-runner of Jesus of Nazareth and originator of the Christian...
John of CapuaJE (JE | WP GWPG) Italian convert to Christianity, and translator; flourished between 1262 and 1269. He translated Rabbi Joel's Hebrew version...
John Casimir (JE | WP GWPG) King of Poland (1648-68). He was elected to the throne with the aid of Chmielnicki, who after the election returned to the...
John of Giscala (Johanan ben Levi) (JE | WP GWPG) Native of the small Galilean city of Giscala ( ), who took an important part in the great war against Rome (66-70). He was...
John Sobieski (JE | WP GWPG) King of Poland (1674-96). During his reign Poland had already lost its prominent position among European peoples, and, except...
John of ValladolidJE (JE | WP GWPG) Jewish convert to Christianity; born 1335. An able speaker, and possessed of some knowledge of rabbinical literature, he persuaded...
Johnson (JE | WP GWPG) American family, members of which have attained distinction in Ohio, Texas, and New York. The family is from England, the...
Joiada (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Eliashib, high priest about 450 B.C. (Neh. xii. 10-11, 22). One of his children became a son-in-law of Sanballat the...
381 – 400
Joigny (JE | WP GWPG) Chief town in the department of the Yonne (the ancient Champagne), France, situated on the River Yonne. It had an important...
Joint Owners (JE | WP GWPG) in the Mishnah joint owners are known as "shuttafin." When the joint owners are coheirs the Mishnah speaks of them as "the...
Joinville (JE | WP GWPG) French town in the department of Haute-Marne; in the Tosafot occur , and other variants (Yoma 81; 'Er. 24; Ber. 8; Bek...
Joktan (JE | WP GWPG) Younger son of Eber and progenitor of thirteen Arabic tribes (Gen. x. 25-29; I Chron. i. 19-23), many of which—as Hazarmaveth...
Zechariah Isaiah b. Mordecai Jolles (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbinical scholar and author; born at Lemberg about 1814; died at Minsk, Russia, May 14, 1852. In 1834, after having married...
Heymann (Hayyim ben Abraham) Jolowicz (JE | WP GWPG) German preacher and author; born Aug. 23, 1816, at Santomischl, province of Posen; died at Königsberg, Prussia, Jan....
JonahJE>>Jonah in rabbinic literatureJE (JE | WP GWPG) Prophet in the days of Jeroboam II.; son of Amittai of Gath-hepher. He is a historical personage; for, according to II Kings...
Book of Jonah (JE | WP GWPG) the Book of Jonah stands unique in the prophetical canon, in that it does not contain any predictions, but simply relates...
JonahJE (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fourth century; leading rabbinical authority in the fourth amoraic generation. With Jose II., his...
Jonah ben Judah Gershon (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi and author; died in Wilna 1808. He was dayyan of that city, and devoted his time to the study of the Tosefta, which...
Benjamin Franklin Jonas (JE | WP GWPG) American lawyer, soldier, and statesman; born in Williamstown, Grant county, Kentucky, July 19, 1834. In early youth he removed...
Emil Jonas (JE | WP GWPG) German writer and publicist; born July 14, 1824, at Schwerin, Mecklenburg; educated at the gymnasium of his native city and...
Émile Jonas (JE | WP GWPG) French musician; born at Paris March 5, 1827. He entered the Conservatoire in 1841, where he took the first prize in harmony...
Jonathan, Jehonathan (JE | WP GWPG) 1. Son or descendant of Gershom, son of Moses. He officiated as a priest to the idol of Micah—a service continued in...
Jonathan (Nathan) JE (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the second century; schoolfellow of Josiah, apart from whom he is rarely quoted. Jonathan is generally so cited without...
Jonathan ben Absalom (JE | WP GWPG) General of Simon Maccabeus. At the command of the latter he took possession of Joppa, and drove out the inhabitants in order...
401 to 500
401 – 420
Jonathan b. 'Akmai (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the third generation. According to Yer. Ter. xi. he was one of the teachers of Abbahu. It is probable...
Jonathan (Nathan) b. Amram (JE | WP GWPG) Semi-tanna of the second and third centuries; disciple of Judah I. and senior of Jannai, who consulted him concerning ritual...
Jonathan b. Anan (JE | WP GWPG) Son of the high priest Anan; was appointed by Vitellius high priest in the place of Joseph Caiaphas, at the time of the Passover...
Jonathan (Nathan) of Bet Gubrin (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the third century; junior of Joshua b. Levi and senior of Simon b. Pazzi (Cant. R. i. 1). He confined...
Jonathan ben David ha-Kohen of LunelJE (JE | WP GWPG) French philosopher; flourished in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. He defended Maimonides against the severe attacks...
Jonathan ben Eleazar (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the third century; contemporary of Ḥanina b. Ḥama (Shab. 49a et seq.); disciple of Simon...
Jonathan ben Horkinas (Archinas) (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian scholar of the first century; contemporary of Eleazar b. Azariah and a disciple of the school of Shammai. He was...
Jonathan ben Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) Hungarian Talmudist and author; flourished at Buda (Ofen) toward the end of the seventeenth century. In 1688, when Buda was...
Jonathan ben JosephJE (JE | WP GWPG) Lithuanian rabbi and astronomer; lived at Risenoi, government of Grodno, in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. In addition...
Jonathan Levi Zion (JE | WP GWPG) Representative of the Jewish community of Frankfort-on-the-Main in its defense against the attacks of John Pfefferkorn. When...
Jonathan Maccabeus (JE | WP GWPG) Son of Mattathias; leader of the Jews in the Maccabean wars from 161 to 143 B.C. He is called also Apphus (Ἀπφ...
Jonathan the Sadducee (JE | WP GWPG) Friend of the Hasmonean prince John Hyrcanus (135-104 B.C.). As the Pharisees belittled the prince's fitness for the office...
Jonathan ben Uzziel (JE | WP GWPG) Hillel's most distinguished pupil (Suk. 28a; B. B. 134a). No halakot of his have been preserved, though a tradition makes...
Aaron b. Zebi Jonathanson (JE | WP GWPG) Russian Hebraist and poet; born about 1815; died in Kovno July 27, 1868. His father, a great-grandson of Jonathan Eybeschü...
Alfred T Jones (JE | WP GWPG) American editor and communal worker; born in Boston July 4, 1822; died at Philadelphia Oct. 3, 1888. In 1842 he became a resident...
Thomas JonesJE (JE | WP GWPG) English publisher; convert to Judaism; born in 1791; died in London May 25, 1882. By birth a Roman Catholic, his change of...
The Jordan (JE | WP GWPG) Principal river of Palestine, formed by the confluence of three streams rising respectively at (1) Baniyas (Paneas), (2) Tell...
Abba Jose ben HaninJE (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian tanna of the last decades before the destruction of the Temple; contemporary of Eliezer B. Jacob and of Ḥ...
Abba Jose of Mahuza (JE | WP GWPG) Scholar of the third (?) century; mentioned once only (Mek., Beshallach, Wayechi, 3), a haggadah of his being transmitted...
Jose b. AbinJE (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fifth generation (4th cent.); son of R. Abin I. (Bacher, "Ag. Pal. Amor." iii. 724) and the teacher...
Jose (Isi, Issi) ben Akabya (Akiba) (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the beginning of the third century. The name "Issi" or "Assa" is derived from "Jose," and was borne by many tannaim...
Jose the GalileanJE (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna; lived in the first and second centuries of the common era. Jose was a contemporary and colleague of R. Akiba, R. Ṭ...
Jose ben HalaftaJE (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian tanna of the fourth generation (2d cent.). of his life only the following few details are known: He was born at...
Jose b. Jacob b. Idi (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fourth generation (4th cent.). He was the colleague of R. Judan of Magdala (Yer. Ta'an. i. 3)...
Jose ben Joezer of ZeredahJE (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of the early Maccabean period; possibly a disciple of Antigonus of Soko, though this is not certain. He belonged to...
Jose (Joseph) ben Johanan (JE | WP GWPG) President of the Sanhedrin in the second century B.C.; a native of Jerusalem. He and Jose b. Joezer were the successors and...
Jose ben Jose (JE | WP GWPG) the earliest payyeṭan known by name; flourished, at the latest, about the end of the sixth century in Palestine. He...
Jose b. Judah (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the end of the second century. He is principally known through his controversies with R. Judah I. As specimens of...
Jose b. Kazrata (Kuzira; Kazra) (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the first amoraic generation; son-in-law of R. Jose. Kohut is of the opinion that the surname is derived...
Jose ha-Kohen ("the Pious") (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the second generation; flourished in the first and second centuries; pupil of Johanan ben Zakkai. It is said of him...
Jose of Mallahaya (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the fourth generation. According to his explanation of Ps. lvii. 5 the disasters that overtook the Jews...
Jose of Maon (JE | WP GWPG) Popular preacher of the beginning of the third century; delivered his addresses in a synagogue at Tiberias which bore the...
Jose b. Nehorai (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the first generation; halakot are transmitted in his name by Johanan (Rashi, B. M. 41a). of his haggadic...
Jose b. SaulJE (JE | WP GWPG) Palestinian amora of the first generation (3d cent.). He is known chiefly as a transmitter of the sayings and traditions of...
Rafael Joseffy (JE | WP GWPG) American piano virtuoso; born in 1852 in Hunfalu, Hungary. In the following year the family moved to Miskolcz, where he spent...
Joseph (JE | WP GWPG) Eleventh son of Jacob and the elder of the two sons of Rachel; born at Haran (Gen. xxx. 24). The meaning given to the name...
Joseph (High Priest) (JE | WP GWPG) 1. Son of Ellem () of Sepphoris; installed by Herod for one day (Yom Kippur) as a substitute for the high priest, who had...
Joseph II (JE | WP GWPG) German emperor; born March 13, 1741; died Feb. 20, 1790, at Vienna. As German emperor his sovereignty was one in name only...
Joseph (JE | WP GWPG) Prominent Jewish family which settled in Canada toward the close of the eighteenth century. It was descended from Naphtali...
Joseph ben Abba (JE | WP GWPG) Gaon of Pumbedita for a period of two years; died in 816 (Sherira Gaon; Neubauer, "M. J. C." i. 37). Abraham ibn Daud ("Sefer...
Joseph ben AbrahamJE (JE | WP GWPG) Liturgical poet. Seven prayers bearing the name "Joseph ben Abraham" are found in the Siddur of Avignon. Zunz identifies this...
Joseph ben Abraham ha-Kohen ha-Ro'eh (JE | WP GWPG) Karaite philosopher and theologian; flourished in Babylonia or Persia in the first half of the eleventh century; teacher of...
Joseph ben Ahmad ibn Hasdai (JE | WP GWPG) Egyptian physician and medical writer; lived in Cairo at the beginning of the twelfth century. Although his biographer, Ibn...
Joseph the Apostate (JE | WP GWPG) Jewish convert to Christianity in the first half of the fourth century. He was one of the assessors of the rabbinical school...
Joseph of Arimathaea (JE | WP GWPG) Wealthy Jew (probably a member of the Essene fraternity) who, out of sympathy with Jesus, gave him burial in one of the tombs...
Joseph of Arles (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudist and cabalist of the sixteenth century. A letter signed "Joseph " (= "of Arles") is found among the halakic...
Joseph ben BaruchJE (JE | WP GWPG) Tosafist of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Gross identifies him with Joseph of Clisson. Joseph resided for some time...
Joseph ben Berechiah (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of Kairwan and a pupil of Jacob bar Nissim; flourished in the tenth century. He carried on a scientific correspondence...
Joseph of Chartres (JE | WP GWPG) French elegiac poet; born in the second half of the twelfth century (Zunz ["Literaturgesch." p. 470] says that he flourished...
Joseph of Chinon (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudist; lived about the middle of the thirteenth century. According to Zunz, Joseph was a son of Nathanael the Holy...
David Joseph (JE | WP GWPG) German architect; born July 4, 1863, at Königsberg, eastern Prussia; educated at the gymnasium of his native town and...
Joseph David (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi of Salonica; flourished in the first half of the eighteenth century; contemporary of Solomon Amarillo and Joseph Covo...
Joseph ben David Heilbronn of Eschau (JE | WP GWPG) German Masorite; lived at the Hague in the eighteenth century. He was the author of "Sefer Mebin Ḥidot" (Amsterdam,...
Joseph ben David ha-Yewani (JE | WP GWPG) Greek grammarian and lexicographer; flourished at the end of the thirteenth or about the middle of the fourteenth century...
Joseph David ben Zebi (JE | WP GWPG) Russian rabbi and author; born in Zetil, government of Grodno, 1767; died in Mir, government of Minsk, 1846. He was the grandson...
Joseph of Dreux (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudist of the first half of the thirteenth century. His name occurs in a manuscript in the British Museum collection...
Joseph ben Elimelech of Torbin (JE | WP GWPG) Polish scholar of the seventeenth century. He was the author of "Ben Ziyyon" (Amsterdam, 1690), containing mnemonic...
Joseph of Gamala (JE | WP GWPG) Son of a midwife (Josephus, "Vita," § 37). With Chares he incited the inhabitants of Gamala to revolt against Agrippa...
Joseph ben GorionJE (JE | WP GWPG) Author of the "Sefer Yosippon," a history of the Jews from the time of the destruction of Babylon (539 B.C.) to the downfall...
Joseph ibn Hasan (JE | WP GWPG) Arabic author of the fifteenth century or earlier. In 1467 he wrote "Muchsin al-Adab," on culture, in fifty Kaṣ...
Joseph Hazzan ben Judah of Troyes (JE | WP GWPG) French Talmudist and ḥazzan; flourished at Troyes about the middle of the thirteenth century. From quotations in "Minḥat Yehudah" (pp. 1b, 19b, 24a, 28a, 38a) it is known that he wrote a commentary on Ecclesiastes...
Henry Samuel Joseph (JE | WP GWPG) English convert to Christianity; born in 1801; died at Strasburg, Alsace, Jan. 28, 1864. At first a preacher in the synagogue...
Joseph bar Hiyya (JE | WP GWPG) Gaon of Pumbedita from 828 to 833. In the controversy between Daniel and the exilarch David ben Judah, the gaon Abraham ben...
Joseph ben Isaac Bekor Shor of Orleans (JE | WP GWPG) French tosafist, exegete, and poet; flourished in the second half of the twelfth century; pupil of Jacob Tam, Joseph Caro...
Joseph b. Isaac of Chinon (JE | WP GWPG) French tosatist; lived in the second half of the twelfth and at the beginning of the thirteenth century. He is mentioned as...
481 – 500
Joseph ben Isaac ha-Levi (JE | WP GWPG) Lithuanian philosopher of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He was well versed in philosophical works, and when in Prague was asked by Yom-Ṭob Lipman Heller...
Jacob JosephJE (JE | WP GWPG) Russian-American rabbi; born at Krozhe, government of Kovno, Russia, 1848; died at New York July 28, 1902. He studied in the...
Joseph ben Jacob (JE | WP GWPG) Gaon of Sura about 930-936 and 942-948. He was chosen by the exilarch David ben Zakkai to fill the place of Saadia (c. 930)...
Joseph b. Jacob Isaac (JE | WP GWPG) Rabbi at Yampol, Russia, later at Zamoscz; died in 1807. He was the author of "Mishnat Ḥakamim," on various subjects...
Joseph ben Jacob of Pinczow (JE | WP GWPG) Lithuanian Talmudist of the seventeenth century. He was a pupil of Zebi Hirsch, rabbi in Lublin. In 1687 he was rabbi...
Joseph ben Jacob ibn ZaddikJE (JE | WP GWPG) Spanish rabbi, poet, and philosopher; died at Cordova 1149. A Talmudist of high repute, he was appointed in 1138 dayyan at...
Joseph ben Johanan (JE | WP GWPG) French rabbi of the fourteenth century. He was a native of Treves (, read by Carmoly "Troyes"), and seems to have been the...
Joseph b. Joshua b. Levi (JE | WP GWPG) Amora of the third century; educated by his father (Shab. 68a; Ber. 8b; Yeb. 9a). He was the son-in-law of Judah ha-Nasi;...
Joseph ben Joshua ben Meïr ha-Kohen (JE | WP GWPG) Historian and physician of the sixteenth century; born at Avignon Dec. 20, 1496; died at Genoa in 1575 or shortly after. His...
Joseph ben Kalonymus ha-Nakdan (JE | WP GWPG) German Masorite and liturgical poet; flourished in the first half of the thirteenth century. He was the author of a long acrostic...
Joseph (Jose) b. Kisma (JE | WP GWPG) Tanna of the first and second centuries; contemporary and senior of Hananiah b. Teradion. He is never cited in connection...
Joseph (b. Jacob) of Mandeville (Morell) (JE | WP GWPG) French exegete; pupil of Abraham ibn Ezra. He wrote a supercommentary on that scholar's commentary on Exodus (Neubauer...
Joseph ben Meïr (JE | WP GWPG) Liturgical poet of the thirteenth century; perhaps uncle of Meïr of Rothenburg. He was the author of a dirge beginning...