Eliakim ben Meshullam
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Eliakim ben Meshullam (born about 1030; died at the end of the eleventh century in Speyer, Rhenish Bavaria) was a German rabbi, Talmudist and payyeṭan.
He studied at the yeshibot in Mayence and Worms, having Rashi as a fellow student. Eliakim himself founded a Talmudical school in Speyer.
He wrote a commentary on all the tractates of the Talmud except Berakot and Niddah (see Solomon Luria, Responsa, No. 29, and Asher ben Jehiel, Responsa, Rule 1, § 8), which was used by scholars as late as the fourteenth century. At present there exists only the commentary on Yoma, in manuscript (Codex Munich, No. 216).
Ritual decisions by Eliakim are mentioned by Rashi ("Pardes," 42a, 44c, 48a). He was the composer of a piyyuṭ, to be read when a circumcision takes place in the synagogue on a Saturday.
[edit] References
- Azulai, Shem ha-Gedolim, i. 28
- Michael, Or ha-Ḥayyim, No. 221
- Leser Landshuth, 'Ammude ha-'Abodah, p. 24
- Berliner, in Monatsschrift, 1868, p. 182
- Heinrich Grätz, Gesch. vi. 364
- Epstein, in the Steinschneider Festschrift, pp. 125 et seq.
- idem, Jüdische Alterthümer in Worms und Speyer, pp. 4, 27.
[edit] External links
This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.