Rabbi Isaac Hayyut | |
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יצחק חיות | |
Personal | |
Died | September 1726 |
Religion | Judaism |
Parent |
|
Isaac ben Jacob Ḥayyut (died 1726) was a Polish rabbi.
He was descended from an old Provençal family which first settled in Bohemia, and was the grandson of Rabbi Menahem Manesh Hayyut of Wilna. [1]
He became rabbi of Skole, near Lviv, late in life, and remained there until his death. [1]
He wrote thirteen works, which are enumerated in the preface to his "Zera' Yiẓḥaḳ" ( Hebrew: זרע יצחק) on the Mishnah, which was published by his son Eliezer ( Frankfort-on-the-Oder, 1732). [2] His "Iggeret Ḳeẓ Ḥai" (Hebrew: אגרת קץ חי), [3] describing in a kabbalistic manner "terrible things which he had seen in the upper world," was published in Chernivtsi in 1862. [1]
He died at Skole in September, 1726. [1]
Rabbi Isaac Hayyut | |
---|---|
יצחק חיות | |
Personal | |
Died | September 1726 |
Religion | Judaism |
Parent |
|
Isaac ben Jacob Ḥayyut (died 1726) was a Polish rabbi.
He was descended from an old Provençal family which first settled in Bohemia, and was the grandson of Rabbi Menahem Manesh Hayyut of Wilna. [1]
He became rabbi of Skole, near Lviv, late in life, and remained there until his death. [1]
He wrote thirteen works, which are enumerated in the preface to his "Zera' Yiẓḥaḳ" ( Hebrew: זרע יצחק) on the Mishnah, which was published by his son Eliezer ( Frankfort-on-the-Oder, 1732). [2] His "Iggeret Ḳeẓ Ḥai" (Hebrew: אגרת קץ חי), [3] describing in a kabbalistic manner "terrible things which he had seen in the upper world," was published in Chernivtsi in 1862. [1]
He died at Skole in September, 1726. [1]