Samuel Ha-Levi - meaning and definition. What is Samuel Ha-Levi
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What (who) is Samuel Ha-Levi - definition

POLISH JEWISH RABBI
Turei Zahav; David ben Samuel; Ture Zahab; Ṭure Zahab; David b. Samuel ha-Levi; David ben Samuel ha-Levi

Samuel HaLevi         
  • Plaque in Toledo commemorating Samuel Ha-Levi with the inscription "Samuel Levi, treasurer to the king, who preferred to die by torture than confess where he hid his treasures". In fact Ha-Levi did confess under torture, and was executed along with his family.
  • Toledo]]
Samuel ha-Levi
Samuel ben Meir Ha-Levi Abulafia (Úbeda, approx. 1320 - Seville, 1360), was the treasurer of king Pedro I "the Cruel" of Castile and founder of the Synagogue of El Transito in Toledo, Spain.
Yakkar ben Samuel ha-Levi         
GERMAN SCHOLAR AND POET (DIED 1271)
Yaḳḳar ben Samuel ha-Levi; Yaqqar ben Samuel ha-Levi II; Yakkar ben Samuel ha-Levi II
Yakkar ben Samuel ha-Levi II (; died 1271) was a German Jewish scholar and liturgical poet, who flourished in Cologne and in Mainz in the second half of the 13th century. He was related to Meïr of Rothenburg, in whose responsa he is several times mentioned, and was a pupil of Rabbi Jehiel of Paris.
Nahman ben Samuel ha-Levi         
Nahman b. Samuel ha-Levi
Naḥman ben Samuel ha-Levi () was a Frankist rabbi, who lived in Busk, Galicia, in the first part of the eighteenth century. When Mikulski, the administrator of the archbishopric of Lemberg, invited the representatives of Judaism to a disputation with the Frankists on July 16, 1759, Naḥman was one of the Frankist delegates.

Wikipedia

David HaLevi Segal

David ha-Levi Segal (c. 1586 – 20 February 1667), also known as the Turei Zahav (abbreviated Taz (ט"ז‎)) after the title of his significant halakhic commentary on the Shulchan Aruch, was one of the greatest Polish rabbinical authorities.