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Yehuda Halevi

A Wisdom Archive on Yehuda Halevi

Yehuda Halevi

A selection of articles related to Yehuda Halevi

More material related to Yehuda Halevi can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Yehuda Halevi
Religious Science, Religious Science - History, Religious Science - Teachings

ARTICLES RELATED TO Yehuda Halevi

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - Yehuda Halevi

Judah Ha-Levi, also Yehudah Halevi, or Judah ben Samuel Halevi(Hebrew רבי יהודה הלוי) (c.1085-1141 CE) was a Jewish Spanish philosopher and poet. He was born at Toledo, southern Castile. Yehuda Halevi - Youth. As a youth Ha-Levi lived a life of pleasure. He mixed pleasure with learning. It is possible that Judah's father, Samuel "the Castilian," sent Judah, who was his only son, to Lucena to be educated in the various branches of Jewish learning at the school of Isaac Alfasi. On th ...

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Read more here: » Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - Yehuda Halevi

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Yehuda Halevi - Youth

As a youth Ha-Levi lived a life of pleasure. He mixed pleasure with learning. It is possible that Judah's father, Samuel "the Castilian," sent Judah, who was his only son, to Lucena to be educated in the various branches of Jewish learning at the school of Isaac Alfasi. On the death of his master, Judah composed an elegy (Brody, "Diwan des Abul-Ḥasan Jehuda ha-Levi," ii., No. 14, p. 100). It was probably in Lucena, too, that Judah won the friendship of Alfasi's most prominent pupil ...

See also:

Yehuda Halevi, Yehuda Halevi - Youth, Yehuda Halevi - Journey to the Holy Land, Yehuda Halevi - His work, Yehuda Halevi - Secular poetry, Yehuda Halevi - Love songs, Yehuda Halevi - Religious poetry, Yehuda Halevi - Patriotism, Yehuda Halevi - Analysis of his poetry, Yehuda Halevi - Synagogal poetry, Yehuda Halevi - As a philosopher, Yehuda Halevi - Ha-Levi’s legacy

Read more here: » Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Yehuda Halevi - Youth

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - 1141

1141 - Events. February 2 - Battle of Lincoln. Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester and Empress Matilda wrest control of the English throne, from King Stephen. September 14 - Rout of Winchester. Empress Matilda is forced to return the throne after Robert is captured by loyalist forces. November - Jin Dynasty and Southern Song Dynasty signed the Treaty of Shaoxing and peace lasted for the next twenty years. Italian winemaking company Ricasoli was founded 1141 ...

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Read more here: » 1141: Encyclopedia - 1141

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - Philosophy of religion

Philosophy of religion is the rational study of the meaning and justification of fundamental religious claims, particularly about the nature and existence of God (or gods, or the divine). Philosophy of religion - Philosophy of religion as a part of metaphysics. Philosophy of religion was classically regarded as a part of metaphysics, after Aristotle, among whose writings was a piece that later editors identified as The Metaphysics. Aristotle there described first causes as one of the subjects ...

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Read more here: » Philosophy of religion: Encyclopedia - Philosophy of religion

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - Jewish philosophy

Jewish philosophy is not a universally agreed-upon term, but it does exist as a field of scholarship. It is therefore a subject that requires careful analysis, definition, clarification and explanation. Some may claim that it is an attempt to fuse the fields of secular (even atheistic) philosophy with the religious teachings of Judaism (an Abrahamic religion). Others may claim that it is a relatively latter-day form of rationalization for Judaism itself. It should be noted that the primary source documents for Judaism, such as the Tor ...

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Read more here: » Jewish philosophy: Encyclopedia - Jewish philosophy

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - Al-Ghazali

Abu Hamid Muhammad ibn Muhammad al-Ghazali (Arabic: ابو حامد محمد بن محمد الغزالى for short: الغزالى ) (born 1058 in Tus, Khorasan province of Persia, modern day Iran, died 1111 in Tus) was a Muslim theologian, and philosopher, known as Algazel to the Western Medieval world, Abu Hamid Al-Ghazali, or al-Ghazzali as it is sometimes written. Al-Ghazali - His life. Al-Ghazali is one of the greatest Islamic theologians and mystical thinkers. He learned v ...

Including:

Read more here: » Al-Ghazali: Encyclopedia - Al-Ghazali

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia - Divine simplicity

In theology, the doctrine of divine simplicity says that God is without parts. Divine simplicity - In Christian thought. In Christian thought, the importance of the concept is that God as a simple being is not divisible, and thus, he is present in his entirety everywhere that he is present, if he is present anywhere. In light of this idea, Thomas Aquinas wrote that, because God is infinitely simple, he can only appear to the finite mind as though he were infinitely complex. This doctrine also ...

Including:

Read more here: » Divine simplicity: Encyclopedia - Divine simplicity

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Kuzari - The Kuzari Principle

The Kuzari has given its name to a "principle" of reasoning which is derived from the book. This principle claims to logically prove the historicity of major events recorded in the Bible from the nature of the belief in them. More specifically, it is argued that one can prove that some three million Israelites personally were led out of Egypt in an Exodus, and witnessed God's revelation to them at Mount Sinai, thus establishing the proof of the events d ...

See also:

Kuzari, Kuzari - Introduction, Kuzari - Creatio ex Nihilo, Kuzari - Superiority of his faith, Kuzari - Question of attributes, Kuzari - Names of God, Kuzari - Arguments against philosophy, Kuzari - Influence of the Kuzari, Kuzari - The Kuzari Principle, Kuzari - Bibliography

Read more here: » Kuzari: Encyclopedia II - Kuzari - The Kuzari Principle

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Jewish philosophy - Modern Jewish philosophy

One of the major trends in modern Jewish philosophy was the attempt to develop a theory of Judaism through existentialism. One of the primary players in this field was Franz Rosenzweig. While researching his doctoral dissertation on the 19th-century German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Rosenzweig reacted against Hegel's idealism and favored an existential approach. Rosenzweig, for a time, considered conversion to Christianity, but in 1913, he turned to Jewish philosophy. He became a philosopher and student of Hermann Cohen. Roze ...

See also:

Jewish philosophy, Jewish philosophy - Approaches, Jewish philosophy - Early Jewish philosophy, Jewish philosophy - Philo of Alexandria, Jewish philosophy - Avicebron Solomon ibn Gabirol, Jewish philosophy - Jewish Mysticism Kabbalah, Jewish philosophy - Saadia Gaon, Jewish philosophy - Karaite philosophy, Jewish philosophy - Bahya ibn Paquda's Duties of the Heart, Jewish philosophy - Yehuda Halevi and the Kuzari, Jewish philosophy - The rise of Aristotelian thought, Jewish philosophy - Maimonides, Jewish philosophy - Position in the history of thought, Jewish philosophy - Renaissance philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Post-Enlightenment Jewish philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Modern Jewish philosophy, Jewish philosophy - Holocaust theology, Jewish philosophy - Modern Jewish philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Orthodox Judaism philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Conservative Judaism philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Reform Judaism philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Reconstructionist Judaism philosophers, Jewish philosophy - Others, Jewish philosophy - Philosophers informed by their Jewish background

Read more here: » Jewish philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Jewish philosophy - Modern Jewish philosophy

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Jews as a chosen people - Views of chosenness by the modern Jewish denominations

The three largest Jewish denominations -- Orthodox Judaism, Conservative Judaism and Reform Judaism -- maintain the belief that the Jews have been chosen by God for a purpose. Jews as a chosen people - Orthodox views. Rabbi Lord Immanuel Jakobovits, former Chief Rabbi of the United Synagogue of Great Britain (Modern Orthodox Judaism), describes chosenness in this way: "Yes, I do believe that the chosen people concept as affirmed by Judaism in its holy writ, its prayers, and its millennial tradition. In fac ...

See also:

Jews as a chosen people, Jews as a chosen people - Chosenness in the Hebrew Bible, Jews as a chosen people - Rabbinic Jewish views of chosenness, Jews as a chosen people - Chosenness as superiority, Jews as a chosen people - Views of chosenness by the modern Jewish denominations, Jews as a chosen people - Orthodox views, Jews as a chosen people - Conservative views, Jews as a chosen people - Reform Judaism, Jews as a chosen people - Criticism of chosenness: Reconstructionist Judaism, Jews as a chosen people - Charges of racism

Read more here: » Jews as a chosen people: Encyclopedia II - Jews as a chosen people - Views of chosenness by the modern Jewish denominations

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain - End of the Golden Age

With the death of Al-Hakam II Ibn Abd-ar-Rahman in 976, the Caliphate began to dissolve, and the position of the Jews became more precarious under the various smaller Kingdoms. The first major persecution occurred on Dec. 30, 1066 when the Jews were expelled from Granada and fifteen hundred families were killed when they did not leave. This was the first persecution of Jews on the Peninsula while under Islamic rule. A possible date of the end of the Golden Age might be in 1090 with the invasion of the Almoravides, a puritan Mus ...

See also:

Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain, Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain - The Nature of the Golden Age, Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain - Birth of the Golden Age, Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain - End of the Golden Age, Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain - Notable figures

Read more here: » Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain: Encyclopedia II - Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain - End of the Golden Age

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Land of Israel - Dimensions of the Land of Israel

The Tanakh (or Hebrew Bible referred to also as the "Old Testament" by Christians) contains several descriptions of the borders of the land.[1] These descriptions encompass a region that extends from the "River of Egypt"[2] to the Euphrates. Areas known to be included are the modern state of Israel, the Palestinian territories, and much of modern-day Syria ...

See also:

Land of Israel, Land of Israel - The Promised Land, Land of Israel - Dimensions of the Land of Israel, Land of Israel - From Dan to Beersheba, Land of Israel - The Land of Israel and the State of Israel, Land of Israel - The Land of Israel in Jewish law, Land of Israel - Notes

Read more here: » Land of Israel: Encyclopedia II - Land of Israel - Dimensions of the Land of Israel

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - List of Hebrew language poets - Modern Hebrew

List of Hebrew language poets - A. Shimon Adaf Natan Alterman Yehudah Amichai Roy Arad Tirtza Atar David Avidan List of Hebrew language poets - B. Maya Bejerano menahem Ben (Braun) Yakir Ben Moshe H. N. Bialik List of Hebrew language poets - C. Abraham Chalfi Rah ...

See also:

List of Hebrew language poets, List of Hebrew language poets - Modern Hebrew, List of Hebrew language poets - A, List of Hebrew language poets - B, List of Hebrew language poets - C, List of Hebrew language poets - G, List of Hebrew language poets - H, List of Hebrew language poets - I, List of Hebrew language poets - K, List of Hebrew language poets - L, List of Hebrew language poets - M, List of Hebrew language poets - N, List of Hebrew language poets - O, List of Hebrew language poets - P, List of Hebrew language poets - R, List of Hebrew language poets - S, List of Hebrew language poets - T, List of Hebrew language poets - W, List of Hebrew language poets - Y, List of Hebrew language poets - Z, List of Hebrew language poets - Golden Age in Spain, List of Hebrew language poets - Italian Renaissance, List of Hebrew language poets - North Africa and Yemen, List of Hebrew language poets - Biblical

Read more here: » List of Hebrew language poets: Encyclopedia II - List of Hebrew language poets - Modern Hebrew

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century

With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711, the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically. In spite of the stigma attached to being dhimmis (non-Moslem members of monotheistic faiths) under Moslem rule, the coming of the Moors was by-and-large welcomed by the Jews of Iberia. Both Moslem and Christian sources tell us that Jews provided valuable aid to the invaders. Once captured, the defense of Cordoba was left in the hands of Jews, and Granada, Málaga, Seville, and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors. The Chro ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Lyric poetry - History

The earliest surviving lyric poems in the Western tradition are arguably the Song of Solomon and the Psalms, but there are many fine examples in classical literature. Some of the best ancient lyric poets are Sappho, Catullus, and Horace. During the Middle Ages, lyric poetry is dominated by the courtly love tradition in most European languages. This is upper-class poetry meant for the courts of the nobility, whether the poet is himself a prince, such as William IX of Aquitaine, or a lower-class troubador in the service of one ...

See also:

Lyric poetry, Lyric poetry - History, Lyric poetry - Themes, Lyric poetry - Forms, Lyric poetry - Metrics, Lyric poetry - Rhyme and alliteration, Lyric poetry - Classical, Lyric poetry - Chinese poets, Lyric poetry - Greek poets, Lyric poetry - Japanese poets, Lyric poetry - Latin poets, Lyric poetry - Persian poets, Lyric poetry - Middle Ages and Renaissance, Lyric poetry - Hebrew poets, Lyric poetry - Chinese poets, Lyric poetry - English poets, Lyric poetry - French poets, Lyric poetry - German poets, Lyric poetry - Hindu poets, Lyric poetry - Italian poets, Lyric poetry - Persian poets, Lyric poetry - Sixteenth century, Lyric poetry - English poets, Lyric poetry - French poets, Lyric poetry - Spanish poets, Lyric poetry - Seventeenth century, Lyric poetry - Dutch poets, Lyric poetry - English poets, Lyric poetry - German poets, Lyric poetry - Japanese poets, Lyric poetry - Spanish poets, Lyric poetry - Eighteenth century, Lyric poetry - English poets, Lyric poetry - German poets, Lyric poetry - Hebrew poets, Lyric poetry - Japanese poets, Lyric poetry - Nineteenth century, Lyric poetry - English poets, Lyric poetry - French poets, Lyric poetry - German poets, Lyric poetry - Italian poets, Lyric poetry - Japanese poets, Lyric poetry - Russian poets, Lyric poetry - Twentieth century, Lyric poetry - Chinese poets, Lyric poetry - Dutch poets, Lyric poetry - English poets, Lyric poetry - Flemish poets, Lyric poetry - French poets, Lyric poetry - German poets, Lyric poetry - Hebrew poets, Lyric poetry - Italian poets, Lyric poetry - Japanese poets, Lyric poetry - Polish poets, Lyric poetry - Russian poets, Lyric poetry - Spanish poets, Lyric poetry - Twenty-first century, Lyric poetry - Persian poets

Read more here: » Lyric poetry: Encyclopedia II - Lyric poetry - History

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Samson Raphael Hirsch - Influence and controversy

There is considerable controversy over Hirsch's legacy; this is a matter of debate between Haredi (Ultra-Orthodox) and Modern Orthodox writers. While it is undisputed that his Torah im Derech Eretz was his real innovation, the exact implementation has been greatly debated. Those on Modern Orthodox's right wing, and Haredi followers, including Hirsch's own descendants (his son-in-law and successor Rabbi Solomon Breuer, his grandson Rabbi Joseph Breuer and the latter's successor Rabbi Shimon Schwab) hold that Hirsch only wanted J ...

See also:

Samson Raphael Hirsch, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Early years and education, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Oldenburg, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Emden, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Nikolsburg, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Frankfurt am Main, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Final years, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Works and activism, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Themes in his work, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Influence and controversy, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Bibliography, Samson Raphael Hirsch - Sources

Read more here: » Samson Raphael Hirsch: Encyclopedia II - Samson Raphael Hirsch - Influence and controversy

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism

Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh. Jerusalem has long been embedded into the religious consciousness of the Jewish people. Jews have always studied and personalized the struggle by King David to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the Jewish temple there, as described in the Book of Samuel and the Book of Psalms. Many of King David's yearnings about Jerusalem have been adapted into popular prayers and songs. Religio ...

See also:

Religious significance of Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Torah and Tanakh, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and the Jewish religious calendar, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem and prayer, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Customs in remembrance of Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Western Wall in Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Rabbis and Jerusalem, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in the Tanakh and Old Testament, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Christianity, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Islam, Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem in Mandaeanism

Read more here: » Religious significance of Jerusalem: Encyclopedia II - Religious significance of Jerusalem - Jerusalem Jews and Judaism

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century

With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711, the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically. In spite of the stigma attached to being dhimmis (non-Moslem members of monotheistic faiths) under Moslem rule, the coming of the Moors was by-and-large welcomed by the Jews of Iberia. Both Moslem and Christian sources tell us that Jews provided valuable aid to the invaders. Once captured, the defense of Cordoba was left in the hands of Jews, and Granada, Málaga, Seville, and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors. The Chro ...

See also:

History of the Jews in Spain, History of the Jews in Spain - Early History Before 300 CE, History of the Jews in Spain - Under the Visigoths 5th Century-711, History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century, History of the Jews in Spain - Christian Spain 974-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Early Rule 974-1085, History of the Jews in Spain - Toleration and Jewish immigration 1085-1212, History of the Jews in Spain - Turning point 1212-1300, History of the Jews in Spain - The Jewish community in 1300, History of the Jews in Spain - Official persecution and massacres 1300-1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Massacres of 1366., History of the Jews in Spain - Anti-Jewish Enactments, History of the Jews in Spain - The Massacre of 1391, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced Conversions and the New Christians 1391-1492, History of the Jews in Spain - Forced conversions, History of the Jews in Spain - Hatred of the New Christians, History of the Jews in Spain - Edict of Expulsion, History of the Jews in Spain - Number of the Exiles, History of the Jews in Spain - Marranos 1492-1858, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern times 1858-, History of the Jews in Spain - Spain and Israel, History of the Jews in Spain - Modern Jewish community, History of the Jews in Spain - External link

Read more here: » History of the Jews in Spain: Encyclopedia II - History of the Jews in Spain - Moorish Spain and the Golden Age 711-12th Century

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - Emunoth ve-Deoth - Premise and introduction

The work was mainly written as a defence of Rabbinic Judaism against the views of the Karaites, who rejected the oral law (Mishna and Talmud). In his detailed introduction, Saadia speaks of the reasons which led him to compose it. His heart was grieved when he saw the confusion concerning matters of religion which prevailed among his contemporaries, finding an unintelligent belief and unenlightened views current among those who professed Judaism, while those who denied the faith triumphantly vaunted their errors. Men were sunken in th ...

See also:

Emunoth ve-Deoth, Emunoth ve-Deoth - Premise and introduction, Emunoth ve-Deoth - Translation, Emunoth ve-Deoth - Ibn Tibbon, Emunoth ve-Deoth - Others

Read more here: » Emunoth ve-Deoth: Encyclopedia II - Emunoth ve-Deoth - Premise and introduction

Yehuda Halevi: Encyclopedia II - List of rabbis - Rabbis: Later Middle Ages

List of rabbis - Rabbis: 18th Century. Haim Isaac Carigal, rabbi in Newport, Rhode Island in 1773 who became great influence on Reverend Ezra Stiles, and therefore on Yale University Dovber of Mezeritch, (Maggid), 18th century Eastern European mystic, primary disciple of the Baal Shem Tov Elijah ben Solomon, (Gra), 18th century Talmudist and mystic, Lithuanian leader of the Mitnagdim, opponent of Hasidim Jacob Emden, 18th century German Talmu ...

See also:

List of rabbis, List of rabbis - Rabbis: Pre-Mishnaic, List of rabbis - Rabbis: Mishnaic Tannaim, List of rabbis - Rabbis: Talmudic Amoraim, List of rabbis - Rabbis: Middle Ages, List of rabbis - Rabbis: Later Middle Ages, List of rabbis - Rabbis: 18th Century, List of rabbis - Orthodox rabbis, List of rabbis - Orthodox rabbis: 19th Century, List of rabbis - Orthodox rabbis: 20th Century, List of rabbis - Orthodox rabbis: Contemporary, List of rabbis - Conservative rabbis, List of rabbis - Conservative rabbis: 19th Century, List of rabbis - Conservative rabbis: 20th Century, List of rabbis - Conservative rabbis: Contemporary, List of rabbis - Union for Traditional Judaism, List of rabbis - Reform rabbis, List of rabbis - Reform rabbis: 19th Century, List of rabbis - Reform rabbis: 20th Century, List of rabbis - Reconstructionist rabbis, List of rabbis - Reconstructionist rabbis: 20th Century, List of rabbis - Reconstructionist rabbis: Contemporary, List of rabbis - Other rabbis

Read more here: » List of rabbis: Encyclopedia II - List of rabbis - Rabbis: Later Middle Ages

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