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HAKHAM

  • Hakham
  • Wise man or rabbi in Judaism

    Hakham (or Chakam(i), Haham(i), Hacham(i), Hach; Hebrew: חכם, romanized: ḥāḵām, lit. 'Wise') is a term in Judaism meaning a wise or skillful man; it often

    Hakham

    Hakham

    Hakham

  • Hakham Bashi
  • Turkish term used to refer to the chief rabbi of the Ottoman Empire

    Hakham Bashi (Ottoman Turkish: حاخامباشی, Turkish: Hahambaşı, IPA: [haˈham baˈʃɯ]; Ladino: xaxam (חכם) baši; translated into French as: khakham-bachi)

    Hakham Bashi

    Hakham Bashi

    Hakham_Bashi

  • Shimon Hakham
  • Rabbi Shimon Hakham (Hebrew: שמעון חכם; 1843, Bukhara - 1910, Jerusalem) was a Bukharan rabbi residing in Jerusalem who promoted literacy by translating

    Shimon Hakham

    Shimon Hakham

    Shimon_Hakham

  • Elijah Bashyazi
  • Crimean Karaite hakham (1420–1490)

    מנחם; c. 1420 in Adrianople – 1490 in Adrianople) was a Karaite Jewish hakham of the fifteenth century. After being instructed in the Karaite literature

    Elijah Bashyazi

    Elijah_Bashyazi

  • Amos Hakham
  • Amos Hakham (Hebrew: עמוס חכם; 1921 – 2 August 2012) was the first winner of the International Bible Contest, who went on to become a Bible scholar and

    Amos Hakham

    Amos Hakham

    Amos_Hakham

  • Isaac S.D. Sassoon
  • British Sephardic rabbi (1946-)

    Isaac S. D. Sassoon (born 1946) is a Sephardic rabbi (hakham), scholar and educator. Currently one of the leading scholars in the Sephardic world, he was

    Isaac S.D. Sassoon

    Isaac_S.D._Sassoon

  • Moses Gaster
  • Romanian-British scholar

    September 1856 – 5 March 1939) was a Romanian, later British scholar, the Hakham of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish congregation, London, and a Hebrew

    Moses Gaster

    Moses Gaster

    Moses_Gaster

  • Karaite Judaism
  • Jewish denomination

    הקראים) were: Hakham Moshe El-Kodsi (1856–1872) Hakham Shlomo Ben Afeda Ha-Kohen (1873–1875) Hakham Shabbatai Mangoubi (1876–1906) Hakham Aharon Kefeli

    Karaite Judaism

    Karaite_Judaism

  • Moshe ben Yosef Firrouz
  • Israeli Karaite hakham

    Ḥakham Moshe ben Yoseph Firrouz (Hebrew: משה בן יוסף פירוז; born 1972) is an Israeli Karaite Hakham and Torah scholar (sage). He is the former Chief Ḥakham

    Moshe ben Yosef Firrouz

    Moshe ben Yosef Firrouz

    Moshe_ben_Yosef_Firrouz

  • Ezra Dangoor
  • Chief Rabbi of Baghdad (1848–1930)

    Hakham Ezra Reuben Dangoor (1848–1930) was the Chief Rabbi of Baghdad from 1923 to 1926, and the founder of the first publishing company in Baghdad. Ezra

    Ezra Dangoor

    Ezra Dangoor

    Ezra_Dangoor

  • Star and crescent
  • Symbol

    Islam Shaykh al-Islām Christianity Rūm Ullah Bulgarian Armenian Judaism Hakham Bashi Provincial Eyalets Beylerbeys Vilayets Sanjaks Sanjakbeys Mutasarrifates

    Star and crescent

    Star and crescent

    Star_and_crescent

  • Avraham Qanaï
  • American Karaite hakham (1946–2021)

    The late Ḥakham Immanuel Massouda (the first Chief Karaite Ḥakham in Israel since 1948) met him shortly afterward and gave him a Ḥakham's cap (hat) as

    Avraham Qanaï

    Avraham_Qanaï

  • Pinchas Toledano
  • Chief Sephardi Rabbi of Amsterdam

    Pinchas Toledano (פנחס טולידאנו) is Hakham-Emeritus (Chief Rabbi) of Amsterdam and of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews of the Netherlands. He was also the

    Pinchas Toledano

    Pinchas_Toledano

  • Tzvi Ashkenazi
  • Dutch rabbi

    Yaakov Ashkenazi (Hebrew: צבי אשכנזי‎; 1656 – 2 May 1718), known as the Hakham Tzvi after his responsa by the same title, served for some time as rabbi

    Tzvi Ashkenazi

    Tzvi Ashkenazi

    Tzvi_Ashkenazi

  • Yedidia Shofet
  • Former Chief Rabbi of Iran

    Yedidia Shofet (also spelled Shophet, and often referred to as Hakham Yedidia; November 14, 1908 – June 24, 2005) was the former Chief Rabbi of Iran and

    Yedidia Shofet

    Yedidia_Shofet

  • List of Sephardi chief rabbis of the Land of Israel
  • sourced from a verse in Isaiah 41:27. Between 1842 and 1920 the position of Hakham Bashi of the Vilayet of Damascus was officially recognised by the Ottoman

    List of Sephardi chief rabbis of the Land of Israel

    List of Sephardi chief rabbis of the Land of Israel

    List_of_Sephardi_chief_rabbis_of_the_Land_of_Israel

  • Abdallah Somekh
  • Iraqi Jewish rosh yeshiva and posek

    Abdallah (Ovadia) Somekh (1813 – September 13, 1889) was an Iraqi Jewish hakham, rosh yeshiva and posek. Abdallah Somekh was born in 1813 in Baghdad to

    Abdallah Somekh

    Abdallah Somekh

    Abdallah_Somekh

  • Jacob Abendana
  • Hakham of London

    Jacob Abendana (1630 – 12 September 1685) was hakham of London from 1680 until his death. Abendana was the eldest son of Joseph Abendana and brother to

    Jacob Abendana

    Jacob_Abendana

  • Masʽud Hai Rakkaḥ
  • מסעוד חי רקח, 1690 – July 24, 1768), also spelled Raccah, was a Sephardi Hakham and shadar (rabbinical emissary) who led the 18th-century Jewish community

    Masʽud Hai Rakkaḥ

    Masʽud Hai Rakkaḥ

    Masʽud_Hai_Rakkaḥ

  • Yosef Hayyim
  • Kabbalist and Iraqi rabbi

    Ḥayyim; Hebrew: יוסף חיים מבגדאד; or Yosef Chaim) was a leading Baghdadi hakham (Sephardi rabbi), authority on halakha (Jewish law), and Master Kabbalist

    Yosef Hayyim

    Yosef Hayyim

    Yosef_Hayyim

  • Isaac Bernays
  • German rabbi (1792–1849)

    revenues. The community assigned to him the title "clerical functionary" or "Ḥakham," instead of the usual traditional titles, "moreh tzedek" or "rabbi". In

    Isaac Bernays

    Isaac Bernays

    Isaac_Bernays

  • Sabbateans
  • Followers of Sabbatai Zevi

    of Amsterdam ..., Sabbatai was eighteen years old when he was ordained a hakham." Scholem also writes, in the previous sentence: "Thomas Coenen, the Protestant

    Sabbateans

    Sabbateans

    Sabbateans

  • Moses Capsali
  • Ottoman rabbi

    Moses ben Elijah Capsali (Hebrew: משה בן אליהו קפשאלי) (1495–1420) was Hakham Bashi (Chief Rabbi) of the Ottoman Empire. Moses ben Elijah Capsali was born

    Moses Capsali

    Moses_Capsali

  • Abraham ben David
  • Provençal rabbi and Talmud commentator (c.1125–1198)

    RABaD (for Rabbeinu Abraham ben David) Ravad or RABaD III, was a Provençal ḥakham, an important commentator on the Talmud, Sefer Halachot of Isaac Alfasi

    Abraham ben David

    Abraham_ben_David

  • Haim Palachi
  • Chief rabbi of Smyrna (1788–1868)

    of Smyrna (İzmir) and author in Ladino and Hebrew. His titles included Hakham Bashi and Gaon. He was the father of grand rabbis Abraham Palacci and Isaac

    Haim Palachi

    Haim Palachi

    Haim_Palachi

  • Moshe ibn Habib
  • Rishon LeZion and Hakham Bashi (1654–1696)

    חביב; 1654–1696) was the Rishon LeZion (Sephardic chief Rabbi of Israel), Hakham Bashi (chief rabbi of the Ottoman Empire) and the head of a major yeshiva

    Moshe ibn Habib

    Moshe_ibn_Habib

  • Makhlouf Eldaoudi
  • Makhlouf Eldaoudi (Hebrew: מכלוף אלדאודי; 1825–1909) was the Hakham Bashi (Turkish for the Chief Rabbi) of the Jewish communities of Acre, Haifa, Safed

    Makhlouf Eldaoudi

    Makhlouf Eldaoudi

    Makhlouf_Eldaoudi

  • Moses Levi
  • Ottoman rabbi (1827–1910)

    Moses Levi (or Moshe HaLevi Effendi) (1827–1910) was the Chief Rabbi (Hakham Bashi) of Constantinople and of the Ottoman Empire. Levi was first appointed

    Moses Levi

    Moses Levi

    Moses_Levi

  • Hayim de lah Rozah
  • Spanish rabbi and kabbalist

    and friend of Rabbi Sharabi. Rabbi de lah Rozah authored the sefer Torat Hakham. Rabbi de lah Rozah lived in the 1700s, long after the Spanish expulsion

    Hayim de lah Rozah

    Hayim_de_lah_Rozah

  • Ishak Haleva
  • Turkish rabbi (1940–2025)

    יצחק חליבה, Turkish: İsak Haleva) (27 April 1940 – 14 January 2025) was Hakham Bashi (Chief Rabbi) (Turkish: Hahambaşı) of Turkey. Haleva was born in Istanbul

    Ishak Haleva

    Ishak Haleva

    Ishak_Haleva

  • Midrash Bet Zilkha
  • pursued advanced studies there. Before the establishment of the Midrash, Hakham Abdallah Somekh would teach students free of charge. This was noted with

    Midrash Bet Zilkha

    Midrash_Bet_Zilkha

  • Sabbatai Zevi
  • Jewish mystic and self-proclaimed Messiah (1626–1676)

    of Amsterdam ..., Sabbatai was eighteen years old when he was ordained a hakham." Scholem also writes, in the previous sentence: "Thomas Coenen, the Protestant

    Sabbatai Zevi

    Sabbatai Zevi

    Sabbatai_Zevi

  • Jacob Rakkah
  • Libyan Hakham

    Yaakov Rakkaḥ) (1800 – 3 March 1891), also spelled Raccah, was a Sephardi Hakham in the 19th-century Jewish community of Tripoli, Libya. He was a well-known

    Jacob Rakkah

    Jacob Rakkah

    Jacob_Rakkah

  • Seraya Shapshal
  • Crimean Karaite community leader (1873-1961)

    Polish: Seraj Szapszał; Russian: Серге́й Маркович Шапшал) (1873–1961) was a hakham and leader of the Crimean and then the Polish and Lithuanian Crimean Karaites

    Seraya Shapshal

    Seraya Shapshal

    Seraya_Shapshal

  • Crimean Karaites
  • Ethnoreligious group

    distinct form of Judaism. In Vilnius and Trakai, the Nazis forced Karaite Hakham Seraya Shapshal to produce a list of the members of the community. Though

    Crimean Karaites

    Crimean Karaites

    Crimean_Karaites

  • Chokmah
  • Biblical Hebrew word; 2nd emanation in Kabbalah

    ḥ-k-m). Adjectival ḥakham "wise" is used as a honorific, as in Talmid Chakham (lit. "student of a sage") for a Torah scholar, or Hakham Bashi for a Chief

    Chokmah

    Chokmah

    Chokmah

  • Baruch Ben Haim
  • (Hebrew: ברוך בן חיים; November 18, 1921 – June 2, 2005) was a Sephardi Hakham who served as Chief Rabbi of the Syrian Jewish community in Brooklyn, New

    Baruch Ben Haim

    Baruch_Ben_Haim

  • Hayyim ben Abraham ha-Kohen
  • Jewish rabbi and writer (1585–1655)

    further publication, and in 1653 we find him in İzmir. In 1654 his Torat hakham, a book of sermons, was printed in Venice; other parts of his Mekor hayyim

    Hayyim ben Abraham ha-Kohen

    Hayyim_ben_Abraham_ha-Kohen

  • Simeon ben Judah ha-Nasi
  • 3rd-century Judean tanna

    Simeon as hakham of his yeshivah in Beit She'arim (Roman-era Jewish village). Judah ha-Nasi had always intended that Simeon only become the hakham of his

    Simeon ben Judah ha-Nasi

    Simeon_ben_Judah_ha-Nasi

  • Yaakov Shaul Elyashar
  • Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Palestine from 1893 to 1906

    Berakhah, was a 19th-century Sephardi rabbi in Ottoman Syria. He became Hakham Bashi or Sephardi Chief Rabbi of the Land of Israel ( Palestine) in 1893

    Yaakov Shaul Elyashar

    Yaakov Shaul Elyashar

    Yaakov_Shaul_Elyashar

  • Bukharan Jews
  • Jewish subgroup of Central Asia

    Maimon's great-grandson Shimon Hakham continued his great-grandfather's work as a Rabbi, and in 1870 opened the Talmid Hakham yeshiva in Bukhara, where religious

    Bukharan Jews

    Bukharan Jews

    Bukharan_Jews

  • Talmid Chakham
  • Honorific title given to one well versed in Jewish law

    Orthodox Jews, due to the resurgence of Orthodoxy since the mid-20th century. Hakham Jewish customs of etiquette Also spelled Talmid Chacham.  This article incorporates

    Talmid Chakham

    Talmid_Chakham

  • Judeo-Persian
  • Persian dialects spoken by Jews in Iran

    around the beginning of the twentieth century by the ּּBukharan rabbi Shimon Hakham, who founded a printing press in Israel. The earliest evidence of Judeo-Persian

    Judeo-Persian

    Judeo-Persian

    Judeo-Persian

  • Ovadia Yosef
  • Talmudic scholar, posek and Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel from 1973 to 1983

    Maran (Hebrew: מרן; lit. 'Our Master'), was an Iraqi-born Talmudic scholar, hakham, posek, and the Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel from 1972 to 1983. Also known

    Ovadia Yosef

    Ovadia Yosef

    Ovadia_Yosef

  • José Faur
  • Argentine talmud researcher

    פאור הלוי Ḥāḵām Yōsēf Fawr Hallēwī; 1934 – June 9, 2020) was a Sephardic Hakham (rabbi), teacher and scholar. He was a Rabbi in the Syrian-Jewish community

    José Faur

    José_Faur

  • Nissim Yehuda Danon
  • Chief Sephardi Rabbi of Israel (1874–1930)

    February 13, 1930) was a Chief Sephardi Rabbi in Eretz Yisroel and the last Hakham Bashi of Ottoman Palestine. Danon was born in Jerusalem to a Jewish family

    Nissim Yehuda Danon

    Nissim Yehuda Danon

    Nissim_Yehuda_Danon

  • List of Karaite Jews
  • (1873–1961), ḥakham of the Lithuanian Karaite community Sima Babovich (1790–1855), ḥakham of the Crimean Karaites Mordecai Alfandari (1929–1999), Ḥakham, known

    List of Karaite Jews

    List_of_Karaite_Jews

  • Mordecai Sultansky
  • Crimean Karaite hakham (1772–1862)

    Mordecai Sultansky (Hebrew: מרדכי סולטנסקי) was a Crimean Karaite hakham of the nineteenth century. He was born at Lutsk about 1772. Sultansky was one

    Mordecai Sultansky

    Mordecai_Sultansky

  • Moses ben Abraham Bali
  • 15th century Karaite physician, poet and ḥakham

    Abraham Bali (fl. late 15th century) was a Karaite physician, poet and ḥakham from Cairo. Two collections of his Hebrew poetry are found in the collection

    Moses ben Abraham Bali

    Moses_ben_Abraham_Bali

  • David Nieto
  • Sephardi rabbi

    David Nieto (1654 – 10 January 1728) was the Hakham of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish community in London, later succeeded in this capacity by his son

    David Nieto

    David Nieto

    David_Nieto

  • Nachman Batito
  • Chief Sephardi Rabbi of the Land of Israel

    Rabbi Nachman Batito (1845 – August 25, 1915) was a Hakham Bashi and Rishon LeZion in the Land of Israel during Ottoman rule. Batito was born in 1845 in

    Nachman Batito

    Nachman Batito

    Nachman_Batito

  • Saul (given name)
  • Name list

    References People named Saul include: Saul Adadi (1850–1918), Sephardic Hakham and rosh yeshiva in the Tripoli Jewish community Saul Alinsky (1909–1972)

    Saul (given name)

    Saul (given name)

    Saul_(given_name)

  • Mesillat Yesharim
  • 1738 text by Moshe Chaim Luzzatto

    manuscript version, written in 1738, was arranged as a dialogue between a hakham (wise man) and a hasid (pious person). Before publication, it was rearranged

    Mesillat Yesharim

    Mesillat Yesharim

    Mesillat_Yesharim

  • History of the Jews in Turkey
  • considerable amount of administrative autonomy and were represented by the Hakham Bashi, the Chief Rabbi. There were no restrictions in the professions Jews

    History of the Jews in Turkey

    History of the Jews in Turkey

    History_of_the_Jews_in_Turkey

  • List of chief rabbis of Israel and Mandatory Palestine
  • The Chief Rabbi of Israel is a religious appointment that began at the time of the British Mandate in Palestine, and continued through to the State of

    List of chief rabbis of Israel and Mandatory Palestine

    List_of_chief_rabbis_of_Israel_and_Mandatory_Palestine

  • Solomon Gaon
  • Sephardic rabbi

    Solomon Gaon (1912–1994) was a Sephardic Rabbi and Hakham of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews of the British Commonwealth. Solomon Gaon was born in Travnik

    Solomon Gaon

    Solomon Gaon

    Solomon_Gaon

  • Naim Dangoor
  • British-Iraqi entrepreneur and philanthropist (1914–2015)

    (1883–1976), was the world's largest printer of Arabic books, and his grandfather Hakham Ezra Reuben Dangoor was the Chief Rabbi of Baghdad. In the 1930s, Dangoor

    Naim Dangoor

    Naim Dangoor

    Naim_Dangoor

  • Zerachiah ha-Levi of Girona
  • 12th century Catalonian rabbi and poet

    name Gerondi. He died after 1186 in Lunel in Provence. He was a famous hakham, Torah and Talmud commentator, and a poet. Zerachiah was born into a rabbinic

    Zerachiah ha-Levi of Girona

    Zerachiah_ha-Levi_of_Girona

  • David Pardo (Dutch rabbi, born in Salonica)
  • 17th century Dutch Rabbi born in Solonica

    David ben Joseph Pardo (c. 1591 – 1657) was a Dutch rabbi and hakham. He was born in Salonica to Rabbi Joseph and Reina in the second half of the sixteenth

    David Pardo (Dutch rabbi, born in Salonica)

    David_Pardo_(Dutch_rabbi,_born_in_Salonica)

  • Dönmeh
  • Group of Sabbatean crypto-Jews in the Ottoman Empire

    Dönme identity and presented the Dönmeh and their religious beliefs. As the Hakham Bashi of Turkey and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel did not accept the Dönmeh

    Dönmeh

    Dönmeh

    Dönmeh

  • Mehmed II
  • Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (r. 1444–1446, 1451–1481)

    Gennadios as the first Orthodox Patriarch. He also appointed a grand rabbi (Hakham Bashi), Moses Capsali, but it is not clear whether the rabbi's authority

    Mehmed II

    Mehmed II

    Mehmed_II

  • Bataween
  • Main Jewish quarter of Baghdad, Iraq

    Hakham Ezra Dangoor (b.1848)— Chief Rabbi of Baghdad (1923-1926) in the New Synagogue of Baghdad

    Bataween

    Bataween

    Bataween

  • Jewish views on Jesus
  • Judaism's views on the central figure of Christianity

    by Jesus and his disciples. Hakham Abraham Firkovich believed Jesus himself was actually a Karaite. Controversial hakham Seraya Shapshal said: We call

    Jewish views on Jesus

    Jewish_views_on_Jesus

  • Court Jew
  • Jewish banker to European royalty

    Ivanhoe serves this purpose to Prince John and other nobles. Crown rabbi Hakham Bashi Jewish heraldry Jewish oath Judenhut Landesrabbiner List of British

    Court Jew

    Court_Jew

  • Honorifics in Judaism
  • Terms of honor in Judaism

    Aharon Yehuda Leib Shteinman was considered one until his death in 2017. "Hakham" (wise one) is an alternate title for rabbis (especially Sephardic ones)

    Honorifics in Judaism

    Honorifics_in_Judaism

  • Yaakov Mutzafi
  • Iraqi-born rabbi and kabbalist

    hakhamim studied Torah non-stop; among them was Hakham Silman Hugi Aboudi dayan, as well as his good friend Hakham Yaakov Mutzafi ..."] Hakhmei Bavel, Hebrew;

    Yaakov Mutzafi

    Yaakov_Mutzafi

  • Avraham Avinu Synagogue
  • Synagogue in Hebron, West Bank, Palestine

    Old City of Hebron, West Bank, Palestine. Built by Sephardic Jews led by Hakham Malkiel Ashkenazi in 1540, its domed structure represented the physical

    Avraham Avinu Synagogue

    Avraham Avinu Synagogue

    Avraham_Avinu_Synagogue

  • Bar Yochai (song)
  • Jewish hymn

    the Zohar. Composed in the 16th century by Rabbi Shimon Lavi, a Sephardi Hakham and kabbalist in Tripoli, Libya, it is the most prominent and popular kabbalistic

    Bar Yochai (song)

    Bar_Yochai_(song)

  • Abraham Cohen Pimentel
  • 17th century Amsterdam rabbi

    Amsterdam. He was a student of Saul Levi Morteira, and he also served as hakham of the synagogue in Hamburg and was initially a signator to a letter of

    Abraham Cohen Pimentel

    Abraham_Cohen_Pimentel

  • Yaakov Ades
  • Israeli Sephardi rabbi and rosh yeshiva

    February 24, 1898 – July 19, 1963), also spelled Adas or Adess, was a Sephardi Hakham, Rosh Yeshiva, and Rabbinical High Court judge. As rosh yeshiva of Porat

    Yaakov Ades

    Yaakov Ades

    Yaakov_Ades

  • Josiah Pardo
  • Hisquiyahu Pardo, Hebrew: יאשיהו בן דוד; 1626–1684) was a Dutch rabbi and hakham, who served as a Rabbi in Willemstad, Curaçao and in Port Royal, Jamaica

    Josiah Pardo

    Josiah_Pardo

  • Asi Abutbul
  • Israeli mobster (born 1975)

    Rosen. He was also charged with conspiring to murder his attorney Yoram Hakham in 2008. Weiss, Efrat (2006-05-21). "אסי אבוטבול נעצר בחשד לסחר באמצעי לחימה"

    Asi Abutbul

    Asi_Abutbul

  • Institute of Traditional Judaism
  • Rabbinical school in New Jersey, US

    Reish Metivta was Rabbi Prof. David Weiss Halivni; notable faculty included Hakham Isaac S.D. Sassoon and Rabbi David Novak. A prominent graduate is Rabbi

    Institute of Traditional Judaism

    Institute_of_Traditional_Judaism

  • Abraham Firkovich
  • 19th-century Karaite Jewish writer and archaeologist

    writer and archaeologist, collector of ancient manuscripts, and a Karaite Hakham. He was born in Lutsk, Volhynia and died in Çufut Qale, Crimea. Gabriel

    Abraham Firkovich

    Abraham Firkovich

    Abraham_Firkovich

  • Chief Rabbinate of Israel
  • Leading authority of Judaism in Israel

    was bestowed upon the Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem. In 1842, the position of "Hakham Bashi"—Chief Rabbi of Constantinople who represented the Turkish Jews before

    Chief Rabbinate of Israel

    Chief Rabbinate of Israel

    Chief_Rabbinate_of_Israel

  • Ehud (given name)
  • Name list

    known use is the Hebrew judge, the etymology is unknown. According to Amos Hakham, medieval rabbis favored one of two improbable explanations. Some, like

    Ehud (given name)

    Ehud_(given_name)

  • Sadqa Hussein
  • Iraqi rabbi (1876–1961)

    householders that went four or five hours. From those years he earned the title "Hakham Sadqa", which he was known by the rest of his life. As a consequence of

    Sadqa Hussein

    Sadqa_Hussein

  • Ethnarch
  • Leader of a homogenous ethnic community

    also influential Jewish diaspora, a similar position was granted to the Hakham Bashi, i.e., chief rabbi. In modern Greek usage, the term has the connotation

    Ethnarch

    Ethnarch

  • Saul Adadi
  • Libyan Jewish leader

    Adadi (Hebrew: שאול עבדיה אדאדי, 1850 – September 18, 1918) was a Sephardi Hakham, rosh yeshiva, and paytan in the 19th-century Jewish community of Tripoli

    Saul Adadi

    Saul_Adadi

  • Travnik
  • Town and municipality in Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina

    chef Sena Jurinac, operatic soprano Solomon Gaon, Sephardic Rabbi and Hakham Mirosław Ferić, fighter pilot Nikola Mandić, politician Zlata Bartl, scientist

    Travnik

    Travnik

    Travnik

  • Shlomo ben Afeda Ha-Kohen
  • Crimean Karaite hakham (1826–1893)

    Solomon Afeda Cohen (in Hebrew: שלמה בן אפידה הכהן) (1826–1893) was a Karaite hakham of the 19th century considered the last of the Karaite sages of Constantinople

    Shlomo ben Afeda Ha-Kohen

    Shlomo ben Afeda Ha-Kohen

    Shlomo_ben_Afeda_Ha-Kohen

  • Hachmei Provence
  • Jewish rabbis of Provence

    Jewish scholarship in the times of the Tosafists. The singular form is hakham, a Sephardic and Hachmei Provençal term for a rabbi. In matters of halakha

    Hachmei Provence

    Hachmei_Provence

  • Tomb of the Prophet Hazkiel
  • Abrhamic holy site in Kurdistan Region, Iraq

    community to settle in Amadiya (Hazan is a Jewish title nearly equivalent to Hakham or Rabbi). Hazan David died by tradition in 936, and the synagogue Knis

    Tomb of the Prophet Hazkiel

    Tomb of the Prophet Hazkiel

    Tomb_of_the_Prophet_Hazkiel

  • Joseph Colon Trabotto
  • Italian rabbi

    for truth and justice; and this happened in his dispute with Capsali, the ḥakham-bashi (Chief Rabbi) of Turkey. Having been falsely informed by an emissary

    Joseph Colon Trabotto

    Joseph_Colon_Trabotto

  • General Assembly of the Ottoman Empire
  • National legislature

    Eastern Orthodox Armenian Apostolic Syriac Orthodox Coptic Orthodox Judaism Hakham Bashi Provincial Eyalets Beylerbeys Vilayets Sanjaks Sanjakbeys Mutasarrifates

    General Assembly of the Ottoman Empire

    General Assembly of the Ottoman Empire

    General_Assembly_of_the_Ottoman_Empire

  • Nagid
  • Hebrew term meaning a prince or leader

    David ben Joshua Maimuni [he], 1335?-1415? Exilarch Nasi (Hebrew title) Hakham Bashi Chief Rabbi Jewish Travellers (ed. Elkan Nathan Adler), chapter: Obadiah

    Nagid

    Nagid

  • Kalonymus ben Kalonymus
  • French Jewish philosopher and translator

    (Arles, 1286 – died after 1328), was a Jewish philosopher, translator, and hakham of Provence. Kalonymus studied philosophy and rabbinical literature at Salon-de-Provence

    Kalonymus ben Kalonymus

    Kalonymus_ben_Kalonymus

  • Menashe Zemro
  • Ethiopian-born Israeli-Ethiopian religious leader

    born 1905 or 1906 and died 7 October 1998 at age 92. He is regarded as a Hakham and the last Kahen of the Ethiopian Jews. Zemro was born in 1906 to his

    Menashe Zemro

    Menashe_Zemro

  • Karaite Kenesa (Kyiv)
  • Former kenesa in Kyiv, Ukraine

    consecration of Kenasa was held on January 27, 1902, by Tauride and Odesa hakham Samuel Pampulov. The ceremony was attended by the vice-governor, mayor,

    Karaite Kenesa (Kyiv)

    Karaite Kenesa (Kyiv)

    Karaite_Kenesa_(Kyiv)

  • David Asseo
  • 4th Chief Rabbi of the Republic of Turkey (1914–2002)

    Chief Rabbi David Asseo (1914 – July 14, 2002) was the Hakham Bashi (Chief Rabbi) of the Republic of Turkey from 1961 until his death in 2002. Asseo was

    David Asseo

    David_Asseo

  • List of synagogues in Iran
  • Kamal Synagogue (fa) Eliahu Hanavi Synagogue Eli Synagogue Hadash Synagogue Hakham Synagogue Mizan Synagogue Molla Shlomo Synagogue Esther and Mordecai Shrine

    List of synagogues in Iran

    List_of_synagogues_in_Iran

  • History of the Jews in Iraq
  • transforming. The Iraqi Jewish community introduced the Hakham Bashi, or Chief Rabbinate, in 1849, with Hakham Ezra Dangoor leading the community. The chief rabbi

    History of the Jews in Iraq

    History of the Jews in Iraq

    History_of_the_Jews_in_Iraq

  • Avraham Mordechai Gottlieb
  • Israeli rabbi

    articles and comments by Rabbi Gottlieb. Petihah LeHokhmah HaKabbalah Pri Hakham Igrot - Annotations on the letters of Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag directed to his

    Avraham Mordechai Gottlieb

    Avraham Mordechai Gottlieb

    Avraham_Mordechai_Gottlieb

  • Rabbi
  • Teacher of Torah and spiritual leader in Judaism

    Like the Babylonian sages, a recognised scholar could be called Rav or Hakham (חכם, 'Wise [one]'). The transmission of learning from teacher to disciple

    Rabbi

    Rabbi

    Rabbi

  • Meir Rekhavi
  • British Karaite hakham and author

    Meir Yosef Rekhavi (born 1962) is a British born Karaite Hakham and author. He was born Martin Furman in Leeds, England. Rekhavi came from an Orthodox

    Meir Rekhavi

    Meir_Rekhavi

  • Cochin Jews
  • Jewish community that settled in the Kingdom of Cochin in modern-day Kerala, India

    from Cochin, who is alleged to have been of Yemenite Jewish origin, was Hakham Shelomo Salem Shurrabi who served as a Hazzan (Reader) in the then newly

    Cochin Jews

    Cochin Jews

    Cochin_Jews

  • Marriage in Israel
  • Legal status of marriages and divorces in the state of Israel

    during the Ottoman period. Jewish religious matters were handled by the Hakham Bashi and the Jewish courts. Article 14 of the British Mandate of Palestine

    Marriage in Israel

    Marriage in Israel

    Marriage_in_Israel

  • Moses Gomez de Mesquita
  • Moses Gomez de Mesquita (1688 – May 8, 1751) was ḥakham of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews of London. Mesquita was born and trained in Amsterdam, where

    Moses Gomez de Mesquita

    Moses_Gomez_de_Mesquita

  • Sima Babovich
  • Crimean Karaite hakham (1790–1855)

    Russian: Сима Соломонович Бабович; 1790–1855) was the first[citation needed] Hakham of the Russian Crimean Karaites (1839–1855), one of the early figures in

    Sima Babovich

    Sima Babovich

    Sima_Babovich

  • Mordechai Eliyahu
  • Israeli rabbi, posek, and spiritual leader (1929–2010)

    (1929-2010)", RabbiMeirBaalHaneis.com "There are many rabbis, but only one hakham, Hakham Naim.", Hebrew; Israel National News "Former Chief Rabbi of Israel Mordechai

    Mordechai Eliyahu

    Mordechai Eliyahu

    Mordechai_Eliyahu

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Online names & meanings

  • KIKU
  • Female

    Japanese

    KIKU

    (菊) Japanese name KIKU means "chrysanthemum."

  • Damiya
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Sindhi

    Damiya

    Greek God

  • Daisi
  • Girl/Female

    English French

    Daisi

    Day's eye. A flower name.

  • HEPHAISTOS
  • Male

    Greek

    HEPHAISTOS

    (Ήφαιστος) Greek name said to be pre-Hellenic and of unknown origin, but possibly from the word hepta, HEPHAISTOS means "seven." In mythology, this is the name of the lame god of artisans, craftsmen, metallurgy and fire. His Roman name is Vulcan. It was from the forge of this god that Promêtheus stole fire to give to man. He is also known by the epithet "both feet crooked."

  • Adelbert
  • Boy/Male

    Teutonic American German Hungarian

    Adelbert

    Intelligent.

  • Kazimah |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Kazimah |

    One who controls her anger

  • Bon-hwa
  • Boy/Male

    Korean

    Bon-hwa

    Glorious.

  • Pradyun | ப்ரதயுந
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Pradyun | ப்ரதயுந

    Radiant

  • Lujzika
  • Girl/Female

    German

    Lujzika

    Renowned in Battle; Famous Warrior; Female Version of Louis

  • Shaakira
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Shaakira

    Thankful; Grateful

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