- Levi Ibn Chaviv
Rabbi Levi Ibn Habib wasrabbi ofJerusalem ; born at Zamora,Spain , about 1480; died at Jerusalem about 1545.Under King Manuel of
Portugal , and when about seventeen, he was compelled to submit tobaptism , but at the first opportunity fled toSalonica , where he could follow the dictates of his conscience in safety. In 1523 he went to Jerusalem, but in a short time returned to Salonica. In 1525 he settled permanently at Jerusalem, where his learning won him the position of chief rabbi. There he metJacob Berab , with whom he often came into conflict on questions of rabbinical law. A serious quarrel broke out between these two rabbis when Berab, becoming chief rabbi ofSafed , reintroduced the ancient practise of the ordination of rabbis. They carried on a bitter and envenomed controversy for some time, in the course of which Berab referred to Ibn Habib's adoption of Christianity. The latter frankly admitted the fact, but pointed out that at the time he was a mere youth, that his involuntary profession of Christianity lasted hardly a year, and that he took the first opportunity to escape and rejoin the religion of his fathers. This controversy was chiefly responsible for the fact that the practise of ordination ceased again soon after Berab's death.Writings
He was knowledgeable in
mathematics andastronomy . In his youth he edited his father's bookEin Yaakov (Constantinople , 1516; ByJacob ibn Habib ). He wrote: "She'elot u-Teshubot", a collection of 147responsa ; "Kontres ha-Semikah", a treatise on ordination; "Perush Kiddush HaCHodesh", a commentary on Kiddush HaChodesh (rules governing the construction of theHebrew calendar inMaimonides code of law). All these works were published together atVenice (1565);' the last-named work was also published separately (ib. 1574-76).References
*
David Conforte , "Kore ha-Dorot", pp. 32a, 33b, 37a:
*Heinrich Grätz , "Gesch." 3d ed., ix.293-296;
*Giovanni Bernardo De Rossi , "Dizionario", i.84;
*Hazan , "Ha-Ma'alot li-Shelomoh", pp. 53a-54a;
*Julius Fürst , "Bibl. Jud." i.153;
*Moritz Steinschneider , "Cat. Bodl." col. 1606.
*JewishEncyclopedia
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