- Aaron of Canterbury
Aaron of Canterbury was an English-Jewish
rabbi and halakhic exegete, mentioned in "Minhat Yehudah " ("The Offering of Judah") byJudah ben Eliezer onDeuteronomy xxvi.2, in association withRashi and RabbiJacob of Orleans , and thus, seemingly, of the twelfth century. But a passage in the "Close Roll " of 1242 refers the decision in a divorce case to three "magistri,"Mosse of London , Aaron of Canterbury, andJacob of Oxford , and makes it probable that the Aaron mentioned in "Minhat Yehudah" was of the thirteenth century and acted as an ecclesiastical assessor, or "dayyan ", inLondon about 1242. If so, his name was Aaron fil (son of) Samson.References
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=22&letter=A&search=Aaron%20of%20Canterbury "Aaron of Canterbury"] "
Jewish Encyclopedia ".Funk and Wagnalls , 1901-1906; which gives the following bibliography:
**Zunz , "Z.G." p. 96;
**Univers Israélite, 1852, p. 357;
**"Jew. Quart. Rev." v.61;
**Jacobs, "Jews ofAngevin England", pp. 98, 417*The article there was written by Joseph Jacobs.
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