- Isaac ibn Ghiyyat
Isaac ben Judah ibn Ghiyyat or Ghayyat (1038-1089) ( _he. יצחק בן יהודה אבן גיאת, _ar. ﺇﺑﻦ ﻏﻴﺎث "ibn Ghayyath") was a Spanish
rabbi , Biblical commentator, philosopher, and liturgical poet. He was born (H. Graetz cites 1030) and lived in the town ofLucena , where he also headed a rabbinic academy. He died in Cordoba.According to some authorities he was the teacher of
Isaac Alfasi ; according to others, his fellow pupil. The best known of his pupils were his sonJudah ibn Ghayyat ,Joseph ibn Sahl , andMoses ibn Ezra . He was held in great esteem bySamuel ha-Nagid and his son Joseph, and after the latter's death (1066), Ibn Ghayyat was elected to succeed him as rabbi of Lucena, where he officiated until his death.He was the author of a compendium of ritual laws concerning the festivals, published by
Bamberger under the title of "Sha'are Simḥah" (Fürth, 1862; the laws concerning thePassover were republished byZamber under the title "Hilkot Pesaḥim," Berlin, 1864), and a philosophical commentary onEcclesiastes , known only through quotations in the works of later authors (Dukes, in "Orient, Lit." x. 667-668). The greatest activity of Ibn Ghayyat was in liturgical poetry; he was an author of hundreds ofpiyyutim , and his hymns are found in theMaḥzor of Tripoli under the title of "Sifte Renanot."Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography
*
Joseph Derenbourg , in Geiger's Wiss. Zeit. Jüd. Theol. v. 396-412;
*Michael Sachs , Religiöse Poesie, pp. 259-262;
*Grätz , Gesch. 3d ed., vi. 61, 77;
*Zunz , Literaturgesch. pp. 194-200;
*idem, in Allg. Zeit. des Jud. 1839, p. 480;
*L. Dukes, in Orient, Lit. ix. 536-540; x. 667, 668;
*Landshuth , 'Ammude ha-'Ahodah, pp. 111-116;
*De Rossi, Dizionario, pp. 173-174;
*Steinschneider , Cat. Bodl. cols. 1110-1111.References
*JewishEncyclopedia
External links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=18&letter=I&search=Isaac%20ibn%20Ghiyyat Jewish Encyclopedia article on Isaac ben Judah ibn Ghiyyat] , by
Gotthard Deutsch andM. Seligsohn .
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