- Judah Messer Leon (1166)
Judah ben Isaac Messer Leon (1166 – 1224) was a French
tosafist born inParis . According to Gross he was probably a descendant ofRashi , and a pupil ofIsaac ben Samuel ofDampierre and his son Elhanan. He married a daughter ofAbraham ben Joseph of Orleans , who has been identified by Jacobs ("Jews of Angevin England", p. 409) with Abraham fil Rabbi Joce, chief Jew inLondon in 1186. In a list of that year associated with Abraham occurs the name of Leo Blund, whom Jacobs identifies with Judah ben Isaac (ib. p. 88; comp. Bacher, in "J.Q.R." vi.360).Sir Leon must have left
Paris in 1182, when all Jews were expelled from the French king's dominions; he did not return till 1198. According to Gross, however, he received his chief training atDampierre underSimson of Sens ,Simson of Coucy ,Solomon of Dreux , andAbraham b. Nathan of Lunel . Shortly after 1198 he returned to Paris and founded an important school of tosafists, in which were trained, among others,Jehiel ben Joseph (Sir Leon's successor),Isaac ben Moses of Vienna (author of "Or Zarua"),Samuel ben Solomon (Sir Morel of Falaise), andMoses of Coucy .He appears to have composed "
tosafot " to most of the tractates of theTalmud , traces being found of his annotations to twenty tractates. The only collection that has been published are his additamenta to "Berakot ," published atWarsaw in 1863. A long fragment of his "tosafot" to "Abodah Zarah " is still extant in a manuscript that formerly belonged toLuzzatto andHalberstam ("R.E.J." vii.55) and that is now in the possession ofJews' College ,London . A few of his "responsa " are also found, chiefly in various additions to the Mordecai, while reference is also found to his commentary on thePentateuch , in which he appears to have followed the method ofRashbam .Judah wrote several poems — an
Aramaic description of theDecalogue (Zunz , "Ritus", p. 198), a "pizmon " (idem, "Literaturgesch". p. 329), and a "piyyut " (Landshuth , "Ammude ha-'Abodah", i.68). He is not, however, to be identified with the mystical Judah Ḥasid, to whom are attributed the "Sefer ha-Ḥasidim" and anethical will . Among the writers whom Judah quotes may be mentionedAmram Gaon ,Sherira Gaon ,Hai Gaon , andNissim Gaon , Alfasi,Maimonides ,Elijah ben Menahem ,Gershom ben Judah ,Jacob of Orleans ,Jacob of Corbeil ,Joseph Kara ,Joseph Bekor Shor ,Yom-Tov of Joigny , andRashi .He died in Paris in 1224 (
Solomon Luria , "Responsa," No. 29).See also
*
Tosafists References
*JewishEncyclopedia
*Henri Gross , in Berliner's "Magazin," iv.173-210;
*idem, "Gallia Judaica", pp. 519-524;
*Joseph Jacobs , "Jews of Angevin England", pp. 406-416.
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