Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Abraham_Bedersi> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 71 of
71
with 100 triples per page.
- Abraham_Bedersi abstract "Abraham Bedersi was a Provençal Jewish poet; he was born at Béziers (whence his surname Bedersi, or native of Béziers). The dates of his birth and death have not been ascertained. An elegy which he composed during his youth, upon the Confiscation of the Books of the Law, is supposed by some scholars to refer to the burning of the Talmud in Paris about the year 1242; by others, to the confiscation of the Talmud in Aragon in 1264, as the direct result of the Barcelona controversy. If the latter view is correct, Bedersi may well have flourished about the year 1240 (Leopold Zunz, Z.G., p. 413).As appears from the letter sent by Bedersi to Don Vidal Solomon (Ḥotam Toknit, p. 4), he went early (perhaps in 1273) to Perpignan, where he attended the lectures of Joseph Ezubi. He returned often to Perpignan and took an active part in its communal affairs. A number of his letters, contained in MS. cviii (72) of the Vienna Hofbibliothek, are written to prominent Jews in Barcelona, asking them to aid their less fortunate coreligionists. At one time he lived at Arles, and in 1285, during the war of France with Roussillon, he took refuge in Narbonne. He seems at one time to have been rich, for in a poem he declares that he is independent and writes for his own pleasure. The compiler of his diwan relates that Bedersi sent money to the wandering poet Gorni (Luzzatto, Intro. to Ḥotam Toknit, p. 4).Bedersi was a prolific writer. Several collections of his poems are still extant in manuscript in various libraries. The most complete manuscript is that in the British Museum, Add. No. 27,168. This contains an elegy on the death of his relative, David of Cabestan; several poems and letters addressed to Todros Abulafia and his companion, Abu al-Ḥasan Saul; poems dedicated to the physician of the king of Castile, Abu al-Ḥasan Meïr ibn al-Ḥarit; and the elegy mentioned above.Two of Bedersi's works were published, with an interesting introduction by Luzzatto, by G. Polak, Amsterdam, 1862: Ḥereb ha-Mithapeket (A Revolving Sword), a poem of 210 strophes, according to the numerical value of the word = 8 + 200 + 2. The author in this poem gives a brief account of Jewish poetry, the decadence of which he deplores. He praises the makamat (poems) of Al-Hariri of Basra, which he probably knew through the translation of several by Al-ḤariziḤotem Toknit (Who Seals the Sum; compare Ezek. xxviii.12), a treatise on Hebrew synonyms. Another poetical work, entitled Bakashat ha-Lamedin, published at Frankfort-on-the-Oder, 1812, was attributed to Abraham Bedersi; but it is probable that this poem was written by his son Jedaiah Bedersi.Bedersi's works show the decadence of Jewish poetry at that time. His style is stiff and unintelligible, though he possessed a thorough knowledge of Hebrew.".
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageExternalLink view.jsp?artid=491&letter=B.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageID "11537204".
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageLength "3984".
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageOutDegree "39".
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageRevisionID "631183702".
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Abu_al-Ḥasan_Meïr_ibn_al-Ḥarit.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Abu_al-Ḥasan_Saul.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_Neubauer.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Al-Hariri_of_Basra.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Al-Ḥarizi.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Aragon.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Arles.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Barcelona.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Barcelona_controversy.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Ezekiel.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink British_Museum.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Béziers.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Category:13th-century_French_people.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Category:13th-century_Jews.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hebrew-language_poets.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_French_Jews.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink David_of_Cabestan.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Diwan_(poetry).
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Ernest_Renan.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Frankfort-on-the-Oder.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Frankfurt_(Oder).
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Heinrich_Graetz.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Heinrich_Gross_(rabbi).
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Heinrich_Grätz.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Henri_Gross.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Gorni.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Jedaiah_Bedersi.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Jedaiah_ben_Abraham_Bedersi.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Ezubi.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Castile.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Leopold_Zunz.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Luzzatto.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Menachem_Meiri.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Narbonne.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Paris.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Perpignan.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Provence.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Roussillon.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Salomon_Munk.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Solomon_da_Piera.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Talmud.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Todros_Abulafia.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Todros_ben_Joseph_Abulafia.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLink Yehuda_Alharizi.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageWikiLinkText "Abraham Bedersi".
- Abraham_Bedersi hasPhotoCollection Abraham_Bedersi.
- Abraham_Bedersi wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:JewishEncyclopedia.
- Abraham_Bedersi subject Category:13th-century_French_people.
- Abraham_Bedersi subject Category:13th-century_Jews.
- Abraham_Bedersi subject Category:Hebrew-language_poets.
- Abraham_Bedersi subject Category:Medieval_French_Jews.
- Abraham_Bedersi hypernym Poet.
- Abraham_Bedersi type Article.
- Abraham_Bedersi type Person.
- Abraham_Bedersi type Writer.
- Abraham_Bedersi type Article.
- Abraham_Bedersi type Source.
- Abraham_Bedersi type Writer.
- Abraham_Bedersi comment "Abraham Bedersi was a Provençal Jewish poet; he was born at Béziers (whence his surname Bedersi, or native of Béziers). The dates of his birth and death have not been ascertained. An elegy which he composed during his youth, upon the Confiscation of the Books of the Law, is supposed by some scholars to refer to the burning of the Talmud in Paris about the year 1242; by others, to the confiscation of the Talmud in Aragon in 1264, as the direct result of the Barcelona controversy.".
- Abraham_Bedersi label "Abraham Bedersi".
- Abraham_Bedersi sameAs m.02rh5gx.
- Abraham_Bedersi sameAs Q4668765.
- Abraham_Bedersi sameAs Q4668765.
- Abraham_Bedersi wasDerivedFrom Abraham_Bedersi?oldid=631183702.
- Abraham_Bedersi isPrimaryTopicOf Abraham_Bedersi.