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- Q2839638 subject Q6488193.
- Q2839638 subject Q8396425.
- Q2839638 abstract "Alfandari was a family of eastern rabbis prominent in the 17th and 18th centuries, found in Smyrna, Constantinople, and Jerusalem. The name may be derived from a Spanish locality, perhaps from Alfambra. The following is a list of the chief members of the family:Aaron ben Moses AlfandariElijah AlfandariḤayyim ben Isaac Raphael Alfandari the YoungerḤayyim ben Jacob Alfandari the ElderIsaac Raphael AlfandariJacob ben Ḥayyim AlfandariSolomon Eliezer AlfandariMembers of this family were to be found as of 1906 in Constantinople and in Beirut. A Portuguese family of the name Alphandéry still exists (1906) in Paris and Avignon. At the latter place there was a physician, Moses Alphandéry, in 1506 (Rev. Ét. Juives, xxxiv. 253) and a Lyon Alphanderic, in 1558 (ibid. vii. 280). Compare the names Moses אלפנדריך (Neubauer, Cat. Bodl. Hebr. MSS. No. 2129) and Aaron אלפנדארק (ibid. No. 1080). For a possible explanation of the name, see Steinschneider, Jew. Quart. Rev. xi. 591.In addition to the persons mentioned above, there is known a Solomon Alfandari (Valencia, 1367), whose son Jacob assisted Samuel Ẓarẓa in tranṣlating the Sefer ha-'Aẓamim of pseudo-ibn Ezra from the Arabic into Hebrew. A merchant, Isaac Alfandari, was wrecked in 1529 on the Nubian coast (Zunz, Z. G. p. 425; Steinschneider, Hebr. Uebers. p. 448). In Israeli popular culture, the principal family in the 1973 film Daughters, Daughters is named Alfandari.".
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- Q2839638 wikiPageWikiLink Q6488193.
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- Q2839638 wikiPageWikiLink Q8396425.
- Q2839638 wikiPageWikiLink Q90.
- Q2839638 wikiPageWikiLink Q9288.
- Q2839638 comment "Alfandari was a family of eastern rabbis prominent in the 17th and 18th centuries, found in Smyrna, Constantinople, and Jerusalem. The name may be derived from a Spanish locality, perhaps from Alfambra.".
- Q2839638 label "Alfandari".