domingo, 20 de octubre de 2019

Jehosaphat, 4th King of Judah ✡ Ref: AG-663 |•••► #Israel #Genealogia #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________
86 ° Bisabuelo de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Jehosaphat, 4th King of Judah is your 86th great grandfather.You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Carlos Urdaneta Carrillo
his father → Enrique Urdaneta Maya, Dr.
his father → Josefa Alcira Maya de la Torre y Rodríguez
his mother → Vicenta Rodríguez Uzcátegui
her mother → María Celsa Uzcátegui Rincón
her mother → Sancho Antonio de Uzcátegui Briceño
her father → Jacobo de Uzcátegui Bohorques
his father → Luisa Jimeno de Bohorques Dávila
his mother → Juan Jimeno de Bohórquez
her father → Luisa Velásquez de Velasco
his mother → Juan Velásquez de Velasco y Montalvo, Gobernador de La Grita
her father → Ortún Velázquez de Velasco
his father → María Enríquez de Acuña
his mother → Inés Enríquez y Quiñones
her mother → Fadrique Enríquez de Mendoza, 2º Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Conde de Melgar y Rueda
her father → Alonso Enríquez de Castilla, 1er. Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Señor de Medina de Rio Seco
his father → Yonati bat Gedaliah, Paloma
his mother → Gedalia Shlomo ibn ben Shlomo ibn Yaḥyā haZaken
her father → Shlomo ben Yahya ibn Yahya
his father → Yosef ibn Yahya HaZaken
his father → Don Yehuda ibn Yahya ibn Ya'ish
his father → Don Yahya "el Negro"
his father → Yehudah "Ya'ish" ben Yahuda ibn ben Yahudah ibn Yaḥyā, senhor de Aldeia dos Negros
his father → Sisnandiz Moniz
his mother → Elvira "Unisco" Bvira (Elvira) "Unisco" Núñez Sisnandiz Núñes Sisnandiz
her mother → Sisnando ben David Davidiz Davidiz, Vizier of Castile, Emir of Toledo, Comtes de Quimbra
her father → UNDOCUMENTED? Shoshana bat Hai Gaon ben Sherira bat Hai Gaon
his mother → Hai ben Sherira, Gaon v'haDayyan b'Pumbeditha
her father → Sherira ben Hananya Gaon of Pumbeditha
his father → 2nd Sheshna haSpfer b'Pumbeditha bat Mar Rab Mishoi 'Sheshna' haSofer b'Pumbeditha
his mother → Mar Rab Mishoi Sheshna ben Yitzhak Sedeq, ha Sofer b'Pumbeditha
her father → Mar Yitzhak Sadoq
his father → Hillel "Hilai" Yishai ben "Mari", Gaon of Sura
his father → Meiri "Mari" ben Hananiah haKohen al-Nahr Peḳod, Gaon of Sura
his father → Hananya ben Haninai HaKohen ben Haninai haKohen al-Nahr Paqod, "Dayan of the Gate" Gaon of Sura
his father → Haninai al-Nehar Peḳkod ben Bustanai bar Adai, Exilarch & Gaon of Sura
his father → Hananya "Bustenai" ben Haninai, Exilarch & Gaon of Pumbeditha
his father → Ḥananya 'Ḥanan of Isḳiya' bar Adoi ben Hophni, 33rd Exiliarch & Gaon Pumbeditha
his father → Hophni Haninai ben Ahunai, 32nd Exilarch Mar Hophni I
his father → Ahunai ben Haninai, 31st Exilarch Huna Mar II
his father → Haninaï ben Mar Mari, Grandson of Exilarch Mar Zutra I
his father → Mar Mari ben Mar Zutra I
his father → Zutra "the Pious" ben Kahana, 25th Exilarch Mar Zutra I
his father → Kahana ben Abba Mari, 23rd Exilarch Mar Kahana I
his father → Mar Sutra
his father → Musa "Rav Papa" bar Yosef, resh metivta al-Nehardea, 5th Gen Amora
his father → Yosef bar Yosef
his father → Yosef bar Khamma
his father → Khamma ben Nachum II, 5th Exilarch Huna I
his father → 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II
his father → Achaya bar Akkub bar Akkub, 1st Exilarch 2nd Dynasty
his father → Ya'akov ben Shlomo, Exilarch
his father → Shlomo ben Hunya, Exilarch Interregnum
his father → Hunya ben Nathan, Exilarch Interregnum
his father → Nathan (de Zuzita, Babylon) ben Shalom
his father → Shalom II ben Hizkiya, Exilarch Interregnum
his father → Hizkiya Rosh Golah of Judah ben Shehanya, 33rd Exilarch Hizkiya III
his father → Shechanya II ibn Da'ud, Exilarch
his father → Da'ud ben Shemaya, Exilarch
his father → Shemaya I ben Shlomo
his father → Shlomo III ibn Da'ud Exilarch
his father → Da'ud ibn Akkub
his father → Salma bat Hizkiya ibn Nearya
his mother → Hizkiyahu II ibn Nearya 21st Exilarch
her father → Neriyah, 18th Exilarch, Dayan,
his father → Bariah Ben Shemaya
his father → Semaya Ben Shechanya
his father → Shechanya Ben Ovadya
his father → Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan
his father → Arnan Ben Rafaya
his father → Refaya (e Ben Chananya
his father → Yeshaiah ben Hananya
his father → Hananya, 5th Exilarch
his father → Zerubbabel 3rd Exilarch / זרובבל
his father → Salathial 2nd Exilarch Ben Jechaniah, 2nd Exilarch
his father → Jechaniah - יהויכין מלך יהודה 18
his father → Jehoiakim Elyakim, 17th King of Judah
his father → Zebidah .
his mother → Pediah of Rumah
her father → Menasseh ., 13th King of Judah
his father → Hephzi-bah .
his mother → Isaiah The Prophet
her father → Amoz .
his father → Jehoash ., 7th King of Judah
his father → King Ahaziah ., 6th King of Judah
his father → Jehoram, 5th King of Judah
his father → Jehosaphat, 4th King of Judah
his fatherShow short path | Share this path

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Jehosaphat . MP
Hebrew: המלך יהושפט ., מלך יהודה, Spanish: Jehoshaphat ., Dutch: Jehoshaphat ., Estonian: Joosafat ., Polish: Jozafat .
Gender: Male
Birth: circa -908
Jerusalem, Israel
Death: -849 (55-63)
Jerusalem, Israel
Place of Burial: City of David, Israel
Immediate Family:
Son of Asa ., 3rd King of Judah and Azuba .
Husband of NN .; Maacah . and Zibiah .
Father of Jehoram, 5th King of Judah; Azariah ., #2; Jehiel ., #3; Zechariahu ., #4; Azariahu ., #5 and 2 others
Added by: Erik Gross on February 20, 2007
Managed by: Esther ROWE Irish and 122 others
Curated by: Shmuel-Aharon Kam (Kahn / שמואל-אהרן קם (קאן
 0 Matches
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media (26)
Timeline
Discussions (1)
Sources
Revisions
DNA
About
English (default) edit | history
2 Chronicles 17:1
2 Chronicles 20:31
Wikipedia: Jehoshaphat and יהושפט.

He reigned for 25 years. He was a good king sending priests throughout the land to teach people the Law of God. He made one serious mistake in making an alliance with the kings of Israel who were wicked rulers. He had 7 sons.

source: Jehosaphat, 4th King of Judah

2 Chronicles 17:1 2 Chronicles 20:31
Wikipedia: Jehoshaphat and http://he.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D7%99%D7%94%D7%95%D7%A9%D7%A4%D7%98 יהושפט]

He reigned for 25 years. He was a good king sending priests throughout the land to teach people the Law of God. He made one serious mistake in making an alliance with the kings of Israel who were wicked rulers. He had 7 sons. -------------------- Jehoshafat ,

occupation: Melech Jehuda,

son of Asa and Azubah to: nn

1) Jehoram , occupation: Melech Jehuda to: Athaliah , daughter of Omri and nn

JehoshaphatFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search For the high priest of Israel, see Jehoshaphat (high priest). For other uses, see Josaphat (disambiguation). Kings of Judah Saul • David • Solomon • Rehoboam • Abijah • Asa • Jehoshaphat • Jehoram • Ahaziah • Athaliah • J(eh)oash • Amaziah • Uzziah/Azariah • Jotham • Ahaz • Hezekiah • Manasseh • Amon • Josiah • Jehoahaz • Jehoiakim • Jeconiah/Jehoiachin • Zedekiah

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This box: view · talk · edit

Statues of Josaphat and Ezechias on the Monastery of El Escorial.Jehoshaphat (pronounced /dʒəˈhɒʃəˌfæt/, alternately spelled Jehosaphat, Josaphat, or Yehoshafat; Hebrew: יְהוֹשָׁפָט, Modern Yehoshafat Tiberian Yəhôšāp̄āṭ ; " Jehovah has judged"; Greek: Ιωσαφατ; Latin: Josaphat) was the fourth king of the The Kingdom of Judah, and successor of his father Asa.[1] His children included Jehoram, who succeeded him as king. His mother was Azubah[2] Historically, his name has sometimes been connected with the Valley of Jehosaphat,[3] where, according to Joel 3:2, the God of Israel will gather all nations for judgment.

Contents [hide] 1 Reign 2 Alliances 3 Victory over Moabite alliance 4 Chronological notes 5 Popular culture 6 References 7 External links

 ReignJehoshaphat took the throne at the age of thirty-five and reigned for twenty-five years.[2] William F. Albright has dated the reign of Jehoshaphat to 873 – 849 BC. E. R. Thiele held that he became coregent with his father Asa in Asa's thirty-ninth year, 872/871 BC, the year Asa was afflicted with a severe disease in his feet, and then became sole regent when Asa died of the disease in 870/869 BC, his own death occurring in 848/847 BC.[4] Thiele's chronology for the first kings of Judah contained an internal inconsistency that later scholars corrected by dating these kings one year earlier, so that Jehoshaphat's dates are taken as one year earlier in the present article: coregency beginning in 873/871, sole reign commencing in 871/870, and death in 849/848 BC.

Jehoshaphat spent the first years of his reign fortifying his kingdom against Israel (2 Chronicles 17:1-2). The Bible lauds the king for overcoming sexual corruption (1 Kings 22:47), and for destroying the cult images or "idols" of Baal in the land.[citation needed] In the third year of his reign Jehoshaphat sent out priests and Levites over the land to instruct the people in the Law (2 Chronicles 17:7-9), an activity that was commanded for a Sabbatical year in Deuteronomy 31:10-13. The author of 2 Chronicles generally praises his reign, stating that the kingdom enjoyed a great measure of peace and prosperity, the blessing of God resting on the people "in their basket and their store."

 Alliances Michelangelo's Asa-Jehoshaphat-Joram. The man on the left is generally considered to be Jehoshaphat.[citation needed]Jehoshaphat also pursued alliances with his contemporaries ruling the northern kingdom, the first being with Ahab, which was based on marriage: Jehoshaphat married his son Jehoram to Athaliah, daughter of Ahab (2 Kings 8:18). This alliance led to much disgrace, and brought disaster on his kingdom (1 Kings 22:1-33) with the Battle of Ramoth-Gilead. While Jehoshaphat safely returned from this battle, he was confronted by the prophet Jehu, son of Hanani, (2 Chronicles 19:1-3) about this alliance. We are told that Jehoshaphat repented, and returned to his former course of opposition to all idolatry, and promoting the worship of God and in the government of his people (2 Chronicles 19:4-11).

Again he entered into an alliance with Ahaziah, the king of Israel, for the purpose of carrying on maritime commerce with Ophir. But the fleet that was then equipped at Ezion-Gever was immediately wrecked. A new fleet was fitted out without the cooperation of the king of Israel, and although it was successful, the trade was not prosecuted (2 Chronicles 20:35-37; 1 Kings 22:48-49).

He subsequently joined Jehoram, king of Israel, in a war against the Moabites, who were under tribute to Israel. This war was successful. The Moabites were subdued, but seeing Mesha's act of offering his own son in a human sacrifice on the walls of Kir-haresheth filled Jehoshaphat with horror, and he withdrew and returned to his own land (Kings%203:4-27&verse=HE&src=! 2 Kings 3:4-27 HE).

 Victory over Moabite alliance Triumph of Jehosaphat over Adad of Syria. Illustration by Jean Fouquet (1470s) for Flavius Josephus's Jewish Antiquities.The last notable event of his reign occurred when the Moabites formed a great and powerful confederacy with the surrounding nations, and marched against Jehoshaphat (2 Chr. 20). The allied forces were encamped at Ein Gedi. The king and his people were filled with alarm, and betook themselves to God in prayer. The king prayed in the court of the temple, "O our God, will you not judge them? For we have no power to face this vast army that is attacking us. We do not know what to do; but our eyes are upon you." Amid the silence that followed, the voice of Jahaziel the Levite was heard announcing that the next day all this great host would be overthrown. So it was, for they quarreled among themselves, and slew one another, leaving to the people of Judah only to gather the rich spoils of the slain. This was recognized as a great deliverance wrought for them by God. Soon after this victory Jehoshaphat died after a reign of twenty-five years at the age of sixty (1 Kings 22:50). According to some sources (such as the Jewish commentator Rashi) he actually died two years later, but gave up his throne earlier for unknown reasons.

 Chronological notesThe calendars for reckoning the years of kings in Judah and Israel were offset by six months, that of Judah starting in Tishri (in the fall) and that of Israel in Nisan (in the spring). Cross-synchronizations between the two kingdoms therefore often allow narrowing of the beginning and/or ending dates of a king to within a six-month range. For Jehoshaphat, the Scriptural data allow the narrowing of the beginning of his sole reign to some time between Tishri 1 of 871 BC and the day before Nisan 1 of the 870 BC. For calculation purposes, this should be taken as the Judean year beginning in Tishri of 871/870 BC, or more simply 871 BC. His death occurred at some time between Nisan 1 of 848 BC and Tishri 1 of that same BC year, i.e. in the Judean regnal year 849/848 BC, which for calculation purposes can be taken as 849 BC. These dates are one year earlier than those given in the third edition of Thiele's Mysterious Numbers of the Hebrew Kings, thereby correcting an internal consistency that Thiele never resolved, as explained in the Rehoboam article.

 Popular cultureThe king's name in the oath jumping Jehosaphat was likely popularized by the name's utility as a euphemism for Jesus and Jehovah. The phrase is first recorded in the 1866 novel The Headless Horseman by Thomas Mayne Reid.[5] The longer version "By the shaking, jumping ghost of Jehosaphat" is seen in the 1865 novel Paul Peabody by Percy Bolingbroke St. John.[6]

Another theory is that the reference is to Joel 3:11-12, where the prophet Joel says, speaking of the judgment of the dead:

11Assemble yourselves, and come, all ye heathen, and gather yourselves together round about: thither cause thy mighty ones to come down, O LORD. 12Let the heathen be wakened, and come up to the valley of Jehoshaphat: for there will I sit to judge all the heathen round about Jehosaphat is one of the "mighty ones" who has come down to judge the wakened heathens (or he is one of the wakened himself, thus, a "ghost".)

In the Looney Tunes cartoon short, Yankee Dood It, uttering "Jehoshaphat" turns elves into mice, while uttering "Rumpelstiltskin" restores them.

Jehoshaphat House of David Cadet branch of the Tribe of Judah Contemporary Kings of Israel:Ahab, Ahaziah, Jehoram Regnal titles Preceded by Asa King of Judah Coregent with Asa: 873–871 BC Sole reign: 871–849 BC Succeeded by Jehoram

Reclaimed the Egyptian gold from the Ammonites: Pesachim 119a

Was known as one who honored those who fear Gd, for he would stand up and call out, "My master! My master! My teacher! My teacher!" when a Torah scholar would pass, and he would rise and hug and kiss the scholar: Makkot 24a

Whether the prohibition against a Tevul Yom's entry to Har haBayit is biblical or a rabbinic institution by King Yehoshafat: Zevachim 32b

Sometimes Yehoshafat is referred to as the son of Nimshi but this may be a reference to Namuseti or Moses.

Yehoshafat also pursued alliances with his contemporaries ruling the northern kingdom, the first being with Ahab, which was based on marriage: Jehoshaphat married his son Jehoram to Athaliah, daughter of Ahab.

Redundant, recently duplicated profile with no added information. Should not have been created in the first place! Better be eliminated!!!

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Josafat 
 Conectado a: Reyes de Judá JehováValle de Josafat
De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Josafat

Rey de Judá
Reinado C. 870 - 849 aC
Predecesor Como un
Sucesor Joram
Josafat , ( / dʒ ə h ɒ ʃ ə f æ t / ; alternativamente escrito Josafat , Josafat , o Yehoshafat ; hebreo : יְהוֹשָׁפָט , Modern :  Yəhōšafat , Tiberian :  Yehōšāp̄āṭ , " Jehová ha juzgado"; Griego : Ἰωσαφάτ , romanized :  Iosafát ; Latín : Josaphat) según 1 Reyes 15:24, era el hijo de Asa y el rey del reino de Judá , en sucesión a su padre. Sus hijos incluyeron a Joram , quien lo sucedió como rey. Su madre era Azubah . Históricamente, su nombre a veces se ha relacionado con el Valle de Josaphat . [1]

Reinado
Josafat ascendió al trono a la edad de treinta y cinco años y reinó durante veinticinco años. Pasó los primeros años de su reinado fortificando su reino contra el Reino de Israel . Su celo en la supresión de la adoración idólatra de los "lugares altos" se elogia en 2 Crónicas 17: 6. [2] En el tercer año de su reinado, Josafat envió sacerdotes y levitas sobre la tierra para instruir a la gente en la Ley , una actividad que se ordenó durante un año sabático en Deuteronomio 31: 10-13 . El autor de los Libros de las Crónicas. generalmente alaba su reinado, afirmando que el reino disfrutó de una gran paz y prosperidad, la bendición de Dios descansando en la gente "en su canasta y en su tienda".

Alianzas
Michelangelo es Asa-Jehoshaphat-Joram.  Generalmente se considera que el hombre de la izquierda es Josafat. [Cita requerida]
Miguel Ángel 's Asa-Josafat-Joram . El hombre de la izquierda generalmente se considera que es Josafat. [ cita requerida ]
Josafat también buscó alianzas con el reino del norte. El hijo de Josafat, Joram, se casó con la hija de Acab , Atalía . [3] En el decimoctavo año de su reinado, Josafat visitó a Acab en Samaria , y casi pierde la vida acompañando a su aliado al asedio de Ramoth-Galaad . Mientras Josafat regresó sano y salvo de esta batalla, el profeta Jehú , hijo de Hanani , le reprochó sobre esta alianza. [2] Se nos dice que Josafat se arrepintió y regresó a su antiguo curso de oposición a toda idolatría.y promoviendo la adoración a Dios y en el gobierno de su pueblo ( 2 Crónicas 19: 4–11 ).

La alianza entre Israel y Judá para el comercio de oro con Ofir difiere en el relato del historiador deuteronomista ( 1 Reyes 22: 48-49 ) y el relato posterior del Cronista ( 2 Crónicas 20: 35-37 ). Mientras el Cronista afirma que Josafat entró en una alianza con Ocozías de Israel , con el propósito de llevar a cabo el comercio marítimo con Ofir , el Deuteronomista dice que Josafat construyó los barcos por su cuenta, se estrellaron, y luego Ocozías intentó unirse a la alianza para obtener oro . Según el Deuteronomista, Jehoshapat rechazó la oferta, muy probablemente, para retener las ganancias de su reino.

Posteriormente se unió a Joram de Israel , en una guerra contra los moabitas , que estaban bajo tributo a Israel. Los moabitas fueron sometidos, pero al ver el acto de Mesha de ofrecer a su propio hijo como un sacrificio humano en los muros de Kir de Moab llenó de horror a Josafat, y él se retiró y regresó a su propia tierra ( 2 Reyes 3: 4–27 ) .

Victoria sobre la alianza moabita
Triunfo de Josafat sobre Adad de Siria, como lo ilustra Jean Fouquet (1470) para las Antigüedades de los judíos de Josefo.
Triunfo de Josafat sobre Adad de Siria, como lo ilustra Jean Fouquet (1470) para las Antigüedades de los judíos de Josefo .
Según Crónicas , los moabitas formaron una gran y poderosa confederación con las naciones vecinas, y marcharon contra Josafat ( 2 Crónicas 20 ). Las fuerzas aliadas fueron acampadas en Ein Gedi . El rey y su pueblo se llenaron de alarma. El rey oró en la corte del Templo : "Oh Dios nuestro, ¿no los juzgarás? Porque no tenemos poder para enfrentar a este vasto ejército que nos está atacando. No sabemos qué hacer, pero nuestros ojos están puestos en ti. ". ( 2 Crónicas 20:12 ). La voz de Jahaziel el levitaSe escuchó anunciar que al día siguiente todo este gran anfitrión sería derrocado. Así fue, porque se peleaban entre ellos y se mataban unos a otros, dejando al pueblo de Judá solo para recoger el rico botín de los asesinados. Poco después de esta victoria, Josafat murió después de un reinado de veinticinco años a la edad de sesenta ( 1 Reyes 22:50 ). Según algunas fuentes (como el comentarista judío del siglo XI, Rashi ), en realidad murió dos años después, pero abandonó su trono antes por razones desconocidas.

También tuvo la ambición de emular las empresas marítimas de Salomón a Ofir, y construyó una gran embarcación para Tarsis. Pero cuando este barco naufragó en Ezion-geber, renunció al proyecto (I Reyes xxii. 48 y ss .; II Chron. Xx. 35 y ss.).

En I Reyes xxii. 43 se habla brevemente de la piedad de Josafat. Las crónicas, de acuerdo con su tendencia, elaboran este rasgo del carácter del rey. Según su informe (II Crón. Xvii. 7 et seq., Xix. 4 et seq.) Josafat organizó un movimiento misionero enviando a sus oficiales, sacerdotes y levitas para instruir a las personas en toda la tierra en la Ley de Yhwh, el rey mismo entregando sermones. Jurisdicciones eclesiásticas y seculares, según II Chron. xix 11, fueron por orden real mantenidos distintos.

Subyacente a esta atribución al rey del propósito de llevar a cabo el Código Sacerdotal, está el hecho histórico de que Josafat prestó atención para organizar la administración de justicia sobre una base sólida, y fue un honesto adorador de Yhwh. En relación con esto, la declaración de que Josafat expulsó a los "deshedeshim" (RV "Sodomitas") de la tierra (I Reyes xxii. 46) es característica; mientras que II Chron. xix 3 le atribuye haber cortado el Asherot. El informe (II Crón. Xvii. 6) de que se llevó los "lugares altos" (y los Asherim) entra en conflicto con I Reyes xxii. 44 (AV v. 43) y II Chron.xx. 33. El relato del tremendo ejército de Josafat (1,160,000 hombres) y el rico tributo recibido de (entre otros) los filisteos y los árabes (II Crón. Xvii. 10 et seq.) No es histórico.[4]

Literatura rabínica
La pregunta que desconcertó a Ewald ("Gesch. Des Volkes Israel", iii. 669, nota 5) y otros, "¿Dónde estaba la serpiente de bronce hasta la época de Ezequías?" ocupó también a los talmudistas. Lo respondieron de una manera muy simple: Asa y Joshaphat, al limpiar los ídolos, dejaron a propósito a la serpiente de bronce para que Ezequías también pudiera hacer un acto digno de elogio al romperlo (Ḥul. 6b). [5]

Notas cronológicas
William F. Albright ha fechado el reinado de Josafat en el 873–849 a. C. ER Thiele sostuvo que se convirtió en coregente con su padre Asa en el año 39 de Asa, 872/871 aC, el año en que Asa fue infectado con una enfermedad grave en sus pies, y luego se convirtió en el único regente cuando Asa murió de la enfermedad en 870/869 aC , su propia muerte ocurrió en 848/847 a. [6] Entonces, las fechas de Josafat se toman como un año antes: la corregencia comenzando en 873/871, el reinado único comenzando en 871/870 y la muerte en 849/848 a. C.

Los calendarios para calcular los años de reyes en Judá e Israel fueron compensados ​​por seis meses, el de Judá comenzando en Tishri (en el otoño) y el de Israel en Nisan (en la primavera). Por lo tanto, las sincronizaciones cruzadas entre los dos reinos a menudo permiten reducir las fechas de inicio y / o finalización de un rey dentro de un rango de seis meses. Para Josafat, los datos de las Escrituras permiten reducir el comienzo de su único reinado a algún tiempo entre Tishri 1 de 871 a. C. y el día anterior a Nisan 1 del 870 a. C. Para fines de cálculo, esto debe tomarse como el Judeanaño que comienza en Tishri de 871/870 a. C., o más simplemente 871 a. C. Su muerte ocurrió en algún momento entre Nisan 1 de 848 a. C. y Tishri 1 de ese mismo año a. C., es decir, en el año real de Judea, 849/848 a. C., que para fines de cálculo puede tomarse como 849 a. C.

En la cultura popular
El nombre del rey en el juramento que saltó a Josafat probablemente fue popularizado por la utilidad del nombre como un eufemismo para Jesús y Jehová . La frase, deletreada "Jumpin 'Geehosofat", se registra por primera vez en la novela de 1865-1866 El jinete sin cabeza de Thomas Mayne Reid . [7] [8] La novela también usa "Geehosofat", solo, como una exclamación. [9] La versión más larga "Por el tembloroso y fantasma saltador de Josafat" se ve en la novela de 1865 Paul Peabody de Percy Bolingbroke St John . [10]

Otra teoría es que la referencia es a Joel 3 , donde el profeta Joel dice, hablando del juicio de los muertos: "Reúnanse, y vengan todos, paganos, y reúnannse alrededor: allí causan la venida de sus poderosos. desciende, oh SEÑOR. Que se despierten los paganos, y suban al valle de Josafat: porque allí me sentaré para juzgar a todos los paganos de alrededor ".

En el cortometraje teatral de Warner Brothers Merrie Melodies de 1956 , Yankee Dood It , basado en el cuento de hadas de The Elves and the Shoemaker , Jehosephat figura prominentemente como una invocación para convertir a los elfos en ratones. En la serie de televisión Car 54, ¿Dónde estás? , el personaje Francis Muldoon citó el uso frecuente de su compañero de la frase "Jumpin 'Jehosephat!" como fuente de molestia en el episodio titulado "Change Your Partners". El programa televisado de acción en vivo de Batman de la década de 1960 también contó con Robin , interpretado por Burt Ward, pronunciando la frase como una exclamación enfática, y también se incorporó a las alarmas parlantes del despertador que Burt Ward volvió a expresar en 1974 en el "despertador parlante Batman & Robin" de Janex.

¡Josafat! fue la palabra de maldición estándar utilizada por Elijah Baley , protagonista de las tres primeras novelas de la serie Robot de Isaac Asimov . Décadas después de la muerte de Baley, la palabra se consideraba demasiado sagrada para ser pronunciada por nadie en Baleyworld.

^ JD Douglas, ed., El nuevo diccionario de la Biblia (Eerdmans: Grand Rapids, MI, 1965) 604)
^ a b Driscoll, James F. "Josaphat". La enciclopedia católica . Vol. 8. Nueva York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 8 de enero de 2014
^ "Josafat", Enciclopedia judía
^ Enciclopedia judía Josafat
^ Enciclopedia judía de Ezequías
^ Edwin R. Thiele, Los números misteriosos de los reyes hebreos (3ra ed .; Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan / Kregel, 1983) 96, 97, 217.
^ Reid, Mayne (1866). El jinete sin cabeza: un extraño cuento de Texas . Londres: Richard Bentley. pags. 100
^ " Saltar a Josafat ", palabras de todo el mundo.
^ Reid, Mayne (1866). El jinete sin cabeza: un extraño cuento de Texas . Londres: Richard Bentley. pags. 61)
^ "Paul Peabody: o, el aprendiz del mundo" . 10 de agosto de 1865 - a través de Google Books.

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

read more
View All
Immediate Family
Text ViewAdd Family
Showing 12 of 12 people

Zibiah .
wife

Maacah .
wife

NN .
wife

Azariah ., #2
son

Jehiel ., #3
son

Zechariahu ., #4
son

Azariahu ., #5
son

Michael ., #6
son

Shaphatiahu ., #7
son

Jehoram, 5th King of Judah
son

Asa ., 3rd King of Judah
father

Azuba .
mother

____________________________________________________________________________

Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan) ★ Ref: AG-661 |•••► # #Genealogia #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________
68 ª Bisabuela de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan is your 68th great grandfather.You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Carlos Urdaneta Carrillo
his father → Enrique Urdaneta Maya, Dr.
his father → Josefa Alcira Maya de la Torre y Rodríguez
his mother → Vicenta Rodríguez Uzcátegui
her mother → María Celsa Uzcátegui Rincón
her mother → Sancho Antonio de Uzcátegui Briceño
her father → Jacobo de Uzcátegui Bohorques
his father → Luisa Jimeno de Bohorques Dávila
his mother → Juan Jimeno de Bohórquez
her father → Luisa Velásquez de Velasco
his mother → Juan Velásquez de Velasco y Montalvo, Gobernador de La Grita
her father → Ortún Velázquez de Velasco
his father → María Enríquez de Acuña
his mother → Inés Enríquez y Quiñones
her mother → Fadrique Enríquez de Mendoza, 2º Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Conde de Melgar y Rueda
her father → Alonso Enríquez de Castilla, 1er. Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Señor de Medina de Rio Seco
his father → Yonati bat Gedaliah, Paloma
his mother → Gedalia Shlomo ibn ben Shlomo ibn Yaḥyā haZaken
her father → Shlomo ben Yahya ibn Yahya
his father → Yosef ibn Yahya HaZaken
his father → Don Yehuda ibn Yahya ibn Ya'ish
his father → Don Yahya "el Negro"
his father → Yehudah "Ya'ish" ben Yahuda ibn ben Yahudah ibn Yaḥyā, senhor de Aldeia dos Negros
his father → Sisnandiz Moniz
his mother → Elvira "Unisco" Bvira (Elvira) "Unisco" Núñez Sisnandiz Núñes Sisnandiz
her mother → Sisnando ben David Davidiz Davidiz, Vizier of Castile, Emir of Toledo, Comtes de Quimbra
her father → UNDOCUMENTED? Shoshana bat Hai Gaon ben Sherira bat Hai Gaon
his mother → Hai ben Sherira, Gaon v'haDayyan b'Pumbeditha
her father → Sherira ben Hananya Gaon of Pumbeditha
his father → 2nd Sheshna haSpfer b'Pumbeditha bat Mar Rab Mishoi 'Sheshna' haSofer b'Pumbeditha
his mother → Mar Rab Mishoi Sheshna ben Yitzhak Sedeq, ha Sofer b'Pumbeditha
her father → Mar Yitzhak Sadoq
his father → Hillel "Hilai" Yishai ben "Mari", Gaon of Sura
his father → Meiri "Mari" ben Hananiah haKohen al-Nahr Peḳod, Gaon of Sura
his father → Hananya ben Haninai HaKohen ben Haninai haKohen al-Nahr Paqod, "Dayan of the Gate" Gaon of Sura
his father → Haninai al-Nehar Peḳkod ben Bustanai bar Adai, Exilarch & Gaon of Sura
his father → Hananya "Bustenai" ben Haninai, Exilarch & Gaon of Pumbeditha
his father → Ḥananya 'Ḥanan of Isḳiya' bar Adoi ben Hophni, 33rd Exiliarch & Gaon Pumbeditha
his father → Hophni Haninai ben Ahunai, 32nd Exilarch Mar Hophni I
his father → Ahunai ben Haninai, 31st Exilarch Huna Mar II
his father → Haninaï ben Mar Mari, Grandson of Exilarch Mar Zutra I
his father → Mar Mari ben Mar Zutra I
his father → Zutra "the Pious" ben Kahana, 25th Exilarch Mar Zutra I
his father → Kahana ben Abba Mari, 23rd Exilarch Mar Kahana I
his father → Mar Sutra
his father → Musa "Rav Papa" bar Yosef, resh metivta al-Nehardea, 5th Gen Amora
his father → Yosef bar Yosef
his father → Yosef bar Khamma
his father → Khamma ben Nachum II, 5th Exilarch Huna I
his father → 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II
his father → Achaya bar Akkub bar Akkub, 1st Exilarch 2nd Dynasty
his father → Ya'akov ben Shlomo, Exilarch
his father → Shlomo ben Hunya, Exilarch Interregnum
his father → Hunya ben Nathan, Exilarch Interregnum
his father → Nathan (de Zuzita, Babylon) ben Shalom
his father → Shalom II ben Hizkiya, Exilarch Interregnum
his father → Hizkiya Rosh Golah of Judah ben Shehanya, 33rd Exilarch Hizkiya III
his father → Shechanya II ibn Da'ud, Exilarch
his father → Da'ud ben Shemaya, Exilarch
his father → Shemaya I ben Shlomo
his father → Shlomo III ibn Da'ud Exilarch
his father → Da'ud ibn Akkub
his father → Salma bat Hizkiya ibn Nearya
his mother → Hizkiyahu II ibn Nearya 21st Exilarch
her father → Neriyah, 18th Exilarch, Dayan,
his father → Bariah Ben Shemaya
his father → Semaya Ben Shechanya
his father → Shechanya Ben Ovadya
his father → Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan
his fatherShow short path | Share this path
Shortest in-law relationship
Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan is your first cousin five times removed's wife's 61st great grandfather.
You
  → Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → show 69 relatives → Shechanya Ben Ovadya
his father → Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan
his fatherShare this path
 ADD PHOTO
Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan
Gender: Male
Birth: circa -370
Immediate Family:
Son of Arnan Ben Rafaya and Wife of Arnan Ben Rafaya
Husband of Wife of Ovadya Ben Amay
Father of Shechanya Ben Ovadya
Added by: Henn Sarv on January 8, 2013
Managed by: Kazi Zulkader Siddiqui, Henn Sarv and John Holliday
 0 Matches
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media
Timeline
Discussions
Sources
Revisions
DNA
Aboutedit | history
Share some things about Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan.
View All
Immediate Family
Text ViewAdd Family
Showing 4 people

Wife of Ovadya Ben Amay
wife

Shechanya Ben Ovadya
son

Arnan Ben Rafaya
father

Wife of Arnan Ben Rafaya
mother

____________________________________________________________________________

Ancestros de Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan)




1. Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan b. circa -370
2. Arnan Ben Rafaya b. circa -400
3. Refaya (e Ben Chananya b. -430, Iraq
4. Yeshaiah ben Hananya b. circa -469, Iraq
5. Hananya, 5th Exilarch b. circa -500, Babylon; d. circa -440
6. Zerubbabel 3rd Exilarch / זרובבל b. circa -566; d. circa -510, Memphis, Egypt
7. Salathial 2nd Exilarch Ben Jechaniah, 2nd Exilarch b. circa -586, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel; d. circa -540, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel
8. Jechaniah - יהויכין מלך יהודה 18 b. circa -616, Jerusalem, Israel; d. -561, Babylon, Mesopotamia, Iraq
9. Jehoiakim Elyakim, 17th King of Judah b. circa -633, Jerusalem, Israel; d. circa -598, taken captivity, Babylon, 597, BC
10. Josiah ., 15th King of Judah b. circa -639, Judah (יהודה), Israel (ישראל); d. circa -610, Megiddo, Yizrael, North District, Israel
11. Amon - אמון מלך יהודה 14 b. circa -665, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל); d. circa -642, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל)
12. Menasseh ., 13th King of Judah b. -709, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל); d. circa -633, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל)
13. King Hezekiah ., 12th King of Judah b. circa -732, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל); d. circa -678, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל)
14. King Ahaz ., 11th King of Judah b. circa -787, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל); d. -726, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל)
15. King Jotham ., 10th King of Judah b. circa -764, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל); d. circa -723, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל)
16. Uzziah ., 9th King of Judah b. circa -788, Jerusalem, Israel; d. circa -736, Jerusalem, Israel
17. Amaziah, 8th King of Judah b. circa -840, Jerusalem, Israel; d. circa -767, Lachish, Israel
18. Jehoash ., 7th King of Judah b. circa -842, Jerusalem, Israel; d. circa -820, Bet-Melo, Judea
19. King Ahaziah ., 6th King of Judah b. circa -885, Jerusalem (ירושלים), Israel (ישראל); d. circa -841, Megiddo, Yizrael, North District, Israel (ישראל)
20. Jehoram, 5th King of Judah b. circa -881, Jerusalem, Israel; d. -841, Jerusalem, Israel

sábado, 19 de octubre de 2019

2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II ✡ Ref: AG-660 |•••► #Irak #Genealogia #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________
49 ° Bisabuelo de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II is your 49th great grandfather.You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Carlos Urdaneta Carrillo
his father → Enrique Urdaneta Maya, Dr.
his father → Josefa Alcira Maya de la Torre y Rodríguez
his mother → Vicenta Rodríguez Uzcátegui
her mother → María Celsa Uzcátegui Rincón
her mother → Sancho Antonio de Uzcátegui Briceño
her father → Jacobo de Uzcátegui Bohorques
his father → Luisa Jimeno de Bohorques Dávila
his mother → Juan Jimeno de Bohórquez
her father → Luisa Velásquez de Velasco
his mother → Juan Velásquez de Velasco y Montalvo, Gobernador de La Grita
her father → Ortún Velázquez de Velasco
his father → María Enríquez de Acuña
his mother → Inés Enríquez y Quiñones
her mother → Fadrique Enríquez de Mendoza, 2º Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Conde de Melgar y Rueda
her father → Alonso Enríquez de Castilla, 1er. Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Señor de Medina de Rio Seco
his father → Yonati bat Gedaliah, Paloma
his mother → Gedalia Shlomo ibn ben Shlomo ibn Yaḥyā haZaken
her father → Shlomo ben Yahya ibn Yahya
his father → Yosef ibn Yahya HaZaken
his father → Don Yehuda ibn Yahya ibn Ya'ish
his father → Don Yahya "el Negro"
his father → Yehudah "Ya'ish" ben Yahuda ibn ben Yahudah ibn Yaḥyā, senhor de Aldeia dos Negros
his father → Sisnandiz Moniz
his mother → Elvira "Unisco" Bvira (Elvira) "Unisco" Núñez Sisnandiz Núñes Sisnandiz
her mother → Sisnando ben David Davidiz Davidiz, Vizier of Castile, Emir of Toledo, Comtes de Quimbra
her father → UNDOCUMENTED? Shoshana bat Hai Gaon ben Sherira bat Hai Gaon
his mother → Hai ben Sherira, Gaon v'haDayyan b'Pumbeditha
her father → Sherira ben Hananya Gaon of Pumbeditha
his father → 2nd Sheshna haSpfer b'Pumbeditha bat Mar Rab Mishoi 'Sheshna' haSofer b'Pumbeditha
his mother → Mar Rab Mishoi Sheshna ben Yitzhak Sedeq, ha Sofer b'Pumbeditha
her father → Mar Yitzhak Sadoq
his father → Hillel "Hilai" Yishai ben "Mari", Gaon of Sura
his father → Meiri "Mari" ben Hananiah haKohen al-Nahr Peḳod, Gaon of Sura
his father → Hananya ben Haninai HaKohen ben Haninai haKohen al-Nahr Paqod, "Dayan of the Gate" Gaon of Sura
his father → Haninai al-Nehar Peḳkod ben Bustanai bar Adai, Exilarch & Gaon of Sura
his father → Hananya "Bustenai" ben Haninai, Exilarch & Gaon of Pumbeditha
his father → Ḥananya 'Ḥanan of Isḳiya' bar Adoi ben Hophni, 33rd Exiliarch & Gaon Pumbeditha
his father → Hophni Haninai ben Ahunai, 32nd Exilarch Mar Hophni I
his father → Ahunai ben Haninai, 31st Exilarch Huna Mar II
his father → Haninaï ben Mar Mari, Grandson of Exilarch Mar Zutra I
his father → Mar Mari ben Mar Zutra I
his father → Zutra "the Pious" ben Kahana, 25th Exilarch Mar Zutra I
his father → Kahana ben Abba Mari, 23rd Exilarch Mar Kahana I
his father → Mar Sutra
his father → Musa "Rav Papa" bar Yosef, resh metivta al-Nehardea, 5th Gen Amora
his father → Yosef bar Yosef
his father → Yosef bar Khamma
his father → Khamma ben Nachum II, 5th Exilarch Huna I
his father → 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II
his fatherShow short path | Share this path
Shortest in-law relationship
2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II is your first cousin 30 times removed's wife's husband's sister's husband's 11th great grandfather.
<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II MP
Hebrew: נחום בן אחיה ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II, Arabic: رأس الجالوت ناحوم الثاني بن رأس الجالوت أحياه, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 120
Babylon, Persian Empire
Death: circa 170 (42-58)
Babylon, Persian Empire
Immediate Family:
Son of Achaya bar Akkub bar Akkub, 1st Exilarch 2nd Dynasty and ???? bat Abba "Abbahu" bar Acha
Husband of Hobah bat Rab
Father of Da'ud ben Nachum; 7th Exhilarch Nathan ben Nachum, 7th Exilarch 'Mar Ukba I'; Ya'akob ben Nachum, 6th Exilarch; Khamma ben Nachum II, 5th Exilarch Huna I and הונא בן נחום
Brother of Yohanan bar Achaya, 3rd Exilarch Yohanan II and Natan bar Achaya, Nasi & rival to Simon bar Gamaliel
Added by:
Managed by: LevShalem and 22 others
Curated by: Jaim David Harlow, J2b2a1a1a1b3c
 0 Matches
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media (2)
Timeline
Discussions
Sources
Revisions
DNA
About
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Se ha estimado que Babilonia era la ciudad más grande del mundo c.  1770  - c.  1670 aC , y nuevamente c.  612  - c.  320 a . C. Tal vez fue la primera ciudad en alcanzar una población superior a 200,000. [2] Las estimaciones para la extensión máxima de su área varían de 890 [3] a 900 hectáreas (2,200 acres). [4]
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

English (default) history
Exilarch Nahum ben Ahijah beni David was Exilarch (Exilarch [Hebrew: ראש גלות Rosh Galut, Aramaic: ריש גלותא Reish Galuta lit. "head of the exile", Greek: Æchmalotarcha], referring to the leaders of the Diaspora Jewish community following the deportation of the population of Judah into Babylonian exile after the destruction of the kingdom of Judah) at Babylonia between 140 and 170.

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Exilarch Nahum ben Ahijah beni David fue Exilarch (Exilarch [hebreo: ראש גלות Rosh Galut, arameo: ריש גלותא Reish Galuta lit "cabeza del exilio", griego: Æchmalotarcha], refiriéndose a los líderes de la comunidad judía de la diáspora después de la deportación de la población de Judá al exilio babilónico después de la destrucción del reino de Judá) en Babilonia entre 140 y 170
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

See "My Lines"

( http://homepagesrootswebancestrycom/~cousin/html/p192htm#i21394 )

from Compiler: R B Stewart, Evans, GA

( http://homepagesrootswebancestrycom/~cousin/html/indexhtm )

Nakhum II ,
occupation: Exilarch ca 145-170,
son of Ahija and nn to: nn

Son:

1) Huna I

2) Mar-Ukba I, occupation: Exilarch ca 210-240 to: nn

source: 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II

Exilarch Nahum ben Ahijah beni David was Exilarch (Exilarch [Hebrew: ראש גלות Rosh Galut, Aramaic: ריש גלותא Reish Galuta lit "head of the exile", Greek: Æchmalotarcha], referring to the leaders of the Diaspora Jewish community following the deportation of the population of Judah into Babylonian exile after the destruction of the kingdom of Judah) at Babylonia between 140 and 170

See "My Lines"

( http://homepagesrootswebancestrycom/~cousin/html/p192htm#i21394 )

from Compiler: R B Stewart, Evans, GA

( http://homepagesrootswebancestrycom/~cousin/html/indexhtm ) -------------------- Nakhum II ,

occupation: Exilarch ca 145-170,

son of Ahija and nn to: nn

Son:

1) Huna I

2) Mar-Ukba I, occupation: Exilarch ca 210-240 to: nn

read more
View All
Immediate Family
Text View
Showing 10 people

Hobah bat Rab
wife

Da'ud ben Nachum
son

7th Exhilarch Nathan ben Nachum,
son

Ya'akob ben Nachum, 6th Exilarch
son

Khamma ben Nachum II, 5th Exilar
son

הונא בן נחום
son

Achaya bar Akkub bar Akkub, 1st
father

???? bat Abba "Abbahu" bar Acha
mother

Yohanan bar Achaya, 3rd Exilarch
brother

Natan bar Achaya, Nasi & rival t
brother


____________________________________________________________________________

Ancestros de 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II

1. 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II b. circa 120, Babylon, Persian Empire; d. circa 170, Babylon, Persian Empire
2. Achaya bar Akkub bar Akkub, 1st Exilarch 2nd Dynasty b. circa 100, Babylon, Persian Empire; d. circa 145, Baghdad, Iraq
3. Ya'akov ben Shlomo, Exilarch b. circa 75, Baghdad, Iraq; d. Baghdad, Iraq
4. Shlomo ben Hunya, Exilarch Interregnum b. circa 50, Babylon Governorate, Iraq; d. 120, Bābil, Iraq
5. Hunya ben Nathan, Exilarch Interregnum b. circa 30, Iran; d. circa 90
6. Nathan (de Zuzita, Babylon) ben Shalom b. circa 5; d. 80, Iran
7. Shalom II ben Hizkiya, Exilarch Interregnum b. circa -20; d. 40
8. Hizkiya Rosh Golah of Judah ben Shehanya, 33rd Exilarch Hizkiya III b. circa -50; d. circa -10
9. Shechanya II ibn Da'ud, Exilarch b. circa -85; d. circa -45
10. Da'ud ben Shemaya, Exilarch b. circa -110; d. circa -65
11. Shemaya I ben Shlomo b. circa -140; d. circa -129
12. Shlomo III ibn Da'ud Exilarch b. circa -168; d. circa -135
13. Da'ud ibn Akkub b. circa -197; d. circa -167
14. Akkub (Exilarch) ben Elioenai, Exilarch b. circa -244, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel; d. circa -180, Jerusalem, Israel
15. Elioenai ben Neariah, 20th Exilarch b. circa -272, Jerusalem, Israel; d. circa -197, Jerusalem, Israel
16. Neriyah, 18th Exilarch, Dayan, b. circa -290, Jerusalem, Israel; d. circa -227
17. Bariah Ben Shemaya b. Iraq
18. Semaya Ben Shechanya b. circa -325, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel; d. -225, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel
19. Shechanya Ben Ovadya b. circa -350, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel; d. -250, Jerusalem, Jerusalem District, Israel
20. Obaja Ben Amay (Aranan b. circa -370
<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla ✡ Ref: AG-659 |•••► #Israel #Genealogia #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________
35 ° Bisabuelo de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla is your 35th great grandfather.You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Carlos Urdaneta Carrillo
his father → Enrique Urdaneta Maya, Dr.
his father → Josefa Alcira Maya de la Torre y Rodríguez
his mother → Vicenta Rodríguez Uzcátegui
her mother → María Celsa Uzcátegui Rincón
her mother → Sancho Antonio de Uzcátegui Briceño
her father → Jacobo de Uzcátegui Bohorques
his father → Luisa Jimeno de Bohorques Dávila
his mother → Juan Jimeno de Bohórquez
her father → Luisa Velásquez de Velasco
his mother → Juan Velásquez de Velasco y Montalvo, Gobernador de La Grita
her father → Ortún Velázquez de Velasco
his father → María Enríquez de Acuña
his mother → Inés Enríquez y Quiñones
her mother → Fadrique Enríquez de Mendoza, 2º Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Conde de Melgar y Rueda
her father → Alonso Enríquez de Castilla, 1er. Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Señor de Medina de Rio Seco
his father → Yonati bat Gedaliah, Paloma
his mother → Gedalia Shlomo ibn ben Shlomo ibn Yaḥyā haZaken
her father → Shlomo ben Yahya ibn Yahya
his father → Yosef ibn Yahya HaZaken
his father → Don Yehuda ibn Yahya ibn Ya'ish
his father → Don Yahya "el Negro"
his father → Yehudah "Ya'ish" ben Yahuda ibn ben Yahudah ibn Yaḥyā, senhor de Aldeia dos Negros
his father → Hayy "Hiyya" ibn Ya'ish ibn Ya'ish ben ben David al-Daudi, HaNasi
his father → David "Ya'ish" ibn Hiyya
his father → Yehudah Hayy "Yahya" ben Hiyya, Nasi, Ra'is b'Rabbanan al-Tulaytula
his father → Ṣāʿid al-Andalusī "Hiyya al-Daudi", Qaḍī of Cordoba & Toledo
his father → Abu Suleiman David ibn Yaʿīs̲h̲ ben Yehuda Ibn Ya Ish ben Zakai II ben Zakai II, Nasi, Qāḍī, haDayyan of Toledo
his father → Yehudah "Zakhai" Natan ben Avraham al-Andalusi Nasi, Qadi de Sidonia ben Avraham al-Andalusī, Nasi, Qaḍī of Sidonia
his father → Abu Isḥāq Ibrahim Sahl (abu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn al-Nag'hdilah ibn Ata al-Yahudi, haRoffeh) Exilarch, Rosh Golah of Judah ibn al-Nag'hdīlah ibn Ata al-yahūdī, haRoffe al-Galut 'Mar Sahl'
his father → 'Nathan HaBabli' ben Abu Ishaq Avraham Nasi, 2nd. Exilarca Mar Uqba HaRofeh, Qadi al-Qayraw ben Abu Ishaq Avraham, Exilarch 'Mar Uqba HaRofeh', Qadi al-Qayrawānī
his father → David Avraham ben Hazub, Exilarch 'Rab David II', haSofer b'Pumbeditha
his father → R' David Nathan Exilarca, Rosh Golah de Judá Gaon Ha Sofer de Pumbeditha ben Chazub, Exilarch, Rosh Golah of Judah
his father → Mar Rab Judah 'Hazub' bar Pinchas, Exilarch, Gaon, haSofer of Pumbeditha
his father → Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi, Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla
his father → Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla
his fatherShow short path | Share this path
You might be connected in other ways.

Show Me


Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla, hasofer MP
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 760
רמלה, ישראל
Death: circa 840 (72-88)
Immediate Family:
Son of Nechemya ben Magis ben Magis, 8th Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias "Nechemya II and ??? bat Mar Rab Ishaq of Firuz-Shabur
Father of Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi, Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla
Brother of Yehuda "Mar Natronai" ibn Magis 'Majus' haKohen, Gaon of Pumbeditha
Added by: Erik Gross on February 20, 2007
Managed by: Alex Ronald Keith Paz and 18 others
Curated by: Jaim David Harlow, J2b2a1a1a1b3c
 0 Matches
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media (1)
Timeline
Discussions
Sources
Revisions
DNA
About
English (default) history
He was the son of Nechemiah ben Magis. Abdimi is the first Exilarch to return a purely Jewish ancestry to the Exilarchate when he takes a Jewish Wife of unquestionable yichus. Abdimi has five (5) sons

1) Haninai ben Abdimi, Yitzchak ben Abdimi, Shmuel ben Abdimi, Tahlifa ben Abdimi, and Pinchas ben Abdimi).

Abdimi's "bother", Natronai Ibn Habibai (a/k/a “Natronai Ibn Haninai” and “Bar Mar Yanqa” and “Machir”) leaves Palestine for Kairouan, then Fez, then Cordoba. Natronai was sent by Haroun Al-Rashid, Calif of Baghdad to Charlemagne, King of the West, at Charlemagne's his request, who wanted to establish in Europe a middle class based on a Jewish nucleus. The motive for Natronai's departure is easy to explain – he was a quick-tempered and unindulgent leader...he was not likely to gain support in the academies and his father suggested he find his success to the west. When Natronai visited Lucena, Spain, he wrote "that Alisana (Arabic for Lucena) was a Jewish place with no gentiles at all".
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Él era el hijo de Nechemiah ben Magis. Abdimi es el primer Exilarca en devolver una ascendencia puramente judía al Exilarcado cuando toma una Esposa judía de incuestionable yichus. Abdimi tiene cinco (5) hijos

1) Haninai ben Abdimi, Itzjak ben Abdimi, Shmuel ben Abdimi, Tahlifa ben Abdimi y Pinchas ben Abdimi).

La "molestia" de Abdimi, Natronai Ibn Habibai (a / k / a "Natronai Ibn Haninai" y "Bar Mar Yanqa" y "Machir") deja Palestina para Kairouan, luego Fez, luego Córdoba. Natronai fue enviado por Haroun Al-Rashid, Calif de Bagdad, a Carlomagno, rey de Occidente, a petición de Carlomagno, que quería establecer en Europa una clase media basada en un núcleo judío. El motivo de la partida de Natronai es fácil de explicar: era un líder de mal genio e indulgente ... no era probable que obtuviera apoyo en las academias y su padre sugirió que encontrara su éxito en el oeste. Cuando Natronai visitó Lucena, España, escribió "que Alisana (en árabe, Lucena) era un lugar judío sin gentiles en absoluto".

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

מר זוטרא השלישי

read more
View All
Immediate Family
Text View
Showing 5 people

Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi...
son

Nechemya ben Magis ben Magis, 8t...
father

??? bat Mar Rab Ishaq of Firuz-S...
mother

Yehuda "Mar Natronai" ibn Magis ...
brother

Wife #2 ben Magis
stepmother

____________________________________________________________________________

Ancestros de Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla

1. Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla b. circa 760, רמלה, ישראל; d. circa 840
2. Nechemya ben Magis ben Magis, 8th Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias "Nechemya II b. circa 698, Tiberias, Israel
3. Haninai "Magis/Majus" ben Mar Sutra II ben Mar Sutra II, 7th Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias b. circa 680, Tiberias, Israel; d. circa 760
4. Rav Yakob 'Zakai' ben Mar Sutra II, 5th Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias b. circa 660, Tiberias, Israel; d. Ramla, Israel
5. Mar Sutra II bar Guriya (ben Mar Guria), 4th Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias b. circa 633, Baghdad, Baghdād, Iraq
6. Mar Sutra I "Guriya" ben Mar Zutra III, 3rd Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias b. circa 589, Ramla, Israel; d. circa 670, Baghdad, Baghdād, Iraq
7. Mar Sutra II (Sa'adya) ben Mar Tsutra I, 2nd Exilarch & Gaon of Tiberias b. circa 558, Ramla, Israel; d. circa 615, Ramla, Israel
8. Mar Zutra III a/k/a Mar Sutra I ben Mar Zutra II, 1st Exilarch of Tiberias b. 520, Mahoza, Bābil, Iraq; d. circa 589, Tiberias, Israel
9. Mar Zutra II, 30th Exilarch b. circa 488, Mahoza, Babil, Iraq; d. circa 520, Bridge of Mahoza, Mahoza, Bavli
10. Rav David ben Rabeina II, Grandson of Exilarch Mar Huna IV b. circa 454, Mahoza, Babylon; d. circa 508, Mahoza, Babylon
11. Rabeina II "Sof hora'a" Rav Rav Huna Avina (רב אבינא בר רב הונא) b. circa 430, Tepe Sura (טפה סורה), Chamchamal, Sulaymaniyah, Iraq (עיראק); d. circa 500, Israel (ישראל) ((Executed by Shah Feruz (Peroz))
12. Huna ben Nathan, Mar Huna IV, 24th Exilarch b. circa 395, Babylon; d. 442, Babylon (בבילון)
13. Nathan bar Abba Mari, 21st Exilarch Nathan II b. circa 352; d. circa 427
14. 20th Exhilarch Abba Mar ben 'Ukba, 20th Exilarch Abba Mari I b. circa 300, Babylon, Persian Empire; d. circa 370, Babylon, Persian Empire
15. Ukba ben Nechemya (Ukvan), 17th Exilarch Mar 'Ukba III ben Nehemías b. circa 290, Babylon, Persia; d. circa 337, Babylon, Persia
16. 14th Exhilarch Nechemya ben Nathan, 14th Exilarch Nehemiah I b. circa 250, Babylon; d. circa 313, Iraq
17. Nathan de-Ẓuẓita ben Nathan, 11th Exilarch 'Ukban' b. circa 230, Baghdad, Baghdād, Iraq; d. circa 270, Baghdad, Baghdād, Iraq
18. 8th Exhilarch Anani bar Nathan, 8th Exilarch Huna II b. circa 190, Babylon, Iraq; d. circa 260, Babylon, Iraq
19. 7th Exhilarch Nathan ben Nachum, 7th Exilarch 'Mar Ukba I' b. circa 156, Babylon, Persian Empire; d. circa 240, Babylon, Persian Empire
20. 2nd Exhilarch of Judah Nachum ben Achaya, 2nd Exilarch Nachum II b. circa 120, Babylon, Persian Empire; d. circa 170, Babylon, Persian Empire


____________________________________________________________________________

Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi, Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla ✡ Ref: AG-658 |•••► #Israel #Genealogia #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________
34 ° Bisabuelo de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi, Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla is your 34th great grandfather.You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Carlos Urdaneta Carrillo
his father → Enrique Urdaneta Maya, Dr.
his father → Josefa Alcira Maya de la Torre y Rodríguez
his mother → Vicenta Rodríguez Uzcátegui
her mother → María Celsa Uzcátegui Rincón
her mother → Sancho Antonio de Uzcátegui Briceño
her father → Jacobo de Uzcátegui Bohorques
his father → Luisa Jimeno de Bohorques Dávila
his mother → Juan Jimeno de Bohórquez
her father → Luisa Velásquez de Velasco
his mother → Juan Velásquez de Velasco y Montalvo, Gobernador de La Grita
her father → Ortún Velázquez de Velasco
his father → María Enríquez de Acuña
his mother → Inés Enríquez y Quiñones
her mother → Fadrique Enríquez de Mendoza, 2º Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Conde de Melgar y Rueda
her father → Alonso Enríquez de Castilla, 1er. Almirante Mayor de Castilla, Señor de Medina de Rio Seco
his father → Yonati bat Gedaliah, Paloma
his mother → Gedalia Shlomo ibn ben Shlomo ibn Yaḥyā haZaken
her father → Shlomo ben Yahya ibn Yahya
his father → Yosef ibn Yahya HaZaken
his father → Don Yehuda ibn Yahya ibn Ya'ish
his father → Don Yahya "el Negro"
his father → Yehudah "Ya'ish" ben Yahuda ibn ben Yahudah ibn Yaḥyā, senhor de Aldeia dos Negros
his father → Hayy "Hiyya" ibn Ya'ish ibn Ya'ish ben ben David al-Daudi, HaNasi
his father → David "Ya'ish" ibn Hiyya
his father → Yehudah Hayy "Yahya" ben Hiyya, Nasi, Ra'is b'Rabbanan al-Tulaytula
his father → Ṣāʿid al-Andalusī "Hiyya al-Daudi", Qaḍī of Cordoba & Toledo
his father → Abu Suleiman David ibn Yaʿīs̲h̲ ben Yehuda Ibn Ya Ish ben Zakai II ben Zakai II, Nasi, Qāḍī, haDayyan of Toledo
his father → Yehudah "Zakhai" Natan ben Avraham al-Andalusi Nasi, Qadi de Sidonia ben Avraham al-Andalusī, Nasi, Qaḍī of Sidonia
his father → Abu Isḥāq Ibrahim Sahl (abu Ishaq Ibrahim ibn al-Nag'hdilah ibn Ata al-Yahudi, haRoffeh) Exilarch, Rosh Golah of Judah ibn al-Nag'hdīlah ibn Ata al-yahūdī, haRoffe al-Galut 'Mar Sahl'
his father → 'Nathan HaBabli' ben Abu Ishaq Avraham Nasi, 2nd. Exilarca Mar Uqba HaRofeh, Qadi al-Qayraw ben Abu Ishaq Avraham, Exilarch 'Mar Uqba HaRofeh', Qadi al-Qayrawānī
his father → David Avraham ben Hazub, Exilarch 'Rab David II', haSofer b'Pumbeditha
his father → R' David Nathan Exilarca, Rosh Golah de Judá Gaon Ha Sofer de Pumbeditha ben Chazub, Exilarch, Rosh Golah of Judah
his father → Mar Rab Judah 'Hazub' bar Pinchas, Exilarch, Gaon, haSofer of Pumbeditha
his father → Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi, Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla
his fatherShow short path | Share this path
You might be connected in other ways.

Show Me


Rab David I 'Pinchas' ben Abdimi, Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla MP
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 810
רמלה, ישראל
Death: circa 870 (52-68)
טבריה, ישראל
Immediate Family:
Son of Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemiah II, 9th Exilarch & Gaon of Ramla
Husband of Sussan bat Al Palestin bat Abaye haKohen Gaon
Father of Mar Yosef ben Pinchas, jahābidha al-ḥadra [Chief Abbassid Banker] and Mar Rab Judah 'Hazub' bar Pinchas, Exilarch, Gaon, haSofer of Pumbeditha
Added by: Erik Gross on February 20, 2007
Managed by: Jaim David Harlow, J2b2a1a1a1b3c and 16 others
Curated by: Jaim David Harlow, J2b2a1a1a1b3c
 0 Matches
Research this Person
 Contact Profile Managers
 View Tree
 Edit Profile
Overview
Media (1)
Timeline
Discussions
Sources
Revisions
DNA
About
English (default) history
<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Rav Pinchas David ben Yehudah was an exilarch during the first half of the ninth century. In his bid for office, David was opposed by another member of the exilarchal dynasty named Daniel ben Anan. The dispute between the two candidates is mentioned in the Epistle of Sherira Gaon, as well as in the Syriac chronicles of Michael the Syrian and Bar Hebraeus.

According to the latter sources, Pinchas David was backed by the Jews of Tiberias, while Daniel, described as a follower of ʿAnan ben David , had the support of the Babylonians. The same sources connect the conflict with a proclamation by the Abbasid caliph al-Maʿmūn (d. 833) allowing religious groups of at least ten people to appoint their own leaders. David is generally thought to have been the victor in the controversy, but a reference to the grave of “the exilarch Daniel in the time of al-Maʿmūn” in an eleventh-century letter from the Cairo Geniza recently led to the suggestion that each of the candidates may have viewed himself as the legitimate appointee. Sherira notes in the Epistle that in David ben Pinchas Yehudah’s time the exilarchate lost its authority over the Pumbedita yeshiva. David had a son named Yehudah who was an exilarch in the second half of the ninth century.

Gil, Moshe. The Jews in Islamic Countries in the Middle Ages (Leiden: Brill, 2004).

Goode, Alexander. “The Exilarchate in the Eastern Caliphate, 637–1258,” Jewish Quarterly Review, n.s. 31 (1940): 149–169.

Arnold Franklin. " David ben Judah." Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World. Executive Editor Norman A. Stillman. Brill Online , 2012. Reference. Jim Harlow. 03 July 2012

A noted grammarian, perhaps the author of The Seder Olam Zutta or Small World Chronicle, recognized by Palestine Jews as heir of King David although the title of Exilarch was held by his distant cousins in Babylon.

Pinchas was not merely the author of a complete Masoretic arrangement of the words of the Tanach, but was also the first to arrange the texts into rhythm and verse.

Historical Note: One of the most important projects connected with the name of the city of Tiberias was the creation of vocalization and cantillation marks and the preservation of the text of the Bible by means of the Masoretic commentaries. Rabbi Avraham Ibn ‘Ezra wrote in his book, Tsahut (Correctness) that “the Sages of Tiberias are the main ones, for from them came the Masoretes, and we received vocalization from them.” We learn from an Arab historian that Rabbi Sa’adia Gaon, who is regarded as the first Hebrew grammarian, spent time in Tiberias and learned the reading and linguistic traditions from one of its Sages. We also know the names of some of the scholars of the language and the Masora who lived and worked in Tiberias: Rabbi Pinhas ben Abdimi ( the head of the Yeshiva), Ahayahu Hacohen Hehaver, and others.

The most famous scholar of the Masora who lived in Tiberias was Aharon Ben Asher, who lived in the tenth century. The treatise, Diqduqei hate’amim (Precisions of Cantillation Marks) is attributed to him, and the heading at the beginning of the book states that Rabbi Aharon Ben Asher was “from the place Ma’azia, which is called Tiberias, which is on the West of the Sea of Galilee.”

In 895, Aharon’s father, Moshe Ben Asher, wrote “a codex of the Bible … in the town of Ma’azia Tiberias the famous city,” as attested by the inscription placed at the end of a manuscript that was found in Cairo. However, Rabbi Aharon himself was the one who revised, vocalized, added cantillation marks, and transmitted the most important Bible manuscript, the Aleppo Codex.

“Tiberias in the Middle Ages,” Hebrew Linguistics in Tiberias, Jerusalem, 1995, pp. 9-31 (Hebrew). Simha Assaf and L. Meir (eds.), “Tiberias,”

The Book of the Settlement, vol. 2, from the Conquest of the Land by the Arabs until the Crusades, Jerusalem, 1944, pp. 0-14 (Hebrew).

read more
View All
Immediate Family
Text View

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Rav Pinchas David ben Yehudah fue un exilarch durante la primera mitad del siglo IX. En su intento por el cargo, David se opuso a otro miembro de la dinastía exilarchal llamado Daniel ben Anan. La disputa entre los dos candidatos se menciona en la Epístola de Sherira Gaon, así como en las crónicas siríacas de Michael the Syrian y Bar Hebraeus.

Según las últimas fuentes, Pinchas David fue respaldado por los judíos de Tiberíades, mientras que Daniel, descrito como un seguidor de nanAnan ben David, contó con el apoyo de los babilonios. Las mismas fuentes conectan el conflicto con una proclamación del califa abasí al-Maʿmūn (muerto en 833) que permite a grupos religiosos de al menos diez personas nombrar a sus propios líderes. En general, se cree que David fue el vencedor en la controversia, pero una referencia a la tumba del "exilarch Daniel en la época de al-Maʿmūn" en una carta del siglo XI de El Cairo Geniza recientemente llevó a la sugerencia de que cada uno de ellos los candidatos pueden haberse visto a sí mismos como el designado legítimo. Sherira señala en la Epístola que en el tiempo de David ben Pinchas Yehudah el exilarcado perdió su autoridad sobre la yeshiva Pumbedita. David tuvo un hijo llamado Yehudah que fue un exilarch en la segunda mitad del siglo IX.

Gil, Moshe. Los judíos en los países islámicos en la Edad Media (Leiden: Brill, 2004).

Goode, Alexander. "El exilarcado en el califato oriental, 637-1258", Jewish Quarterly Review, n.s. 31 (1940): 149-169.

Arnold Franklin. "David ben Judá". Enciclopedia de los judíos en el mundo islámico. Editor Ejecutivo Norman A. Stillman. Brill Online, 2012. Referencia. Jim Harlow 03 de julio de 2012

Un notable gramático, quizás el autor de The Seder Olam Zutta o Small World Chronicle, reconocido por los judíos de Palestina como heredero del rey David, aunque el título de Exilarch lo tenían sus primos lejanos en Babilonia.

Pinchas no fue simplemente el autor de un arreglo masorético completo de las palabras del Tanach, sino que también fue el primero en ordenar los textos en ritmo y verso.

Nota histórica: Uno de los proyectos más importantes relacionados con el nombre de la ciudad de Tiberíades fue la creación de vocalizaciones y marcas de cantilación y la preservación del texto de la Biblia a través de los comentarios masoréticos. El rabino Avraham Ibn 'Ezra escribió en su libro, Tsahut (Corrección) que "los Sabios de Tiberíades son los principales, porque de ellos vinieron los Masoretes, y recibimos la vocalización de ellos". Aprendemos de un historiador árabe que el Rabino Sa' adia Gaon, quien es considerada como la primera gramática hebrea, pasó un tiempo en Tiberíades y aprendió la lectura y las tradiciones lingüísticas de uno de sus sabios. También conocemos los nombres de algunos de los eruditos de la lengua y la Masora que vivieron y trabajaron en Tiberíades: el rabino Pinhas ben Abdimi (el jefe de la Yeshiva), Ahayahu Hacohen Hehaver y otros.

El erudito más famoso de la Masora que vivió en Tiberíades fue Aharon Ben Asher, quien vivió en el siglo X. Se le atribuye el tratado, Diqduqei hate'amim (Precisiones de marcas de cantilación), y el título al comienzo del libro dice que el rabino Aharon Ben Asher era "del lugar Ma'azia, que se llama Tiberíades, que está en al oeste del mar de Galilea ".

En 895, el padre de Aharon, Moshe Ben Asher, escribió "un códice de la Biblia ... en la ciudad de Ma’azia Tiberias, la famosa ciudad", como lo atestigua la inscripción colocada al final de un manuscrito que se encontró en El Cairo. Sin embargo, el propio Rabino Aharon fue quien revisó, vocalizó, agregó marcas de cantilación y transmitió el manuscrito bíblico más importante, el Códice Alepo.

"Tiberíades en la Edad Media", Lingüística hebrea en Tiberíades, Jerusalén, 1995, pp. 9-31 (hebreo). Simha Assaf y L. Meir (eds.), "Tiberíades"

El libro del asentamiento, vol. 2, desde la conquista de la tierra por los árabes hasta las cruzadas, Jerusalén, 1944, pp. 0-14 (hebreo).

Lee mas
Ver todo
Familia directa
Vista de texto
<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Showing 4 people

Sussan bat Al Palestin bat Abaye...
wife

Mar Yosef ben Pinchas, jahābidh...
son

Mar Rab Judah 'Hazub' bar Pincha...
son

Rab Dimi 'Abba Dimi' ben Nechemi...
father


____________________________________________________________________________


<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->