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Revision as of 11:00, 15 November 2023

Galician rabbi (1727–1792)
Tomstone of Joseph ben Meir Teomim

Joseph ben Meir Teomim (1727–1792; Hebrew: יוסף בן מאיר תאומים) was a Galician Rabbi. He was one of the foremost Torah Scholars of his time, a "thorough student of rabbinical literature, and... not unlearned in the secular sciences". He is also referenced as "The Pri Megadim", for his best known work.

Biography

Teomim was born in Shchyrets, then in Poland (today in Ukraine). His father, Rabbi Meir Teomim, became Dayan (rabbinic judge) and Rosh Yeshiva in Lemberg (Lvov), and the family moved there.

Teomim studied Torah, primarily under his father, in the Lvov yeshivah; while still young he took up a position as "preacher and rabbinical instructor" there. At the age of 20 he moved to Komarno to marry. He spent more than a decade there primarily studying and writing, and also working as a melamed.

In 1767, on the invitation of Daniel Itzig, he went to Berlin to co-head a Yeshiva with Rabbi Hirschel Levin. Following his Father's death in 1771, Teomim returned to Lemberg, eventually becoming Dayan there. In 1782 was appointed Rabbi at Frankfurt an der Oder, where he remained until his death.

He was buried in the Jewish cemetery at Frankfurt/Oder.

Works

Pri Megadim title page (תקמז-1787)

Rabbi Teomim's Pri Megadim (פרי מגדים, published 1782) is a widely referenced work on the Shulkhan Aruch. It is composed, essentially, as a supercommentary on the major commentators there: On the Orach chayyim section, Mishbetzot Zahav discusses David ben Samuel's Ṭurei Zahav, and Eshel Avraham is on Avraham Gombiner's Magen Avraham. On the Yoreh De'ah section, Siftei Da'at discusses Shabbethai Kohen's Siftei Kohen, and Mishbetzot Zahav is continued. Pri Megadim is however seen as authoritative in its own right, often quoted, for example, by the Mishna Berurah.

Teomim also authored:

He left two works in manuscript: Sefer ha-Maggid, a commentary on the Torah and the Haftarot, sermons for Shabbat and festivals, and a twofold commentary on Pirke Avot; and Em la-Binah, a Hebrew, Talmudic Aramaic, and Biblical Aramaic lexicon. In the introduction to the latter, Rabbi Te'omim mentions a great number of his writings on halakhot and ethics, which are no longer in existence.

Bibliography and references

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSinger, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "TE'OMIM, JOSEPH BEN MEÏR". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. Retrieved 14 Mar 2012.

The following bibliography is referred to in the Jewish Encyclopedia article:

  • D. Cassel, in Ersch and Gruber, Encyc. section ii., part 31, p. 97;
  • Steinschneider, Cat. Bodl. col. 1534;
  • Neubauer, in Ha-Maggid, xiii. 285;
  • Fuenn, Keneset Yisrael, p. 514;
  • Buber, Anshe Shem, p. 95.
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  1. See He: יוסף_תאומים for detail
  2. He: פרי_מגדים
  3. Neubauer, Cat. Bodl. Hebr. MSS. No. 1500
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