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Isaac ben Moses of Vienna : ウィキペディア英語版
Isaac ben Moses of Vienna

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Isaac ben Moses of Vienna, also called Isaac Or Zarua or the Riaz, was one of the greatest rabbis of the Middle Ages. He was probably born in Bohemia and lived between 1200 and 1270. He attained his fame in Vienna and his major work, the halachic guide known as the ''Or Zarua'', was very popular among Ashkenazic Jewry. He was a member of the Chassidei Ashkenaz and studied under many scholars, including the Ra'avyah, Rabbi Yehudah HaChasid, the Sar mi'Kutzi and Rabbi Elazar Rokeach. He was among the teachers of Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg.
== Life ==
In his ''Or Zarua'', the only primary source of information on his life, Isaac ben Moses mentions as his teachers two Bohemian scholars, Jacob ha-Laban and Isaac ben Jacob ha-Laban (author of ''Arugat ha-Bosem''). Led by a thirst for Talmudic knowledge, he undertook in his youth extensive journeys to the prominent ''yeshivot'' of Germany and France. According to Gross he went to Ratisbon first; but S.N. Bernstein conjectures that previously he stopped for a long time at Vienna, and became closely identified with the city, as he is usually quoted as "Isaac of Vienna." From among the many scholars at Ratisbon he selected for his guide the mystic Yehuda ben Samuel HaChasid.
About 1217 he went to Paris, where the great Talmudist Judah ben Isaac Sir Leon became his chief teacher. He also visited for a short time the ''yeshiva'' of Jacob ben Meir in Provins. Then he returned to Germany, and studied under the mystic Eleazar ben Judah at Worms, and, at Speyer, under Simchah ben Samuel of Speyer, his intimate friend, and Eliezer ben Joel ha-Levi, author of ''Abi ha-'Ezri'' and ''Abi'asaf''. At Würzburg, where Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg was his pupil (c. 1230), he became ''rosh yeshiva.'' Later on Isaac returned to Ratisbon, and then settled for some time in Vienna, where he held the position of Av Beth Din and ''rosh yeshiva.'' Finally, he went to Saxony and Bohemia.
Isaac lived a long but unsteady and troubled life. He saw the law compelling Jews to wear the yellow badge put into force in France, and he deplored the massacres of the Jews in Frankfurt-am-Main (1241) and the extortions practised upon them by the nobles of Austria. His son-in-law was Samuel ben Shabbethai of Leipzig; his son Chaim Eliezer, called ''Or Zarua,'' like him a scholar, carried on a comprehensive halachic correspondence, a part of which (251 ''responsa'') was printed under the title ''Sefer She'elot u-Teshubot'' (Leipzig, 1860).

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