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Saul Adadi : ウィキペディア英語版
Saul Adadi

Saul Adadi ((ヘブライ語:שאול אדאדי), 1850 – September 18, 1918) was a Sephardi Hakham, rosh yeshiva, and paytan in the 19th-century Jewish community of Tripoli, Libya. He was heavily involved in youth education, founding a yeshiva and co-founding and serving as principal of a Talmud Torah. He preserved the ''pinkasim'' (community record books) of the Tripoli Jewish community, unpublished manuscripts of 18th-century Tripoli Jewish leader Rabbi Abraham Khalfon, and ''sefarim'' belonging to his father, Hakham Abraham Hayyim Adadi, a senior rabbi of the previous generation.
==Family==
Saul Adadi was born in Tripoli, the scion of a distinguished rabbinical family. He was the son of Hakham Abraham Hayyim Adadi (1801–1874), head of the Tripoli rabbinical court and author of several halakhic works. He was the great-grandson of Hakham Nathan Adadi (1740–1818), one of the leaders of the Tripoli Jewish community in the 19th century, and the great-great-grandson of Hakham Mas'ud Hai Rakkah (1690–1768), author of ''Ma'aseh Rokeaḥ'', who is credited with laying the foundation for the development of the Jewish community of Tripoli into one of "sages, scribes, and kabbalists". He was a contemporary of Hakham Jacob Rakkah (1800–1891), another great-great-grandson of Mas'ud Hai Rakkah and author of approximately 40 ''sefarim''.
On Lag BaOmer 1870, Adadi's father and mother returned to Safed in the Levant, where the senior Adadi had lived in his younger years and served as a ''shadar'' (rabbinical emissary). Saul remained in Tripoli and corresponded with his father until the latter's death in 1874.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Rabbi Avraham Chaim Adadi )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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