Uziel, Isaac ben Abraham, -1622

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
עוזיאל, יצחק בן אברהם
Name (Latin)
Uziel, Isaac ben Abraham, -1622
Other forms of name
עזיאל, יצחק בן אברהם
Date of death
1622-04-01
Place of birth
Fès (Morocco)
Place of death
Amsterdam (Netherlands)
Gender
male
Biographical or Historical Data
מקום לידה: Fez
מקום לידה: פאס Fez], מארוקו]
תאריך לידה עברי: שכ"א [1561]?
מקום פטירה: אמשטרדם
מקום פטירה: Amsterdam
תאריך פטירה עברי: כא בניסן שפ"ב [1.4.1622].
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 291989452
Wikidata: Q1673452
Library of congress: nb2008004898
Sources of Information
  • משלי אירסטו, תש"ה 1945:
  • Record enhanced with data from Bibliography of the Hebrew Book database
  • M. Kayserling, Espanola - Portugueza-Judaica, Strasbourg 1890, p.107.
  • ח"ז הירשברג, תולדות היהודים באפריקה הצפונית, ב, ירושלים תשכ"ה, עמ' 102-103 [שם: נפטר ש"ף]
  • ד' ברגמן, צרור זהובים, ירושלים תשנ"ח, עמ' 126 [שם: נפטר בשנת 1620].
Wikipedia description:

Isaac ben Abraham Uziel (died 1 April 1622, Amsterdam) (Hebrew: יצחק בן אברהם עזיאל) was a Moroccan physician, poet and grammarian, born at Fez, Morocco. At one time he held the position of rabbi at Oran, Algeria, but late in life he left that city to settle in Amsterdam, where he opened a Talmudical school which counted among its pupils Manasseh ben Israel and Isaac Aboab da Fonseca. Dissatisfied with the laxity in religious matters which he noticed among many members of the Sephardic community, Uziel delivered a series of lectures which led to the foundation of a new congregation under the name of "Neveh Shalom". In 1610, at the death of Judah Vega, the first rabbi of the new congregation, Uziel was called to the rabbinate. Uziel was the author of a Hebrew grammar, Ma'aneh Lashon, edited by his pupil Isaac Nehemiah at Amsterdam in 1627 (2nd ed. 1710). He left also in manuscript many Hebrew and Spanish poems (Libros Poeticos en Declaracion de Todos los Equivocos de las Sagradas Letras); these are highly praised by De Barrios, who represents the author as a great poet, an able musician, and a distinguished mathematician. Joseph Serrano dedicated a poem to Uziel; it is inserted in the Temime Derek.

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