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  1. 24. Jan. 2006 · Maimonides. First published Tue Jan 24, 2006; substantive revision Thu Feb 4, 2021. Moses ben Maimon [known to English speaking audiences as Maimonides and Hebrew speaking as Rambam] (1138–1204) is the greatest Jewish philosopher of the medieval period and is still widely read today. The Mishneh Torah, his 14-volume compendium of Jewish law ...

  2. Nachmanides. Nachmanides (or Nachmani = Ben - Nachman), MOSES (also called by the Jews Ramban, רמב ן from the initial letters ר משה בן נחמן, R. Moses ben- ltachman; the Pious Teacher [הרב המאמין], the ,Great Master הרב הגדול], and by Christian writers Moses Gerundemnis), a Jewish writer of considerable note in the ...

  3. Precocious Development. Spanish Talmudist, exegete, and physician; born at Gerona (whence his name "Gerondi") in 1194 (Gans, "Ẓemaḥ Dawid," p. 50, Warsaw, 1890); died in Palestine about 1270. He was the grandson of Isaac ben Reuben of Barcelona (Simeon ben Ẓemaḥ Duran, Responsa, i., § 72) and cousin of Jonah Gerondi; his brother was ...

  4. (auch: Mose ben Nachman, Ramban, Mose Gerondi) – Spanischer Bibelkommentator, Jurist, Philosoph, Kabbalist, Dichter und Arzt; verfasste mehr als 50 Werke, darunter religionsgesetzliche Schriften, Gedichte und Gebete, Predigten, Kommentare zur Tora und zu Hiob;...

  5. Rabbi Moses ben Nachman, Nachmanides (1194-1270 CE), was the leader of Spanish Jewry. Perhaps the most dramatic event in his life was the Great Debate, in which he was given permission by the king to speak freely in defense of Judaism against an apostate Jew converted to Christianity. Rabbi Moses ben Nachman, Nachmanides, was born in Gerona, Spain.

  6. James I awarded Nachmanides a prize of 300 gold coins and declared that never had he heard “an unjust cause so nobly defended.” The following day, Nachmanides left Aragon never to return. The disputation had far-reaching consequences. Between August 26 and 29, 1263, James I ordered the removal of passages deemed offensive from the Talmud ...