//  Main  //  Menu


Category Index

   
⤷ You are here:   Contributors (A→Z)  🪜   Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans
Avatar photo

Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans

Rabbi Meir bar Yitzchak (Nehorai) of Orléans (d. ca. 1095) was a ḥazzan and payyetan in Worms, Germany,

http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/10573-meir-ben-isaac-of-orleans
Resources filtered by TAG: “7th century C.E.” (clear filter)

Sorted Chronologically (new to old). Sort oldest first?

🆕 חֲנַנְיָה מִישָׁאֵל וַעֲזַרְיָה | Ḥanaiah, Mishael, and Azariah — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of Shavuot

Contributed by: Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans, Unknown

This piyyut, “Ḥanaiah, Mishael, and Azariah,” was originally written to be recited as an introduction to the targum of the Second Commandment, the prohibition on worshiping other gods. It is a dispute-poem retelling the story of Ḥanaiah, Mishael, and Azariah, the three “holy children” of Daniel chapter 3 who would rather be thrown into an oven than worship an idol. It’s an intricate multi-part acrostic that I absolutely love. (I also am partially convinced it may be influenced by the apocryphal “Song of the Three Holy Children,” if not in context then in the idea of an extensive poem related to their story.) Since the original poem’s acrostic only goes halfway through the alphabet, the great Meir bar Isaac Nehorai of Orleans wrote a continuation that is also included here. . . .