//  Main  //  Menu


Category Index

   
⤷ You are here:   Contributors (A→Z)  🪜   Yisrael Najara
Avatar photo

Yisrael Najara

Yisrael ben Mosheh Najara (Hebrew: ישראל בן משה נאג'ארה; Arabic: إسرائيل بن موسى النجارة‎, Isra'il bin Musa al-Najara; c. 1555, Safed, Ottoman Empire – c. 1625, Gaza, Ottoman Empire) was a prolific Jewish liturgical poet, preacher, Biblical commentator, kabbalist, and rabbi of Gaza.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel_ben_Moses_Najara
Resources filtered by CATEGORY: “Se'udat Leil Shabbat” (clear filter)

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

יָהּ רִבּוֹן | Yah Ribōn, a piyyut by Rabbi Yisrael Najara (16th c.) translation by Sara-Kinneret Lapidot

Contributed by: Sara Lapidot (translation), Yisrael Najara

The piyyut, yah Ribon Olam, in Hebrew with an English translation. . . .


יָהּ רִבּוֹן | Yah Ribōn, a piyyut by Rabbi Yisrael Najara (16th c.) translated by Paltiel Birnbaum (1949)

Contributed by: Paltiel Birnbaum (translation), Yisrael Najara, Aharon N. Varady (transcription)

The piyyut, Yah Ribon, in Aramaic with an English translation. . . .


יָהּ רִבּוֹן | Yah Ribōn, a piyyut by Rabbi Yisrael Najara (16th c.) translated by Rabbi Israel Brodie (1962)

Contributed by: Israel Brodie, Yisrael Najara, Aharon N. Varady (transcription)

The piyyut, Yah Ribon, in Aramaic with an English translation. . . .


יָהּ רִבּוֹן | Yah Ribōn, a piyyut by Rabbi Yisrael Najara (16th c.) rhyming translation by Israel Abrahams (1914)

Contributed by: Israel Abrahams (translation), Yisrael Najara, Aharon N. Varady (transcription)

The piyyut, yah Ribon Olam, in Hebrew with a rhyming English translation. . . .


יָהּ רִבּוֹן | Yah Ribōn, a piyyut by Rabbi Yisrael Najara (16th c.) translation by Rabbi David Aaron de Sola (1857)

Contributed by: Aharon N. Varady (transcription), David de Aaron de Sola (translation), Yisrael Najara

This translation by Rabbi David Aaron de Sola of “Yah Ribon” by Rabbi Yisrael Najara was first published in his Ancient Melodies of the Spanish and Portuguese Jews (1857). . . .