Jump to content

Shmuel ha-Katan: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
rabbi-stub
No edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:


[[he:שמואל הקטן]]
[[he:שמואל הקטן]]
[[de:Samuel der Kleine]]

Revision as of 08:22, 1 August 2008

Shmuel Hakatan (literally Shmuel the Small) was a Babylonian Jew considered a great scholar of the Talmud, Jewish law and custom. He was one of the second generation of Tannaim, who served under the patriarch Gamliel II of Yavneh, during the last two decades of the first century CE.

He is known for his great work on the Hebrew calendar in exilic times, which brought an end to the practice of witnesses testifying to the new moon. and in establishing some texts of the Jewish prayer book, the Siddur. Particularly, he wrote the Birkat HaMinim benediction, the 19th blessing in the silent prayer said thrice daily, the Amidah.