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Kikayon DeYonah

Kikayon DeYonah

1595 CE1669 CE · Acharonim · Prague

Yonah Teomim-Frankel, commonly identified by the title of his major work, Kikayon DeYonah, was born in Prague around 1595. He served as rabbi and head of yeshiva across a succession of Polish and Lithuanian communities, among them Grodno and Pinsk. The Chmielnicki upheavals of 1648-1649 uprooted him from these posts; he fled westward, passing through Vienna and Nikolsburg before being called in 1660 to lead the Jewish community of Metz, in Lorraine, where he settled for the remainder of his life. Although he was named to the rabbinate of Posen in 1666, he stayed in Metz until his death there on 16 April 1669. His Kikayon DeYonah, novellae on the Talmud engaging Rashi, Tosafot, and the glosses of Maharshal and Maharsha, was printed in Amsterdam by his son shortly after his passing.

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Stop 1 of 61595Born

PragueפראגBohemia

What they did here

Birthplace.

Prague in this era

Prague in the Acharonic era was a vibrant and turbulent center of Jewish learning under the rule of the Bohemian kings and the Holy Roman Emperor, most notably Rudolf II in the late 1500s. The Jewish community flourished in the Old Town, expanding beyond the crowded ghetto streets that would later define its reputation, and achieved considerable prosperity through banking, trade, and craftsmanship. The city became renowned as a fortress of Ashkenazi Talmudic scholarship, where rigorous legal reasoning and mystical inquiry coexisted in an atmosphere of intense intellectual ferment. The Maharal of Prague emerged as the community's spiritual leader, his teachings blending Kabbalah with rational philosophy in ways that captivated both scholars and common folk. Prague's Jewish quarter bustled with yeshivas and study-halls, while the Alt-Neu Synagogue—already centuries old—stood as the spiritual heart of communal life. Yet this golden age was shadowed by the encroaching ghetto walls, restrictive imperial decrees, and the distant tremors of the Chmielnicki massacres that devastated Polish Jewry in 1648, reminding Prague's Jews of their precarious status within Christian lands.

About Prague

Major 16-17c. Ashkenazi center; Maharal and Kli Yakar both served here.

In Prague at the same time

Maharal, Mordechai Yoffe, Dovid Gans, Shlah

See other sages who lived in Prague

In the same place & time

Sages whose lives overlapped with Kikayon DeYonah’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.

Across the traditions

In the same tradition

Maharal, Mordechai Yoffe, Dovid Gans, Shlah

The world in their lifetime

Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Kikayon DeYonah’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.

Works(1)

Kikayon DeYonah

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