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British rabbi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chief Rabbi David Tevele Schiff (Hebrew: דוד טעבלי שיף; died 17 December 1791; or, in the Hebrew calendar, 26 Kislev 5551) was the chief rabbi of Great Britain and the rabbi of the Great Synagogue of London from 1765 until his death.
Chief Rabbi Tevele Schiff | |
---|---|
Title | Chief rabbi of Great Britain |
Personal | |
Born | David Tevele Schiff |
Died | London, England | 17 December 1791
Religion | Judaism |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Chief Rabbi |
Position | Chief Rabbi |
Synagogue | Great Synagogue of London |
Rabbi Schiff was a disciple of Rabbi Jacob Joshua Falk, author of the Classic Commentary on the Talmud Penei Yehoshua. He was a contemporary of Rabbi Yechezkel Landau, Prague's Chief Rabbi and author of the fundamental Responsae Noda B'Yehuda. His most famous disciple was Rabbi Nosson Adler of Frankfurt-am-Main, famous for his Kabbalistic teachings.
Rabbi Schiff's resting place is at Britain's first Ashkenazic cemetery since the expulsion of Jewry in medieval times. It is situated at 27 Alderney Road, London E1 4EG, in London's East End.
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