Difference between revisions of "Commentators:R. Eliyahu of Vilna (Vilna Gaon – GR"A)/0"

From AlHaTorah.org
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
<page type="Basic">
 
<page type="Basic">
<h1>R. Eliyahu Kramer (Vilna Gaon – GR"A)</h1>
+
<h1>R. Eliyahu of Vilna (Vilna Gaon – GR"A)</h1>
 
<stub></stub>
 
<stub></stub>
 
<div class="header">
 
<div class="header">

Version as of 06:10, 27 July 2015

R. Eliyahu of Vilna (Vilna Gaon – GR"A)

This page is a stub.
Please contact us if you would like to assist in its development.
Vilna Gaon
Name
R. Eliyahu b. Shelomo Zalman, Vilna Gaon
ר' אליהו בן שלמה זלמן, הגר"א
Dates1720-1797
LocationLithuania
WorksAderet Eliyahu on Tanakh, Beur HaGRA
Exegetical Characteristics
Influenced by
Impacted on

Background1

Life

  • Name – 
    • Hebrew name – ר' אליהו בן שלמה זלמן2
    • _ name – 
  • Dates – 1720-1797
  • Location – Born in Selets, Grodno province, lived most of his life in Vilna.3
  • Education – To say the Gra was a child prodigy would be an understatement, based on various reports of amazing incidents in his youth.4 From a young age, the Gra studied mainly on his own, always with great diligence and fortitude.5
  • Intellectual pursuits – The Gra’s interests and teachings encompassed the entire world of Torah, both exoteric and esoteric.6 Moreover, he studied secular subjects such as algebra, geometry, astronomy, and medicine, and valued such fields as providing assistance in understanding the Torah.7 In contrast, he had a rather negative view of philosophy.8
  • Occupation – The Gra led a life of secluded study until the age of forty,9 when he started lecturing to a group of elite Torah scholars who became his close disciples, and began assuming a communal leadership role.10 One of his main endeavors in this role was to oppose the emerging Chassidic movement, and it was the Gra himself who was the main driving force behind the anti-Chassidic campaign.11 In practice, though not in any official capacity, the Gra became the spiritual leader of Lithuanian Jewry. At some point before 1783, the Gra set out for Eretz Yisrael, intending to send for his family later. However, he never reached his destination – for unknown reasons12 – and returned to Vilna.13 Nevertheless, he famously encouraged his students to emigrate to Eretz Yisrael, and it was a group of his students and their families who comprised one of the first major waves of modern Jewish settlement in Eretz Yisrael.14
  • Family – – The Gra came from a well-known rabbinical family. He married his first wife Chanah around the age of eighteen. After she died in 1782, he married Gitel. The Gra had three sons<fn>Two of these sons, Avraham and Yehudah Leib, published the Gra’s Torah commentary and other works.</fn> and four daughters, all from his first wife.<fn>See B. Landau, הגאון החסיד מוילנא (Jerusalem, 1978): 267-268 and notes, and S. Leiman, “Who is Buried in the Vilna Gaon’s Tomb?” available at the following link: http://ou.org.s3.amazonaws.com/publications/ja/5759winter/leiman.htm.</fn>
  • Teachers – 
  • Contemporaries – 
  • Students – 
  • Time period – 
  • World outlook – 

Works

  • Biblical commentaries – 
  • Rabbinics – 
    • Talmudic novellae – 
    • Halakhic codes – 
    • Responses to the works of others – 
    • Responsa – 
  • Jewish thought – 
  • Misattributed works – 

Torah Commentary

Characteristics

  • Verse by verse / Topical – 
  • Genre – 
  • Structure – 
  • Language – 
  • Peshat and derash – 

Methods

  • – 

Themes

  • – 

Textual Issues

  • Manuscripts – 
  • Printings – 
  • Textual layers – 

Sources

Significant Influences

  • Earlier Sources – 
  • Teachers – 
  • Foils – 

Occasional Usage

Possible Relationship

Impact

Later exegetes

Supercommentaries