music.wikisort.org - Poet
List of Hebrew language poets (year links are to corresponding "[year] in poetry" article):
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
Biblical
- Moses
- King David
- King Solomon
- Jeremiah
Early Middle Ages
- Eleazar ha-Kalir
- Jose b. Jose
- Yannai
Golden Age in Spain
- Joseph ibn Abitur
- Abraham Abulafia
- Meir Halevi Abulafia
- Todros ben Judah Halevi Abulafia
- Samuel he-Hasid
- Todros Abulafia
- Yehuda Alharizi (1190-1240)[1]
- Judah Ben Samuel Halevi (born c. 1086)[1]
- Dunash ben Labrat (10th century)[1]
- Santob De Carrion (late 14th century), also a proverb writer[1]
- Abraham ibn Ezra, also known as Abraham ben Meir ibn Ezra (1088-1167), known mainly for Biblical commentaries and grammar works[1]
- Moses ibn Ezra (1070-1139)[1]
- Solomon Ibn Gabirol (1021-1058)[1]
- Isaac ibn Ghiyyat
- Yehuda Halevi
- Joseph Kimhi (1105-1170), born in Spain, he fled to Narbonne, Provence, where he became known as a grammarian, exegete, poet, and translator.[1]
- Shmuel haNagid, also known as Samuel ibn Naghrela or Samuel Ha-Naggid (992-1055)[1]
- Menahem ibn Saruq
- Joseph ben Jacob ibn Zaddik (died 1149)
Medieval Germany
Medieval France
- David Hakohen (late 13th century), composer of piyyutim from Avignon
- Isaac Gorni (late 13th century), troubadour from Aire-sur-l'Adour
- Jedaiah ben Abraham Bedersi (1270-1340), poet, philosopher and physician born in Béziers[1]
- Joseph ben Isaac Bekor Shor (12th century), Tosafist, exegete and poet from Orléans[1]
Safed Cabalists
Italian Renaissance
- Deborah Ascarelli (17th century)[1]
- Immanuel Frances
- Immanuel the Roman also known as Immanuel ben Solomon and Immanuel of Rome (1270-1330), a satirical poet and scholar[1]
- Daniel ben Judah (late 14th century), liturgical poet[2]
- Moshe Chaim Luzzatto, also known as Moses Hayyim Luzzatto (1707-1747)
- Judah Leone Modena, also known as: Leon Modena or Yehudah Aryeh Mi-modena (1571-1648), a rabbi, orator, scholar, teacher and poet[1]
- Sara Copia Sullam (died 1641)[1]
North Africa and Yemen
Jewish Enlightenment (Haskalah)
Modern Hebrew
A
B
C
- Ya'akov Cahan (1881-1960)[1]
- T. Carmi
- Miriam Chalfi (writing as Miriam Barukh)
- Rahel Chalfi
- Sami Shalom Chetrit
D
- Menahem Mendel Dolitzki (1858-1931)[1]
E
F
G
H
I
- Naphtali Herz Imber (1856-1909), the author of Hatikvah ("The Hope"), called "the Jewish national hymn"[1]
K
L
M
- Meir Leibush Malbim (1809-1879), notable Russian Bible commentator who wrote some poetry in Hebrew[2]
- Salomon Mandelkern (1846-1902), Ukrainian poet and scholar; author of the Hebrew concordance, Hekal Hakodesh[2]
- Mordecai Zvi Mane (1859-1886)[1]
- Reda Mansour
- Salman Masalha
- Margalit Matitiahu
- Agi Mishol (born 1947), Hungarian-born Israeli poet
N
O
P
R
- Rachel (Hebrew: רחל) in English, sometimes transcribed as "Ra'hel" or "Rahel", also known as "Rachel the poetess" (Hebrew: רחל המשוררת), pen name of Rachel Bluwstein Sela (1890–1931), poet who immigrated to Palestine in 1909
- Yonatan Ratosh
- Dahlia Ravikovitch
- Janice Rebibo
- Abraham Regelson
- Abraham Reisen (1870-1953), Russian native who emigrated to the United States; prolific poet and prose writer; pen name: Ben Kalman[2]
- Tuvya Ruebner
S
T
V
W
Y
Z
- Nathan Zach
- Nurit Zarchi
- Zelda
- Eliezer Zvi Zweifel [he], also a Russian scholar, commentator and defender of Hassidism[2]
- Stephan Zweig, (1836-1913), wrote in Hebrew and Yiddish[1]
- Eliakum Zunser, (1881-1942), born in Vienna; also a biographer and dramatist[2]
See also
- The Modern Hebrew Poem Itself
Notes
- Kravitz, Nathaniel (1972). 3,000 Years of Hebrew Literature. Chicago: Swallow Press Inc. ISBN 9780804005050.
- Kravitz, Nathaniel, "3,000 Years of Hebrew Literature", Chicago: Swallow Press Inc., 1972, Appendix B ("Other Hebrew Writers and Scholars"), pp 555-559
- Breger, Jennifer. "Rachel Morpurgo". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive.
Literature in Israel / Israeli literature |
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Hebrew literature | |
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Bookstores |
- Comikaza
- Mini Book
- Sefer ve Sefel
- Steimatzky (chain)
- Tzomet Sfarim (chain)
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Literary events |
- Hebrew Book Week
- Jerusalem International Book Forum
- Palestine Festival of Literature
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Literary prizes |
- Bernstein
- Bialik
- Brenner
- Geffen
- Israel Prize
- Jerusalem Prize
- Lamdan
- Prime Minister's Prize
- Yitzhak Sadeh
- Sapir
- Tchernichovsky
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Publishers |
- Am Oved
- Bialik
- Carta
- Gefen
- Kibutz-Poalim
- Kinneret–Zmora
- Mapa
- Modan
- Pardes
- Shocken
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