Moses ben Isaac Edrehi (Hebrew : משה בן יצחק אדרעי ; c. 1774 –c. 1842 ) Moroccan -born cabalist and teacher of modern and Oriental languages. He resided mainly in Amsterdam and in England .
Biography
Moses Edrehi was born to a Moroccan Jewish family in Agadir . At an early age, when the Jews were expelled from that city, his family relocated to Mogador , and after 1784 to Rabat .[ 3] At the age of fourteen he began preaching in the city of Meknes .[ 4]
He arrived in London in 1791, studying there at the Sephardi beth midrash Etz Ḥayyim .[ 3] He also lived for some time in Amsterdam .[ 5] Edrehi eventually left for the Land of Israel , via France , Italy , Malta , and Turkey .[ 3]
Edrehi was a firm believer in the existence somewhere in western Asia of the Ten Lost Tribes ,[ 6] and was known for his eccentric character and manner of speech. In June 1829 there appeared in Blackwood's Magazine one of Christopher North 's Noctes Ambrosianae , devoted in large measure to his peculiarities.[ 7]
Bibliography
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Jacobs, Joseph; Lipkind, Goodman (1903). "Edrehi, Moses" . In Singer, Isidore ; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia . Vol. 5. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. pp. 41–42.
^ Edrehi, Moses (1855). Edrehi, Isaac (ed.). History of the Capital of Asia and the Turks, together with an Account of the Domestic Manners of the Turks in Turkey . Vol. I. Boston. p. vi. {{cite book }}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link )
^ Hyamson, Albert M. (1951). The Sephardim of England: A History of the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish Community, 1492–1951 . London: Methuen & Co. p. 263.
^ a b c Berenbaum, Michael ; Skolnik, Fred , eds. (2007). "Edrehi (Heb. אדרעי), Moses ben Isaac" . Encyclopaedia Judaica (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. ISBN 978-0-02-866097-4 .
^ Hallamish, Moshe (October 2010). "Edrehi (al-Darʿī), Moses b. Isaac" . In Stillman, Norman A. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World . Retrieved 14 November 2021 .
^ Slouschz, Nahoum (1909). "Moïse Edrehi, un savant marocain (1760(?)–1840)" . Revue du monde musulman (in French). 7 : 53–68.
^ Zytnicki, Colette (2017). "The 'Oriental Jews' of the Maghred: Reinventing the North African Jewish Past in the Colonial Era" . In Katz, Ethan B.; Leff, Lisa M.; Mandel, Maud S. (eds.). Colonialism and the Jews . Indiana University Press. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-0-253-02462-6 .
^ North, Christopher (1829). "Noctes Ambrosianae, No. XLIV" . Blackwood's Magazine . 25 (148). Edinburgh: William Blackwood: 787 ff.