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Old Yishuv
Jewish community in the Land of Israel under Mamluk and Ottoman rule
Key events
Nachmanides Aliya (1263)
Alhambra decree (1492)
Manuel I decree (1496)
Hebron and Safed massacres (1517)
Revival of Tiberias (1563)
Sack of Tiberias (1660)
Plunder of Safed (June 1834)
Hebron massacre (August 1834)
Safed attack (1838)
Jerusalem expansion
Moshavot establishment
Key figures
Nachmanides (d.1270)
Joseph Saragossi (d. 1507)
Obadiah MiBartenura (d. 1515)
Abraham ben Eliezer Halevi (d. 1528)
Levi ibn Habib (d. 1545)
Jacob Berab (d. 1546)
Joseph Nasi (d. 1579)
Moses Galante (d. 1689)
Moses ibn Habib (d. 1696)
Yehuda he-Hasid (d. 1700)
Haim Abulafia (d. 1744)
Menachem Mendel (d. 1788)
Haim Farhi (d. 1820)
Aaron Hershler (d. 1873)
Jacob Saphir (d. 1886)
Haim Aharon Valero (d. 1923)
Economy
Etrog cultivation
Winemaking
Banking
Printing
Soap production
Textiles
Philanthropy
Kollel
Halukka
Montefiore
Judah Touro
Communities
Musta'arabim
Sephardim
Perushim
Hasidim
Jerusalem
Mea Shearim
Mishkenot Sha'ananim
Hebron
Safed
Tiberias
Biriya
Jaffa
Haifa
Peki'in
Acco
Shechem
Gaza
Kafr Yasif
Shefa-'Amr
Petah Tikva
Synagogues
Great Academy of Paris (1258)
Ramban (1267)
Abuhav (1490s)
Abraham Avinu (1540)
Ari (1570s)
Johanan ben Zakai (1600s)
Hurva (1700)
Tifereth Israel (1872)
Related articles
History of Israel
Four Holy Cities
Applicability of religious laws
History of Zionism
Timeline
Pre-Modern Aliyah
Return to Zion
Three Oaths
Haredim and Zionism
Edah HaChareidis
ShaDaR
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Kollel Shomrei haChomos (Hebrew: כולל שומרי החומות) is a financial charity institute or kollel set up to support the community of Hungarian-Jews who emigrated to the Holy Land, hence it is called by many the Hungarian Kollel. The Hungarian Jews separated themselves in 1858 from its mother institute Kolel Chibas Yerushalayim which at one point in time included the Jewish communities of the entire Austrian Hungarian Kingdom. Kolel Chibas Yerushalayim was itself a breakaway from the original Kolel Perushim, established by the students of the Vilna Gaon. Two leading Hungarian rabbis were appointed as the "Nesyim" or "Presidents of the Kolel, Avraham Shmuel Binyamin Sofer, author of Ketav Sofer, and Meir Eisenstein. In honor of these two leaders the Hungarian Kolel was also called "House of Sofer and Meir"
and 9 Related for: Kollel Shomrei HaChomos information
KollelShomreihaChomos (Hebrew: כולל שומרי החומות) is a financial charity institute or kollel set up to support the community of Hungarian-Jews who emigrated...
October 2008 the yeshiva was officially reopened as a synagogue. KollelShomreiHaChomos Edah HaChareidis Rossoff, Dovid. Where Heaven Touches Earth, Guardian...
separated into Kolel ShomreiHaChomos. The first kollel – in the modern sense of the term – in the Jewish diaspora was the Kovno Kollel ("Kolel Perushim")...
Rabbi Leibish Leizer of Pshevorsk is presiding over the Kolel. KollelShomreiHaChomosKollel Hod "Charity Navigator - Rating for Kolel Chibas Jerusalem"...
Ottoman-ruled Palestine. By 1873, he was a 23-year-old student at the KollelShomreiHaChomos and had a wife and a daughter. On the night of 1 January 1873,...
טוביה אריה גולדברגר; 1856 – December 30, 1910) was a dayan at the Badatz Kollel Hasidim in Jerusalem [he]. Goldberger was born in Hungary, where he studied...
Rabbi Meir Baal Haness Kolel Polen the general united charity of Rabbi Meir Baal Haneis Salant[citation needed] Kolel ShomreiHaChomos Kolel Chibas Yerushalayim...