Yitzhak Ben-Hezekiah Yosef Kovo (1770–1854) was born in the large Sephardi community of Ottoman Salonica and later settled in Jerusalem. In 1848, he succeeded Chaim Abraham Gagin as hacham bashi aged 78. Throughout his career he went on fundraising missions to Poland, London and Egypt. In 1854, he died while in Alexandria. He authored many works on the Mishnah, Talmud and Shulchan Aruch and wrote responsa.
Yitzhak Ben-Hezekiah Yosef Kovo (1770–1854) was born in the large Sephardi community of Ottoman Salonica and later settled in Jerusalem. In 1848, he succeeded...
Zari David "Bebo" Kovo is an Israeli-Bulgarian property developer. He was one of the partners of property company Camden Market Holdings & Developments...
- first Hakham Bashi of Palestine recognized by Ottoman government. YitzhakKovo (1848–1854) Chaim Nissim Abulafia (1854–1861) Chaim David Hazan (1861–1869)...
he was appointed to the Beit Din alongside Moshe Benvenisti, Yitzhak Cordoviro, Yitzhak Kalmaro, and Avraham Amar. In 1859, he went on a mission with...
Empire Religion Judaism Jewish leader Predecessor Yehuda Navon Successor YitzhakKovo Position Chief Rabbi of Ottoman Palestine Began 1842 Ended 1848...
Chaim Abraham Gagin 1842–1848 Isaac Kovo 1848–1854 Haim Nisim Abulafia 1854–1861 Chaim David Hazan 1861–1869 Abraham Ashkenazi 1869–1880 Raphael Meir Panigel...
Retrieved 12 January 2023. Rūkas, Eugenijus (2013). "Pirmoji Kauno pilis ir kovos su Vokiečių ordinu Kauno apylinkėse iki XV a. pradžios" (PDF). Kauno istorijos...
14) (in Belarusian). Прыезд афіц. "Valstybės atkūrimas. Nepriklausomybės kovos. Sovietų okupacija (1918 m.–1940 m.)". Kariuomene.lt (in Lithuanian). Lithuanian...