Authors of piyyut are known as paytanim (singular: paytan). Piyyut is Jewish liturgical poetry, in Hebrew or occasionally Aramaic.

The earliest authors of piyyut did not sign their names in acrostics, nor do manuscripts preserve their names. The earliest paytan whose name is known is Yosé ben Yosé, usually dated to fifth-century Palestine; he did not sign his name in his work, but copyists of manuscripts preserved it along with his work. Starting in the sixth century, paytanim began to sign their work.[1]

Pre-classical Palestine

(up to the 5th century CE)

Classical Palestine

(6th to mid-8th centuries CE)

  • Eleazar ben Qallir (or: ben Qillir)—6th- to 7th-century Palestine
  • Joshua the Kohen—7th-century Palestine
  • Pinḥas the Kohen, son of Jacob—8th-century Tiberias, Palestine
  • Simeon bar Megas the Kohen—6th-century Palestine
  • Yannai—6th-century Palestine
  • Yoḥanan the Kohen, son of Joshua—7th-century Palestine

Post-classical Palestine and the Middle East

(mid-8th to 13th centuries CE)

  • Benjamin ben Judah—late 9th- or 10th-century Middle East, perhaps Iraq[2]
  • Saadia Gaon—early to mid-10th-century Iraq
  • Shelomo Suleiman al-Sanjāry—9th-century Middle East (Syria?)

Apulia (Southern Italy)

  • Amittai ben Shefatya—mid- to late 9th-century Oria

Lombardy

  • Solomon Ha-bavli—mid-10th century Lombardy

Iberian Peninsula - the Spanish period

Post-Spanish piyyut

Notes

  1. Fleischer, Hebrew Liturgical Poetry in the Middle Ages (Hebrew), Keter Publishing House: Jerusalem, 1975. (Hereafter: Shirat Ha-qodesh.)
  2. Shulamit Elizur, Rabbi Jehuda Berabbi Binjaminis: Carmina Cuncta (Hebrew), Mekize Nirdamim:Jerusalem, 1988. p. 77
  3. "Baynes, T. S., ed. (1875–1889). "Avicebron" . Encyclopædia Britannica (9th ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons." in the Encyclopædia Britannica, 9th ed. 1878.

References

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