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Meir ben Judah Leib Poppers

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Name
  
Meir Judah

Died
  
1662

Meir ben Judah Leib Poppers or Meir ben Judah Loeb Ha-Kohen Ashkenazi Poppers (ca. 1624-1662) was a Bohemian rabbi and kabbalist. He was born in Prague and died in Jerusalem in February or March, 1662.

He studied the Kabbala under Israel Ashkenazi and Jacob Zemah, and he wrote a great number of works, all in the spirit of Isaac Luria; thirty-nine of them have "Or" as the beginning of their titles, in reference to his name "Meir." His works which have been published are: Or Zaddikim (Hamburg, 1690), a mystical methodology, or exhortation to asceticism, based upon Isaac Luria's writings, the Zohar, and other moral works (an enlarged edition of this work was published later under the title Or Ha-Yashar [Furth, 1754]); Or Pene Melek, a treatise on the mysteries of the prayers and commandments, condensed and published under the title Sefer Kavanot Tefillot u-Mizvot (Hamburg, 1690); Me'ore Or, an alphabetical arrangement of the kabbalistic sacred names found in Isaac Luria's Sefer Ha-Kavanot, published by Elijah ben Azriel, with the commentary Ya'ir Natib of Nathan Mannheimer and Jacob ben Benjamin Wolf, under the title Me'orot Natan (Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1709); Mesillot Hokmah (Shklov, 1785), regulations and rules for the study of the Kabbala.

Among his unpublished works the following may be mentioned: Or Rab, a commentary on the Zohar; Or ha-Abukah, a treatise on the Kabbala; Or Zarua, a commentary on Hayyim Vital's Derek 'Ez ha-Hayyim; Or Ner, on the transmigration of souls; Or Zah, on the order in which souls are linked together; Derushim 'al ha-Torah, homilies on the Pentateuch; Matok ha-Or, a cabalistic commentary on the Aggadah of the Talmud and Midrash Rabbah.

He is buried on the Mount of Olives.

References

Meir ben Judah Leib Poppers Wikipedia