Hayyim Tyrer
Quick Facts
Biography
Hayyim ben Solomon Tyrer (Hebrew: חיים בן שלמה טירר) was a Hasidic rabbi and kabbalist. After he had been rabbi at five different towns, among them Mogilev, Czernowitz and Botoșani, he settled in Jerusalem.
He was the author of: "Sidduro shel Shabbat," kabbalistic homilies on Sabbatical subjects, Poryck, 1818; "Be'er Mayim Ḥayyim," novellæ on the Pentateuch, in two parts, Czernowitz, pt. i. 1820, pt. ii. 1849; "Sha'ar ha-Tefillah," kabbalistic reflections on prayer, Sudilkov, 1837; "Ereẓ ha-Ḥayyim," in two parts: (1) a homiletic commentary on the Prophets and Hagiographa, and (2) novellæ on the treatise Berakhot, Czernowitz, 1861. He is mentioned by Sender Margalioth in his responsa on the Shulchan Aruch, Even Ha'ezer.
He died at Jerusalem in 1813, and was buried in a cave in the Jewish cemetery of Safed.