Dinov (Hasidic dynasty)

Dinov (Yiddish: דינאָוו, Hebrew: דינוב) is the name of a Hasidic dynasty, descended from Rabbi Tzvi Elimelech Spira of Dinov (c.1783  1841), also called "the Bnei Yisaschar" after his popular work: בני יששכר [Bene Yiśaśkhar]. Dinov is the Yiddish name of Dynów, a town in southern Poland, in the historic region of Galicia.[1]

Notable Hasidic movements descended from the Dinov dynasty are Munkatch and Bluzhov.

Dynasty

Notes

  1. In ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor, Alfasi writes that he was the son-in-law of Rebbe Mendel Rubin of Glogov of the Ropshitz dynasty, and so includes Rebbe Eliezer and his sons in the Ropshitz dynasty. However, in his Entsiḳlopedyah la-Ḥasidut he agrees with the other sources.
  2. Alfasi,[13] Rand,[14] and Vunder[15] write that Rebbe Eliezer's father-in-law was Rabbi Simcha of Lantzut; later,[16] Vunder retracts and writes that his father-in-law was Rebbe Elazar of Lantzut (Rabbi Simcha's father). Rebbe Avraham David Rubin's own tombstone,[17] however, agrees with Alfasi and Rand.
  3. Rebbe Eliezer's ancestor "Rebbe Menachem Mendel of Linsk" can be identified either with Rebbe Mendel Rubin (or Rabin), the rabbi of Linsk (Lesko), father of Rebbe Naftali Tzvi Horowitz of Ropshitz, or with Rebbe Menachem Mendel Horowitz, rabbi and rebbe of Linsk, Rebbe Naftali Tzvi's grandson. In Volume 2 of Meʼore Galitsyah, Ṿunder writes that Rebbe Eliezer was the son of Rebbe Avraham Chaim Horowitz (the second) of Linsk, son of Rebbe Menachem Mendel Horowitz of Linsk. In Volume 4, he writes that Rebbe Eliezer succeeded his father, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Rubin—who was the grandson of Rebbe Naftali Tzvi of Ropshitz's brother—as the rabbi and rebbe of Baligrod.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Alfasi. "שושלת דינוב" [The Dinov Dynasty]. ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor. pp. 305–310.
  2. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. pp. 506–507.
  3. ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor. p. 73.
  4. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. pp. 491–492.
  5. "Israel Spira, 99, Leader of Bluzhov Hasidim". The New York Times. 31 October 1989. Retrieved October 2012.
  6. ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor. pp. 109, 222.
  7. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. pp. 513–515.
  8. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. pp. 521–522.
  9. Meʼore Galitsyah 2. pp. 518–520.
  10. ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor. pp. 345, 347.
  11. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. p. 570.
  12. 1 2 3 4 Lantsuṭ. p. 58.
  13. Entsiḳlopedyah la-Ḥasidut 1. p. 74.
  14. Rand, Asher Z. (1950). Toldot Anshe Shem (תולדות אנשי ש"ם). New York. pp. 127–128.
  15. Meʼore Galitsyah 4. pp. 679, 710.
  16. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. p. 455. Meʼore Galitsyah 6. p. 1118.
  17. Amsel, Baruch (1 January 2009). "Rebbe Avroham Dovid Rubin". Kevarim of Tzadikim in North America. Kevarim of Tzadikim in North America. Retrieved 2 October 2012.
  18. Meʼore Galitsyah 4. p. 783.
  19. 1 2 3 ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor. pp. 335–337. Entsiḳlopedyah la-Ḥasidut 1. p. 74. Rand, Asher Z. (1950). Toldot Anshe Shem (תולדות אנשי ש"ם). New York. pp. 127–128. Meʼore Galitsyah 2. p. 136. Meʼore Galitsyah 4. pp. 679, 710. Meʼore Galitsyah 5. p. 455. Meʼore Galitsyah 6. p. 1118.
  20. Meʼore Galitsyah 4. p. 707. Spira, Rabbi Tzvi Elimelech. "רבי ישראל לייב ראבין" [Rebbe Yisrael Leib Rubin]. In Walzer-Fass, Michael. Lantsuṭ. p. 64.
  21. Manuscript of Rebbe Meir Rubin of Glogov in Or yeshaʻ (Jerusalem: Kolel Ḳehillat Yaʻaḳov Sulitsa, 1973)
  22. Spira, Rabbi Tzvi Elimelech. "רבי אברהם דוד ראבין" [Rebbe Avraham David Rubin]. In Walzer-Fass, Michael. Lantsuṭ. p. 64.
  23. 1 2 Meʼore Galitsyah 5. p. 568.
  24. 1 2 3 4 Meʼore Galitsyah 2. pp. 752–753. ha-Ḥasidut mi-dor le-dor. p. 148.

Further reading

Many members of the Dinov dynasty (including most of the Lantzut branch) are described in pages 55–64 and 66–67.
The Bluzhov dynasty is described in detail in volume 2, pages 165–183.
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