(known by the acronym Maharshal; 1510-1573). Luria was born in Brest-Litovsk (Brisk), Lithuania, and died in Lublin. He was rabbi of Brest-Litovsk and founded a yeshivah there. Later, he served in Ostraha, and in 1555 he became the rabbi of Lublin.
His approach to the study of the Talmud was rational, and he criticized those who relied on the commentators and codifiers rather than on the actual text. He stressed the importance of ascertaining the correct textual rendition of each passage of the Talmud and its major commentators (Rashi and the Tosafot). Unlike Rabbenu Tam, who attempted to show that every textual variant might be correct in the context, Luria was always interested in finding the accurate reading. While emphasizing the importance of using the Talmud as the basic source for decisions, he made a point of exhaustively studying every possible work with a bearing on the subject before issuing his own decision on questions of Halakhah. Luria wrote Yam shel Shelomo (Solomon's Sea) of which only part has been published. On the other hand, his Hokhmat Shelomo (Solomon's Wisdom), which is a short work on the different tractates of the Talmud, has been published in almost every edition of the Talmud since printed.




