David ben Se‘adya
Little is known about the life of halakhic scholar David ben Se‘adya al-Ger (or Ibn Muhājir), who was active in the circle of either Samuel ha-Nagid or Isaac Ibn Ghiyath. The patronym al-Ger (the proselyte) may have denoted that David’s father converted to Judaism; it has been suggested that his father may have come from northern Spain or southern France. David was held in high regard by his contemporaries. Later authorities, however, including Isaac al-Fāsī, criticized some of his rulings. In addition to a relatively wide-ranging halakhic work, The Comprehensive Book (Kitāb al-ḥāwī), David wrote a book on the laws of oaths. Parts of his writings were translated into Hebrew in the decades after his death.
Content by David ben Se‘adya
Primary Source
The Comprehensive Book
Kitāb al-ḥāwī