Azulai was a prolific writer. His works range from a prayerbook he edited and arranged ('Tefillat Yesharim') to a vast spectrum of
Halachic literature including a commentary on the
Shulchan Aruch titled 'Birkei Yosef' which appears in most editions. While living and traveling in Italy, he printed many works, mainly in
Livorno and
Pisa but also in
Mantua. The list of his works, compiled by
Isaac ben Jacob, runs to seventy-one items; but some are named twice, because they have two titles, and some are only small treatises. The veneration bestowed upon him by his contemporaries was that given to a saint. He reports in his diary that when he learned in Tunis of the death of his first wife, he kept it secret, because the people would have forced him to marry at once. Legends printed in the appendix to his diary, and others found in
Aaron Walden's
Shem HaGedolim HeḤadash (compare also ''Ma'aseh Nora
, pp. 7–16, Podgorica, 1899), prove the great respect in which he was held. Many of his works are still extant and studied today. His scope was exceptionally wide, from halakha (Birkei Yosef
) and Midrash to his main historical work Shem HaGedolim
. Despite his Sephardi heritage, he appears to have been particularly fond of the Chasidei Ashkenaz'' (a group of Medieval German rabbis, notably
Judah the Chasid).
Shem HaGedolim His historical notes were published in four booklets, comprising two sections, under the titles
Shem HaGedolim (The Name of the Great Ones), containing the names of authors, and ''Va'ad la-Ḥakhamim'' (Assembly of the Wise), containing the titles of works. This treatise has established for Azulai a lasting place in Jewish literature. It contains data that might otherwise have been lost, and it proves the author to have had a critical mind. By sound scientific methods he investigated the question of the genuineness of
Rashi's commentary to
Chronicles or to some Talmudic treatise (see "Rashi," in
Shem HaGedolim). However, he does assert that Rashi indeed is the author of the "Rashi" commentary on
Neviim and
Ketuvim, contrary to some others' opinions. Nevertheless, he firmly believed that
Haim Vital had drunk water from
Miriam's well, and that this fact enabled him to receive, in less than two years, the whole
Kabbalah from the lips of
Isaac Luria (see "Ḥayyim Vital," in
Shem HaGedolim). Azulai often records where he has seen in person which versions of certain manuscripts were extant.
Bibliography A complete bibliographical list of his works is found in the preface to Benjacob's edition of
Shem HaGedolim, Vilna, 1852, and frequently reprinted; •
Eliakim Carmoly, in the edition of
Shem HaGedolim, Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1843; •
Fuenn,
Keneset Yisrael, p. 342; • Hazan, ''Hama'alot li-Shelomoh,'' Alexandria, 1894; •
Aaron Walden,
Shem HaGedolim HeChadash, 1879; • The diary ''Ma'agal Tob,'' edited by
Elijah Benamozegh, Leghorn, 1879; •
Heimann Joseph Michael,
Or ha-chayyim, No. 868. == His role as Shadar==