Rishonim Almost none of the famous early commentators extended their work to Tamid. Surviving commentaries include: • The "Mefaresh" (
commentator). Occasionally attributed to
Samuel ben Meir or to
Rashi, but it cites Rashi's genuine commentary to b. Shabbat 19b by name on b. Tamid 25b s.v. בית המוקד.
Solomon Adeni writes that it is assembled from Rashi's commentary on b. Yoma (b. Tamid 33b), but only some content can be found there. On b. Tamid 27b s.v. שריא the Mefaresh cites to Yoma as his teacher, but the citation does not match Rashi's commentary. Variously attributed to
Shemaiah of Soissons (The Vilna printers'
Shita Mequbetzet 28a:5, 29b:5, 31a:4, 31b:3, appears to refer to the Mefaresh as ר"ש; these comments are not found in Adeni's holograph manuscript), but there is a different commentary to b. Tamid under his name found MS Opp. 726 and published by Fuchs (2000), and Isaac ben Baruch, a Tosafist, though pseudo-Abraham b. David quotes a different commentary on b. Tamid in his name (27b, s.v. בית המוקד.). • The Anonymous German Commentary published by Fuchs (2000). •
Shemaiah of Soissons, found MS Opp. 726 and published by Fuchs (2000). This commentary cites no German but two French words.) or
Eliezer ben Joel HaLevi (according to
David Luria).
Zecharias Frankel believed the author Sephardic, while
Heimann Michael argued he was Ashkenazic.
Yaakov Sussmann agrees with Michael; see also his sources n. 53-4. to be the work of another scholar. Little original content. •
Menachem HaMeiri, almost entirely a commentary on the Mishna but with a few notes on the Gemara as well.
Acharonim • The
Binyan Shelomo leChokhmat Betzalel of Solomon Adeni (d. 1625). Among this work's sources were the notes of Adeni's master,
Bezalel Ashkenazi; the printers call it
Shita Mequbetzet. • Baruch Bendit of
Zabłudów,
Ner Tamid (1789) •
Moses Sofer,
Hiddushim (1934) [before 1839] •
Haim Palachi,
Einei kol hai (1878) [before 1868] •
Moshe Greenwald,
Olat Tamid im Minhat Tamid (e.p. 1936) • Yair Goldshtuf,
Yair netivot al Tamid (1997) • Amitai ben-David,
Ner Tamid (2004) ==References==