Ashkenazi (surname)
Ashkenazi (Hebrew: אַשְׁכְּנַזִּי) is a surname of Jewish origin. The term Ashkenaz (Hebrew: אַשְׁכְּנַז) refers to the area along the Rhine in Western Europe where diaspora Jews settled and formed communities during the Middle Ages. The useage of Ashkenazi (lit. of Ashkenaz) as a surname originates with the arrival of Ashkenazi Jews to Muslim-ruled Spain in the 13th century, settling in with the local Sephardic Jewish community. After the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492, they resettled with the rest of the Sephardic community throughout North Africa, Italy and the Ottoman Empire. Thus, today the name is almost exclusively associated with Jews of Sephardic origin, despite what the name itself suggests, and is most common in Israel, where most Jews of Sephardic origin live. [1]
The surname is sometimes spelled "Ashkenazy".
People
- Abraham Ashkenazi, 19th-century rabbi, Chacham Bashi of Jerusalem
- Adi Ashkenazi (born 1975), Israeli actress, comedian and television host
- Amir Ashkenazi (born 1971), Israeli businessman
- Benjamin Ashkenazi (1824–1894), Russian communal worker and philanthropist
- Bezalel Ashkenazi, 16th-century rabbi and Talmud scholar
- Dan Ashkenazi (13th century), German Talmudist
- David Ashkenazi (1915–1997), Russian pianist, accompanist and composer
- Eliezer ben Elijah Ashkenazi (1512–1585), rabbi, Talmudist, and physician
- Gabi Ashkenazi (born 1954), former Chief of the Israel Defense Forces General Staff
- Goga Ashkenazi (born 1980), Kazakh-Russian businesswoman
- Israel Sarug Ashkenazi (16th century), pupil of Isaac Luria
- Jacob ben Isaac Ashkenazi (1550–1625), rabbi and author of the Tseno Ureno
- Judah Ashkenazi (18th century), rabbi and author of the Ba'er Hetev
- Léon Ashkenazi (1922–1996), French rabbi and Jewish leader
- Lior Ashkenazi (born 1969), Israeli actor
- Malkiel Ashkenazi (16th century), Sephardic rabbi in Hebron
- Meir Ashkenazi (16th century), envoy of the Khan of Crimea
- Menachem Ashkenazi (1934–2000), Israeli football referee
- Mordechai ben Hillel Ashkenazi (1250–1298), German rabbi and legal authority
- Moses Ashkenazi (died 1701), also known as Johann Peter Spaeth, German convert to Judaism
- Motti Ashkenazi (born 1940), Israeli reserve captain
- Tzvi Ashkenazi (1656–1718), rabbi of Amsterdam
- Yisroel ben Shmuel Ashkenazi of Shklov (1770–1839), Lithuanian Talmudist
- Yitzhak Ashkenazi (1534–1572), also called Isaac Luria, rabbi and mystic, founder of an important branch of Kabbalah