Moses of Évreux

Moses of Évreux was a French tosafist, one of three brothers, and author of a siddur,[1] who flourished at Évreux in Normandy in the first half of the thirteenth century.

[2] Heinrich Gross identifies[3] him with Moses ben Shneor, the teacher of the author of Sefer ha-Gan, a commentary on the Pentateuch.

Others have generally supposed to him to be the son of Yom-Ṭov, referred to in Elijah Mizraḥi's responsa (No.

He is quoted in the tosafot on Berakhot, and his name is frequently written.

[5] Moses wrote his tosafot on the margin of a copy of Isaac Alfasi, whose authority he invoked.