Maharsha

After her death, he served as rabbi in the following prominent communities: Chelm (1610),[2] Lublin, Tiktin[6] and Ostroh.

His son-in-law was R. Moses ben Isaac Bonems of Lublin, who authored his own novellæ on the Talmud, published with the Ḥiddushe Halakhot, last recension (Mahdura Batra).

Chiddushei Halachot is based on Maharsha's teaching in his yeshiva, and he refrained from printing his commentary on those pages that were studied while he served on the Council of Four Lands.

Maharsha on Aggados is a multi-volume translation by Rabbi Avraham Yaakov Finkel.

Per the Maharsha's wishes, virtually all printed editions of his commentary found on the back of Gemaras today features the two works combined into one long running commentary with different fonts to differentiate between the Chiddushei Halachot and Chiddushei Aggadot.

Maharsha grave in Ostroh