Background
He does not appear to have stayed long in Toledo, for in 1286 he married the daughter of his oldest brother, Jehiel, who is not known to have left Germany before 1305.
He does not appear to have stayed long in Toledo, for in 1286 he married the daughter of his oldest brother, Jehiel, who is not known to have left Germany before 1305.
These dates are deduced from the evidence furnished by Judah"s testament and epitaphs (Luzzatto, Abne Zikkaron, Number 5. See Schechter in Bet Talmud, iv 340-346, 372-379). At the age of thirteen, according to the custom of the German Talmudists of that epoch, Judah began to traveling
He set out for Spain July 18, 1283, and arrived at Toledo April 7, 1285, consuming almost two years in his journey.
In 1305 his father, who was then obliged to leave Germany, sent Judah before him into Spain in order to arrange for his settling there. Judah says in his testament that when he first came to Toledo he could not profit much by the Spanish Talmudists, as he understood neither their writing nor their language.
And as he had sore eyes he could not even occupy himself with writing. After his father"s death (1321 or 1328) Judah was chosen by the Toledo community as his successor in the rabbinate.
Judah died at Toledo July 4, 1349.
Judah was a recognized authority on Halakha, and his responsa, together with a fragment of his commentary on Shabbat, were published, under the title of Zikron Yehudah, by David Cassel (Berlin, 1846).
He was held in great esteem by the members of his congregation, and when, on account of some disagreement, he manifested a desire to remove to Seville, they urged him to remain and doubled his salary. Asher, Judah"s father, had ordained that every member of his family should give for charitable purposes a tithe of his earnings, and that three-fourths of the amount of such tithe should be confided to two trustees for distribution among the poor.