Education
After having studied Talmud and rabbinics under his uncle R. Zvi and Shlomo Luria, he became rabbi of Belz, where he had a large number of pupils.
After having studied Talmud and rabbinics under his uncle R. Zvi and Shlomo Luria, he became rabbi of Belz, where he had a large number of pupils.
Surnamed Met or (in the Ashkenazi pronunciation) Mes (Hebrew: מת). As Rabbi Moshe is best known for his work Mateh Moshe, he is also often personally referred to as the Mateh Moshe. He retired from this rabbinate and lived privately for a time at Volodymyr-Volynskyi.
He was then called to the rabbinate of Przemysl, and, in 1597, to that of Lubomyl.
Toward the end of his life, he became the chief of the community of Opatow and district rabbi of Cracow. He authored the following works:
Taryag Miẓwot (Cracow, 1581), a versification of the 613 commandments
Mateh Moshe (ib 1590-1591), a treatise on the practical ritual laws
Ho"il Moshe (Prague, 1611), a simple and homiletic commentary on the Pentateuch, in which he occasionally explains the commentary of Rashi
Some responsa of his are to be found in the responsa collections of his rabbinical contemporaries.