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Chief rabbis of populated places

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Eugenio Pio Zolli
Chief rabbi of Rome, Italy, during World War II; later converted to Catholicism (1881-1956)
Yom-Tov Lipmann Heller
Czech rabbi
Malbim
Meir Leibush ben Yehiel Michel Wisser (March 7, 1809 – September 18, 1879), better known as the Malbim (), was a rabbi, master of Hebrew grammar, and Bible commentator. The name Malbim was derived from the Hebrew initials of his name. He used this acronym as his surname in all his published works and became known by it in common usage. His writings do not include works about Kohelet or Eicha.
Henrik Bródy
Hungarian rabbi (1868–1942)
Dow Ber Meisels
Polish rabbi
Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld
rabbi and Charedi Council of Jerusalem co-founder (1848–1932)
Simon Schreiber
Austrian rabbi (1820-1883)
David Oppenheim
Czech rabbi
Zvi Koretz
Greek chief rabbi (1884–1945)
Ephraim Carlebach
German rabbi (1879–1936)
René Gutman
French rabbi
Chaim Berlin
rabbi of Valozhyn, Moscow, and Jerusalem (1832–1912)
Raphael Evers
Rabbi of Rotterdam
Yiḥyah Qafiḥ
prominent Yemenite rabbi
Avraham Yehoshua Heschel
born 1595; died 1663
Yaakov Gesundheit
chief rabbi of Warsaw (1815-1878)
Solomon Eliezer Alfandari
Ottoman rabbi, kabbalist and rosh yeshiva (c.1826–1930)
Jacob Joseph
American rabbi
Sidi Fredj Halimi
Algerian rabbi (1876–1957)
Pinchas Biberfeld
German rabbi (1915–1999)
Isaac ben Moses Abulafia
rabbi (1824–1910)
Jonathan Markovitch
Chief Rabbi of Kiev
Joseph Hirsch Dünner
Polish author (1833–1911)
Ezra Dangoor
Baghdad Chief Rabbi and founder of a publishing house
David Messas
French rabbi (1934-2011)
Berend Berenstein
Dutch rabbi
David Pardo
Italian Rabbi