The Bialik Prize is an annual literary award given by the municipality of Tel Aviv , Israel , for significant accomplishments in Hebrew literature . The prize is named in memory of Israel's national poet Hayyim Nahman Bialik . There are two separate prizes, one specifically for "Literature", which is in the field of fiction, and the other for "Jewish thought" (חכמת ישראל). The prize was established in January 1933, Bialik's 60th birthday.
2-1453: Matityahu Shoham Moshe Zvi Segal (also 1950) Yehuda Burla (also 1954) Melech Zagrodski Shaul Tchernichovsky (also 1942) Shaul Tchernichovsky (also 1940) Shlomo Zemach Natan Yonatan Uri Zvi Grinberg (also 1947 and 1977) Shmuel Yeivin Eliezer Steinman Zalman Shazar Aharon Megged Yeshurun Keshet Zelda Aaron Mirski Avot Yeshurun Yehuda Ratzaby (also 1965) Yehoshua Tan-Pi Zev Vilnay Ozer Rabin Nechama Leibowitz David Shahar Shlomo Tanai David Weiss Halivni Shlomo Pines Amos Oz Dahlia Ravikovitch Zvi Meir Rabinovitz A. B. Yehoshua Shlomo Morag Pinchas Sadeh Aryeh Kasher Nathan Rotenstreich Amalia Kahana-Carmon Moshe Idel Meir Wieseltier Ya'akov Orland Yehuda Liebes Ephraim Kishon Aryeh Sivan Eliezer Goldman Menahem Haran Yoram Kaniuk Nurit Zarchi Maya Bejerano Yoel Hoffman Miriam Roth Israel Ta-Shma Moshe Zvi Segal Moshe Zvi ( Hirsch ) Segal ( Hebrew : משה צבי סגל) (born 23 September 1875; died 11 January 1968)
4-648: Was an Israeli rabbi, linguist and Talmudic scholar. Segal was born in Maishad , Lithuania in 1875. In 1896, he moved with his family to Scotland and subsequently to London . He was ordained as a rabbi in 1902 and later obtained a degree from Oxford University . He was the Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregation of Newcastle upon Tyne from 1910 to 1918, when he went to the British Mandate of Palestine as
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