The meaning of names among Mediterranean Jews
Marc Eliany
©
ARAMA
(ha-ramati, ha-aghamati, Rama, A'rema, Arami)
The name Arama was mentioned in a correspondence between a rabbi from the village Aghama near Marakesh, a village of Cohanim (priests) and leading rabbis in Babylon. The name is in all likelihood an indication of origin, refering to a location, perhaps the village of priests Aghama near Marakesh. But it may also indicate to the town of Arama in the province of Guipuezcoa in the Basque region in Spain or a person from Aram in ancient Babylonia. The patriarch Abraham originate from Aram Naharayim in ancient Babylon. The word Arami refers to a person of Aramaean origin in the Hebew language. The word a'rema means 'pile' in Hebrew and North African Arabic. The word rama means 'level' or 'height' or 'mount' in Hebrew.
Prefixes
attached to the root name such as (aben, iben, abi, avi, am, ben, bin,
abou, a, aj, al, bel, i, la, lel, me, m, o, wi, vi, ) denotes usually a relation
to a person, i.e., the father of or the son of X, a place, i.e., a person
from X, an occupation, i.e., a person who practices a specific occupation, a
characteristic of a person, i.e., beautiful... The prefixes al, el are equivalent
to 'the' in English or the article 'le' in French. In the Moroccan Berbers tradition,
prefixes such as 'wi' 'vi' 'i' means usually a family relationship to X, the
equivalent of Abu in Arabic, i.e., 'the father of', 'son of' a man, a tribal
affiliation and so forth.In
the Hebrew tradition, the prefix ‘M ‘ is an abbreviation of
the word 'from.'
Suffixes such as 'illo' 'ano' 'ino'
ARAMA
Maurice (1934-). Morocco. (Meknès). Artist. Painter. Art Historian. Director
of the school of art in Casablanca. Author of Itinéraires marocains, regards
de peintres (Pilgrimage of painters in Morocco).
ARAMA Itshak ben Moché (1420-1494). Spain. (Zamora).
Rabbi. Rabbinical academy director. Settled in Naples after the expulsion from
Spain.
Author of A'kédat Itshak (The sacrifice of Isaac).
ARAMA Méir ben Itshak (1460?-1545). Spain. (Saragossa).
Rabbi. Judge. Author. Lived in Naples and Saloniqua.
References:
Azoulay, Hayim Yossef Shem Hagdolim (the names of the great)
AZOULAY Haïm Yossef David (Hida) (1724-1807) Chém haguédolim va’ad lahakhamim (The names of the Great Council of Sages).
Levi, J et. al. 2000 Dictionnaire biographique du monde Juif Sepharade et Mediteranean, Editions Elysee, Montreal.
Toledano, J. 1983 La saga des familles, Les juifs du Maroc et leurs noms, Editions Stavit, Tel Aviv
Laredo A. 1978 Les noms des juifs au Maroc (Madrid, 1978)