Isaac ben Joseph of Corbeil (13th century) (Hebrew: ???? ?? ???? ??????"?) was a French rabbi and Tosefist who flourished in the second half of the thirteenth century.
He was the son-in-law of R. Jehiel ben Joseph of Paris, whose school he attended, and the pupil of the "Great Men of Evreux," notably of Samuel, whom he calls "the Prince" (??) of Evreux. Isaac's conspicuous piety drew toward him many disciples, the best known of whom were Perez ben Elijah of Corbeil, Baruch ?ayyim ben Menahem of Niort, and his fellow citizen Joseph ben Abraham. He was induced by his pupils to publish in 1277 an abridgment of Moses ben Jacob of Coucy's Sefer Mi?wot Gadol (called "Semag" from its initials ??"?), under the title Ammude ha-Golah or Sefer Mi?wot ?a?an (generally called "Sema?" from the initials ??"?). This work was most favorably received by the communities of France and Germany, and has often been edited and annotated. Isaac also published Li??u?im (collectanea), and several small compilations containing his ritual decisions. The Kol Bo (No. 128) contains a long fragment of a Talmudic work of R. Isaac, with this superscription: ??? ????? ??"? ???? ?"?.
Jewish Encyclopedia Bibliography
Eliakim Carmoly, Biographics des lsraélites de France, p. 45;