Saul Adadi
| Saul Adadi | |
|---|---|
| Personal life | |
| Born | Saul Adadi 1850 Tripoli, Libya | 
| Died | September 18, 1918 (aged 67–68) | 
| Nationality | Libyan | 
| Parent | Abraham Hayyim Adadi | 
| Religious life | |
| Religion | Judaism | 
| Position | Rosh yeshiva | 
| Yahrtzeit | 13 Tishrei 5679 | 
| Buried | Tripoli | 
Saul Adadi (Hebrew: שאול עבדיה אדאדי, 1850 – September 18, 1918) was a Sephardi Hakham, rosh yeshiva, and paytan in the 19th-century Jewish community of Tripoli, Libya. He was heavily involved in youth education, founding a yeshiva and co-founding and serving as principal of a Talmud Torah. He preserved the pinkasim (community record books) of the Tripoli Jewish community, unpublished manuscripts of 18th-century Tripoli Jewish leader Rabbi Abraham Khalfon, and sefarim belonging to his father, Hakham Abraham Hayyim Adadi, a senior rabbi of the previous generation.