TY - CHAP
T1 - Judah ibn tibbon
T2 - The cultural and intellectual profile of the “father of the Hebrew translation movement”
AU - Leicht, Reimund
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2019 Brill Academic Publishers. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The most conventional starting points for any research project on the development of Hebrew terminology in medieval philosophy and science are undoubtedly the translators of the Tibbonide dynasty, and among them Judah Ibn Tibbon - the so-called “father of the translators” ( He can be called “father” in the double sense of the word: he is the biological father, grandfather, and grandfather-in-law of the following generations of translators within his own family - his son Samuel Ibn Tibbon, his grandson Moses Ibn Tibbon, his grandson-in-law Jacob Anatoli, and his great-grandson Jacob b. Makhir - and the spiritual father of this fascinating, large-scale and enduring enterprise to acculturate philosophical and scientific learning from Arabic, and later also from Latin, culture into Judaism - a phenomenon which is comparable to the reception of Greek knowledge by the Arabs and the acculturation of Greco-Arabic knowledge in medieval scholasticism.
AB - The most conventional starting points for any research project on the development of Hebrew terminology in medieval philosophy and science are undoubtedly the translators of the Tibbonide dynasty, and among them Judah Ibn Tibbon - the so-called “father of the translators” ( He can be called “father” in the double sense of the word: he is the biological father, grandfather, and grandfather-in-law of the following generations of translators within his own family - his son Samuel Ibn Tibbon, his grandson Moses Ibn Tibbon, his grandson-in-law Jacob Anatoli, and his great-grandson Jacob b. Makhir - and the spiritual father of this fascinating, large-scale and enduring enterprise to acculturate philosophical and scientific learning from Arabic, and later also from Latin, culture into Judaism - a phenomenon which is comparable to the reception of Greek knowledge by the Arabs and the acculturation of Greco-Arabic knowledge in medieval scholasticism.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85105700466&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1163/9789004412996_007
DO - 10.1163/9789004412996_007
M3 - فصل
T3 - Studies in Jewish History and Culture
SP - 104
EP - 130
BT - Studies in Jewish History and Culture
PB - Brill Academic Publishers
ER -