|
Darrera modificació: 2026-02-02 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Yıldız, Firdevs, "The impact of a ninth-century Jewish physician on North African and European medical culture: Isaac al-Israelī", Journal of Medical Biography, 34/1 (2025), 86-90.
- Resum
- Isaac al-Israelī (died early ninth century AD) was a Jewish physician. He is known for writing important works in many different fields such as medicine, philosophy, pharmacology, botany, and Jewish theology. He was a court physician as the chief physician during the rule of the Aghlebids and Fatimids in North Africa. He ensured the systematization and institutionalization of the first medical school established in Qayrawān under the name of Bayt al-Hikma. Israelī was considered an authority in the field of medicine in Qayrawān and is known for his major works in this field. Many of his works were translated into Latin, Hebrew, English and Spanish over time and were first translated into Latin by Constantinus Africanus (died 1082 AD) in 1082. Thanks to these translations, Israel's medical works reached Europe via Sicily and were used as textbooks in the medical school of Salerno (The Schola Medica Salernitana). Moreover, his works continued to be taught with interest in many European universities until the 17th century.
In this study, the contributions of a Jewish scholar who continued his medical career in the Islamic development of medicine in North Africa, and in the establishment of a medical school there.
- Matèries
- Biografia
Jueus Història de la medicina
- URL
- https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0967772025 ...
|