Elia del Medigo

Elia del Medigo

Elia del Medigo (also called Elijah Delmedigo and sometimes known to his contemporaries as Helias Cretensis) (c. 1458 – c. 1493) was the last major Jewish Averroist. He was born in Candia, on the island of Crete, which at that time was under the control of the Venetian Republic, but spent ten years in Rome and northern Italy, although returning to Candia in his last years. Del Medigo's family had emigrated to Crete from Germany.

He is remembered for a number of translations, commentaries on Averroes (Ibn Rushd in Arabic) (notably a commentary on Averroes' "Substantia Orbis" in 1485), for his influence on many Italian philosophers of the early Renaissance (especially Pico della Mirandola but also other Platonists of the Florentine Academy), and for his for his treatise on Jewish philosophy, "Sefer Bechinat Ha-dath" ("Investigation of Religion"), published many years after his death, in 1629.

Del Medigo had a traditional religious upbringing in Candia, demonstrating considerable breadth. In addition to rabbinic learning, he studied philosophy, and had a good knowledge of Arabic and of Greek, as well as Latin and Hebrew. It is likely that he also studied medicine, and it may have been with that intention that he originally went to Padua, whose University was the most important center for traditional Aristotelian philosophy in Italy. By 1480, he was in Venice, where he wrote "Quaestio utrum mundus sit effectus", and supported himself by giving classes in Aristotelian philosophy for the sons of wealthy and important families.

He moved to Perugia and continued to give classes in "radical Aristotelianism," that is, heavily interpreted with the ideas of Averroes--with whose work Elia was very familiar--and other Islamic commentators. Del Medigo became quite well-known as a major Averroist in Italy. It was in Perugia that he met Pico, and wrote two pamphlets for him.

Another important student of del Medigo's at that time was Domenico Grimani, a Venetian, who eventually became the Cardinal of San Marco. Grimani proved to be a consistent patron, and with his encouragement, del Medigo wrote several manuscripts which received wide distribution among the philosophers ot Italy. He stayed in close contact as well with Pico, and traveled to Florence, the site of Ficino's Platonic Academy, to give classes and to make translations for Pico from Hebrew to Latin, although he never collaborated with him on any manuscript.

Del Medigo, however, was no Kabbalist, and was disenchanted with the syncretic direction Pico and his associates were moving in, combining concepts of magic, Hermeticism and Kabbalah with Plato and Neoplatonism. He became disappointed with Pico, and he was discredited somewhat by the backlash from Pico's imprisonment and the interdiction of his 900 Theses. These factors, combined with the tension that arose between del Medigo and the Italian Jewish community over his secular intellectual interests and his associations with gentile scholars, and with the financial difficulties he experienced attendant on Pico's disfavor, led del Medigo to leave Italy for good, and to go back to Crete.

In his last few years, del Medigo returned to Jewish thought, writing the "Sefer Bechinat Ha-dath" for his students, clarifying his disagreement with the magical and Kabbalistic theories that inspired Pico's "Oration on the Dignity of Man", and his belief that a man cannot aspire to become a god, but rather that Judaism requires that a man must "fight for rationality, sobriety and the realization of [his] human limitations."ref|Stanford

ee also

*Byzantine scholars in Renaissance

Notes

# Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy article on del Medigo -- http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/delmedigo/ downloaded 1/17/2006.

References

*The "Jewish Encyclopedia", article on "Averroeism" -- [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=2164&letter=A]
*Italian Ashkenazi website -- [http://www.unisi.it/ricerca/dip/let_mod/ebas/askenaziti/personaggiEng.html]
*"Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy" article on del Medigo -- [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/delmedigo/]
*Paul Oskar Kristeller, "Eight Philosophers of the Italian Renaissance". Stanford University Press (Stanford California, 1964.)
*"Sefer Behinat Hadat" of Elijah Del-Medigo, critical edition with introduction, notes and commentary by Jacob Joshua Ross, Tel-Aviv: Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies, 1984


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Del Medigo — is the surname of a Cretan Jewish family that included several notables: Elia del Medigo (1458 1493), philosopher and Talmudist Joseph Solomon Delmedigo (1591 1655), scientist and philosopher This page or section lists people with the surname Del …   Wikipedia

  • Medigo — Medigo, Jos. Salomo del, jüdischer Gelehrter, geb. 1591 zu Candia, gest. 1655 zu Prag, Reisender u. Arzt; sein literar. Nachlaß ist von geringer Bedeutung. Sein Verwandter, Elia Ben Mose Abba del M., gest. 1493 als Lehrer der Philosophie in Padua …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

  • Jewish philosophy — Jewish theology redirects here. Philosophy and Kabbalah are two common approaches to Jewish theology Part of a series on …   Wikipedia

  • Jüdische Literatur — Jüdische Literatur, im weitern Sinne das gesamte Schrifttum der Juden vom Abschluß der Bibel bis zur Gegenwart. Sie wurzelt in der hebräischen Literatur, deren Pflege und Weiterbildung sie übernimmt. Zu der überkommenen eignen Gelehrsamkeit tritt …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • PIC DE LA MIRANDOLE — En sa courte vie, le comte de Mirandole et de Concordia compta plus d’ennemis que d’amis, mais sa pensée, à la fois conciliatrice et polémique, provocatrice et séductrice, répétitive et apparemment contradictoire, exerça une influence multiple… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Giovanni Pico della Mirandola — Portrait from the Uffizi Gallery, in Florence. Full name Giovanni Pico della Mirandola Born 24 February 1463(1463 02 24) Mirandola, Italy …   Wikipedia

  • DELMEDIGO, ELIJAH BEN MOSES ABBA — (c. 1460–1497), philosopher and talmudist. Born in Candia, Crete, Delmedigo was also known as Elijah Cretensis. While still a young man he immigrated to Italy. He received a traditional Jewish education, and studied the classics of Islamic and… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 1497 — Year 1497 was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events of 1497 * February 7 Followers of Girolamo Savonarola burn thousands of immoral objects at the Bonfire of the Vanities in Florence …   Wikipedia

  • Jerusalem (Mendelssohn) — Title page of the first edition (Berlin: Friedrich Maurer, 1783) …   Wikipedia

  • Shroud of Shadow — is a novel written by Gael Baudino in 1994. It is the third in the Strands of Starlight tetralogy. The other novels are Strands of Starlight , Maze of Moonlight , and Strands of Sunlight [cite journal | year=1995 | month=January | title=Book… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”