- Shem-Tob ben Isaac of Tortosa
Shem-Ṭob ben Isaac of Tortosa (born at
Tortosa 1196) was aProvençal rabbi and physician.Life
He engaged in commerce, and travelled. Once at
Acre , he was reminded by its rabbi of his insufficient knowledge of the Jewish religion; and he left the city (1226), resolving to abandon commerce and to devote himself exclusively to rabbinical and scientific studies. He first studied atBarcelona underIsaac ben Meshullam ; then he devoted himself to medicine; and after twenty years' study he became a skilful physician. He lived afterward inMontpellier , France, but chiefly atMarseilles , where he practised his profession.Translations
Shem-Ṭob's first work was his Hebrew translation, under the title of "Bi'ur Sefer ha-Nefesh," of
Averroes ' middle commentary on Aristotle's "De Anima ".In the month of
Elul , 1254, at the age of fifty-eight, he began the translation into Hebrew ofAl-Zahrawi 's "Kitab al-Taṣrif," a medical work in thirty books. He finished it at Marseilles in the month ofNisan , 1258, entitling it "Sefer ha-Shimmush." This translation is preceded by a long introduction, which forms a treatise in itself, and in which he deals with man as composed offour elements , and with the relation between diseases and the fourseasons of the year.According to the superstitions of his time, he believed in the influence of the planets on man; and accordingly an entire treatise deals with
astrology .His translation was undertaken with the view of spreading medical science among the Jews, so that they might not be dependent on Christian physicians (comp. 'Ab. Zarah ii.2). The translation is not literal; and in this Shem-Ṭob departed from the method of the earlier translators. As to the various names of diseases and medicaments, Shem-Ṭob employs all that he could find in the
Bible and inTalmudic literature. Others he explains in a glossary. He also gives directions to physicians on the treatment of patients and the preparation of medicaments.In 1264 Shem-Ṭob translated into Hebrew
Al-Razi 's "Al-Manṣuri," a work in ten treatises which that author had dedicated toAl-Manṣur .Shem-Ṭob states that he also transliterated many Arabic medical works in Hebrew characters in order that Jews might be able to read them. According to
De Castro ("Biblioteca Española," i.231), Shem-Ṭob of Tortosa was the author also of the "Pardes Rimmonim," which is generally attributed toShem-Ṭob ben Isaac ibn Shaprut . De Castro concludes this from the date 1267, which is given in theEscorial manuscript of the work in question and which is a century earlier than the time of Shem-Ṭob ibn Shaprut.References
:JewishEncyclopedia
*Carmoly , "Histoire des Médecins Juifs," pp. 78-80;
*Julius Fürst , "Bibl. Jud." iii.259 (where Shem-Ṭob of Tortosa is confused withShem-Ṭob ibn Shaprut );
*Salomon Munk , in "R.E.J." v.256 et seq.;
*Renan-Neubauer , "Les Rabbins Français," p. 592;
*De Rossi , "Dizionario," ii.124, Parma De Rossi MS. No. 347;
*Moritz Steinschneider , "Cat. Bodl." cols. 2549-2551;
** "idem ,Hebr. Uebers. ," pp. 148, 725, 741 et seq.;
** "idem,Jewish Literature ," pp. 362 (No. 83), 378.External links
* [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=596&letter=S Source]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.