Startseite Geschichte On the Heavenly and the Earthly, the Secular as Sacred – A New Reading of Medieval Hebrew Fables
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On the Heavenly and the Earthly, the Secular as Sacred – A New Reading of Medieval Hebrew Fables

  • Revital Refael-Vivante

Abstract

This article offers some insights regarding the conceptions of holy and secular in one of the popular medieval Hebrew books of fables: Meshal HaQadmoni (The Fable of the Ancient) by Isaac ben Shlomo Ibn Sahula, composed in Castile in 1281. Although Ibn Sahula was a biblical scholar and even engaged in Kabbalah, he also practiced medicine and was knowledgeable regarding contemporary scientific theories and mindsets. Thus, he had a broad worldview, and his writing corresponds to the general context of his time and place. I discuss Ibn Sahula’s references to sacred and secular issues within the context of the medieval general and Jewish cultural perception and illustrate the synthesis between the concepts of sacred and secular in Meshal HaQadmoni.

Abstract

This article offers some insights regarding the conceptions of holy and secular in one of the popular medieval Hebrew books of fables: Meshal HaQadmoni (The Fable of the Ancient) by Isaac ben Shlomo Ibn Sahula, composed in Castile in 1281. Although Ibn Sahula was a biblical scholar and even engaged in Kabbalah, he also practiced medicine and was knowledgeable regarding contemporary scientific theories and mindsets. Thus, he had a broad worldview, and his writing corresponds to the general context of his time and place. I discuss Ibn Sahula’s references to sacred and secular issues within the context of the medieval general and Jewish cultural perception and illustrate the synthesis between the concepts of sacred and secular in Meshal HaQadmoni.

Heruntergeladen am 28.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783111243894-009/html
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