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Medieval Europe + Byzantine
Course: Medieval Europe + Byzantine > Unit 2
Lesson 1: Judaism and art- Jewish history to the middle ages
- Writing a history of Jewish architecture
- Medieval synagogues in Toledo, Spain
- The Golden Haggadah
- Sefer Musre Hafilosofim (Book of Morals of Philosophers)
- The manuscripts of Luis de Carvajal
- Altneushul, Prague
- Diarna: documenting the places of a vanishing Jewish history
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Sefer Musre Hafilosofim (Book of Morals of Philosophers)
Sefer Musre Hafilosofim (Book of Morals of Philosophers), 13th -15th century, ink and opaque watercolor on parchment, Spain (The Hispanic Society of America, New York)
Speakers: Dr. Ronnie Perelis (Yeshiva University, New York) and Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Want to join the conversation?
- Are there any examples when Jewish art and culture has influenced local culture, and not just the other way around?(5 votes)
- Off the top of my head - hospitals, 7 day week, any biblically-based paintings, christianity (what you think of as christian values are often sourced, as is much of christianity, in judaism), islam, public schools, helping the poor... there's more, just google it.(3 votes)
Video transcript
I'm in the Metropolitan Museum of Art
with Dr. Ronnie Perelis,... ...who has tremendous expertise
in Medieval Iberia,... ...this period of transformation... ...where three cultures are interacting
in enormously complex ways: ... ...the Jews, the Muslims, and the Christians. We're looking at a Hebrew book. It's a book based on an earlier Arabic source,
an anthology of philosophy. So this is a book in Hebrew,
that is a copy of a book in Arabic,... ...that was itself a translation of works... ...that come from the classical world,
that come from ancient Greece. This is ancient Greek philosophy,
making its way into the modern world. Yes, and it was translated,
and put together and anthologized,... ...by a Nestorian Christian from the south
of modern-day Iraq : Hunayn ibn Ishaq,... ...who was a world-renowned doctor
and translator of Greek text. Who mastered,
in addition to his Arabic and Syriac, Greek,... ...and was able to translate
all the great medical works,... ...but also was interested
in Philosophy and Theology,... ...because all these things
were interconnected... ...during this time period in the ninth century,... ...when the Muslim world was encountering
the great works of Hellenism,... ...and realizing its power and usefulness
in their everyday life. It's so interesting, because,
if I want to read Aristotle,... ...I just go onto the internet,
and I read Aristotle. ...but it's really important to ask,
why do we have Aristotle now? Why is it that when so many ancient Greek temples, buildings of stone, are ruined... ...why would we have
the fragile words on a page? It's remarkable. They were originally preserved
in the monasteries of the Byzantine world,... ...which fell into the hands
of the Islamic conquerors,... ...who left Arabia
after the death of Muhammad in 632. They entered these great urban centers,... ...and, instead of pillaging,
instead of destroying,... ...realize there's a lot to be gained here
from these cultural resources,... ...and, over time, there becomes
a massive project of translation... ...of Hellenic sources into Arabic,... ...which becomes this international language,
stretching from Iberia,... ...which was conquered in the early 8th century,
all the way to India. And so we have this international language,... ...that people, wherever they are,
can now read these texts. But this book is not in Arabic,... ...this book is in Hebrew,
and this book is made in Iberia,... ...that is, what we would recognize
as Spain and Portugal. And it's many centuries later.
That book is originally from the 9th century,... ...and... we are now in the 13th century.
Much has changed. The Muslims conquered Iberia in 711
from the Visigoths, who were Christians... ...who took over from the Romans. And, with the conquest by the Muslims,... ...we see the small Jewish community of Spain
turned into, within a few centuries,... ...one of the most important
Jewish communities of the world,... ...a place that produced many,
if not the majority,... ...of the classic Jewish authors and thinkers
of the Medieval period. And that culture was highly Arabized. These were Jews who were fully conversant
in a classical Arabic, and through that... ...were part of this larger Arabic culture. One can imagine how politically complicated
that relationship must've been,... ...and that there were times of toleration,... ...but there were also times
when Jews were not tolerated. But I'm imagining that the reason
that the end date is the 15th century... ...is because, by 1492, the Jews are expelled. Individuals were not allowed
to own Hebrew books,... ...or books about Judaism,
after the expulsion,... ...for fear of you being a judaising Christian. But what I find fascinating is that
what we're really looking at here is Greek,... ...but we're looking at it through the lens
of all of these surviving cultures. Yes.