Gedaliah Ibn Yaḥya

1526–1587

A versatile Renaissance rabbinic scholar, Gedaliah ben Joseph Ibn Yaḥya was born in Imola, in northern Italy, to a distinguished family of Portuguese Jews. He studied in prominent Italian yeshivas, lived in a number of the peninsula’s cities, and—displaced and dispossessed in 1569 by Pope Pius V’s expulsion of Jews from papal lands—died in Alessandria, in Italy’s Piedmont region. His short treatise “In Praise of Women” belongs to a long-standing literary debate over women’s inherent characteristics. He is best known as the author of Shalshelet ha-kabalah (The Chain of Tradition), which presents a history of the Jews, as well as a general history, and includes an assortment of short scientific tractates. Begun in 1549, Shalshelet ha-kabalah was concluded several decades later, close to Ibn Yaḥya’s death. Most of his other works have been lost.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Shalshelet ha-kabalah (The Chain of Tradition): History of Late Antiquity

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In the days of Antigonus, in about 3160 of creation, roughly 52 of the second rule of Ptolemy II over…

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Shevaḥ nashim (In Praise of Women)

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I have realized, and my attention has been drawn to the fact that many people say that the salvation of women is not on the same level as that of men, for their [women’s] knowledge is limited. They…

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Shalshelet ha-kabbalah (The Chain of Tradition): On Spirits

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Now, after God has made known to you all of this by means of the toil of my hands, having gathered and bound them together, may the strength of my hand grow to write to you and to present before you…