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<category>Background<br/><br/>
 
<category>Background<br/><br/>
<p>Rabbi Abraham ben Meir ibn Ezra was one of the outstanding personalities produced by medieval Andalusian Jewry. &#160;He has been described as a Polymath.[1] &#160;He was a noted poet, mathematician, astrologer, grammarian, and philosopher. According to Leon Weinberger, Ibn Ezra &#160;“was one of the best known and admired Jewish figures in the West. His Pisan Tables in astronomy were the authoritative guides for Roger Bacon…, Nicolas of Cusa…, and Pico della Pirandola…, and he was remembered for his pioneering efforts in introducing the mathematics of the Arabs to the Europeans."[2] However, above all he was one of the greatest Bible commentators of all time.&#160; He was born in 1092 C.E.&#160; In Tudela, Spain, and died in 1164.[3] His place of death is unknown.<br/>&#160;<br/><br/> <br/>[1] See Isadore Twersky and Jay Harris, Rabbi Abraham Ibn Ezra: Studies in the writings of&#160; a twelfth-century Jewish Polymath.,Harvard University Press, 1993.<br/>[2] Henry Rasof, Abraham Ibn Ezra and the Metaphors of Imagination. http://www.medievalhebrewpoetry.org/articles/abraham-ibn-ezra-metaphors-imagination<br/>&#160;<br/>[3]According to a statement found in several codices, Ibn Ezra (henceforth I.E.) died on a Monday, on the first day of 1 Adar&#160; 4927 (January 23, 1167) at the age of seventy-five.&#160; If this date is accepted, then I.E. was born in 1092.&#160; See M. Friedlander, ed. and trans., The Commentary of Ibn Ezra on Isaiah (London, 1873), p. Xxvii n. 54.&#160; However, H. Graetz believes that I.E. was born between 1088 and 1089.&#160; See H. Graetz, Divre Yeme Yisra'el, ed. and trans., S. P. Rabinowitz, Vol. 4, p. 212 (Warsaw, 1916).&#160; Also see J.L.&#160; Fleisher, Be-ezu Shanah Met Rabbenu Avraham ibn Ezra. pp. 5-16, in R. Avraham ibn Ezra, Kovetz Ma’amarim Al Toledatav Vi-Yetzirotav (Tzion. Tel Aviv, 1970).</p>
+
<p>Rabbi Abraham ben Meir ibn Ezra was one of the outstanding personalities produced by medieval Andalusian Jewry. &#160;He has been described as a Polymath.<fn>See Isadore Twersky and Jay Harris, Rabbi Abraham Ibn Ezra: Studies in the writings of a twelfth-century Jewish Polymath.,Harvard University Press, 1993.</fn>[ &#160;He was a noted poet,<fn>2] Henry Rasof, Abraham Ibn Ezra and the Metaphors of Imagination. http://www.medievalhebrewpoetry.org/articles/abraham-ibn-ezra-metaphors-imagination</fn> mathematician, astrologer, grammarian, and philosopher. According to Leon Weinberger, Ibn Ezra &#160;“was one of the best known and admired Jewish figures in the West. His Pisan Tables in astronomy were the authoritative guides for Roger Bacon…, Nicolas of Cusa…, and Pico della Pirandola…, and he was remembered for his pioneering efforts in introducing the mathematics of the Arabs to the Europeans." However, above all he was one of the greatest Bible commentators of all time.&#160; He was born in 1092 C.E.&#160; In Tudela, Spain, and died in 1164.<fn>[3]According to a statement found in several codices, Ibn Ezra (henceforth I.E.) died on a Monday, on the first day of 1 Adar 4927 (January 23, 1167) at the age of seventy-five. If this date is accepted, then I.E. was born in 1092. See M. Friedlander, ed. and trans., The Commentary of Ibn Ezra on Isaiah (London, 1873), p. Xxvii n. 54. However, H. Graetz believes that I.E. was born between 1088 and 1089. See H. Graetz, Divre Yeme Yisra'el, ed. and trans., S. P. Rabinowitz, Vol. 4, p. 212 (Warsaw, 1916). Also see J.L. Fleisher, Be-ezu Shanah Met Rabbenu Avraham ibn Ezra. pp. 5-16, in R. Avraham ibn Ezra, Kovetz Ma’amarim Al Toledatav Vi-Yetzirotav (Tzion. Tel Aviv, 1970).</fn>[3] His place of death is unknown.<br/>&#160;<br/><br/>&#160;<br/>[3]According to a statement found in several codices, Ibn Ezra (henceforth I.E.) died on a Monday, on the first day of 1 Adar&#160; 4927 (January 23, 1167) at the age of seventy-five.&#160; If this date is accepted, then I.E. was born in 1092.&#160; See M. Friedlander, ed. and trans., The Commentary of Ibn Ezra on Isaiah (London, 1873), p. Xxvii n. 54.&#160; However, H. Graetz believes that I.E. was born between 1088 and 1089.&#160; See H. Graetz, Divre Yeme Yisra'el, ed. and trans., S. P. Rabinowitz, Vol. 4, p. 212 (Warsaw, 1916).&#160; Also see J.L.&#160; Fleisher, Be-ezu Shanah Met Rabbenu Avraham ibn Ezra. pp. 5-16, in R. Avraham ibn Ezra, Kovetz Ma’amarim Al Toledatav Vi-Yetzirotav (Tzion. Tel Aviv, 1970).</p>
 
<subcategory>Life
 
<subcategory>Life
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
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<li><b>Location</b> – Spain, Italy,France, Provence, England. Some maintain that &#160;Ibn Ezra &#160;visited &#160;Egypt, Israel, Babylonia and India. However, there is no real evidence to back up these assertions.</li>
 
<li><b>Location</b> – Spain, Italy,France, Provence, England. Some maintain that &#160;Ibn Ezra &#160;visited &#160;Egypt, Israel, Babylonia and India. However, there is no real evidence to back up these assertions.</li>
 
<li><b>Education</b> – Bible, Talmud<fn><p>Ibn Ezra's commentary reveals a knowledge of Talmudic literature. According to Ezra-Tzion Melammed , Ibn Ezra I.E. commentary cites or realtes 500 times to Rabbinic literature. He cites many &#160;these quotes in his &#160;; Mefareshei Ha-Mikra; Jerusalem, 1978, pp 678-694.<br/><br/>It should be noted that &#160;Rabbi Shelomo Luria did not consider Ibn Ezra to be a &#160;Talmudist. He that &#160;charges Ibn Ezra attributed &#160;Biblical laws to the Rabbis and Rabbinical laws to the Bible. &#160;He claims that I.E. &#160;permitted that which is &#160;forbidden and prohibited that which is permitted. His exegesis is not to be followed in matters of law. (Rabbi Shelomo Luria; Introduction to the <i>Yam shel Shelomo</i>).</p>
 
<li><b>Education</b> – Bible, Talmud<fn><p>Ibn Ezra's commentary reveals a knowledge of Talmudic literature. According to Ezra-Tzion Melammed , Ibn Ezra I.E. commentary cites or realtes 500 times to Rabbinic literature. He cites many &#160;these quotes in his &#160;; Mefareshei Ha-Mikra; Jerusalem, 1978, pp 678-694.<br/><br/>It should be noted that &#160;Rabbi Shelomo Luria did not consider Ibn Ezra to be a &#160;Talmudist. He that &#160;charges Ibn Ezra attributed &#160;Biblical laws to the Rabbis and Rabbinical laws to the Bible. &#160;He claims that I.E. &#160;permitted that which is &#160;forbidden and prohibited that which is permitted. His exegesis is not to be followed in matters of law. (Rabbi Shelomo Luria; Introduction to the <i>Yam shel Shelomo</i>).</p>
<p>&#160;</p></fn>, Midrash, Grammar, Philosophy,<fn>"&#160;Ibn Ezra was...well versed in the philological, scientific&#160;and philosophical studies cultivated by Arabs and Jews in his native land. " (I. Husik, A History of Medieval Jewish Philosophy, New York 1916, p. 187.) &#160;He was a Neo-Platonists (ibid. p.184).Julius Guttmann referred to Ibn Ezra as “the last in the line of Jewish Neoplatonists”.<br/><br/>Ibn Ezra maintained that one must master philosophy and<br/>the physical sciences if one wants to fully develop one’s soul .<br/>"It is only when a person knows the sciences and the secret of God’s<br/>Throne and the “Chariot” and knows God, his soul cleaves to<br/>God while he is yet alive and continues clinging to God after it<br/>leaves his body". (See H. Norman Strickman,The Secret of the Torah; A Translation of &#160;Ibn Ezra's Yessod Mora Ve-Sod Ha-Torah New Jersey, 1995, p. 148-149. Yesod Mora 10:2).<br/><br/></fn> Mathematics, Astronomy, Astrology,<fn>Ibn Ezra believed that astrology is a true science. He was not only a student of astrology but also a practitioner of its arts. He believed that many commandments in the Torah are based on the teachings of astrology (Ibn Ezra on Ex. 20:14; &#160;Chapter 9 of the Yesod Mora). He believed that the vestments of the High priest and the Ark of the Covenant had astrological significance .&#160; He authored a number of works dealing with this science, some of which were translated into Latin. He played a major role in spreading this science in his travels. (Shlomo Sela. Astrology and Biblical Exegesis in Abraham Ibn Ezra’s Thought. Ramat-Gan. Israerl, 1999.)<br/>&#160;<br/>&#160;<br/>“ All things that were created and exist upon the earth are dependent on the arrangement of the heavenly bodies. "(Ibn Ezra on Ps. 33:3).<br/>&#160;<br/>&#160;<br/>“One who knows the ways of the spheres knows the mind of the most high.”(Ibn Ezra on Ps. 19:1).<br/>[1]<br/>&#160;<br/>“A Human being’s rational faculty can comprehend the truth which the heavens declare and the firmament shows. It can accomplish the aforementioned by employing the vision of the corporeal eye and the perception of the eye of the inner soul.”( Ibid.)<br/>&#160;<br/>According to Ibn Ezra the fate of individuals and nations are determined by the arrangement of the heavenly bodies. However,&#160; “ God granted wisdom to man and implanted in his heart the intelligence to receive power from on high to add to his good or to diminish his evil.” (Ibn Ezra&#160; on Ex. 7:3.) Thus by observing the Torah, clinging to God, and by studying the laws of astrology man can avert the fate that the stars have in store for them. <br/><br/> <br/>[1]&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Ibn Ezra on Ps. 19:1.</fn> and Poetry.&#160;</li>
+
<p>&#160;</p></fn>, Midrash, Grammar, Philosophy,&#160;Mathematics, Astronomy, Astrology,<fn>Ibn Ezra believed that astrology is a true science. He was not only a student of astrology but also a practitioner of its arts. He believed that many commandments in the Torah are based on the teachings of astrology (Ibn Ezra on Ex. 20:14; &#160;Chapter 9 of the Yesod Mora). He believed that the vestments of the High priest and the Ark of the Covenant had astrological significance .&#160; He authored a number of works dealing with this science, some of which were translated into Latin. He played a major role in spreading this science in his travels. (Shlomo Sela. Astrology and Biblical Exegesis in Abraham Ibn Ezra’s Thought. Ramat-Gan. Israerl, 1999.)<br/>&#160;<br/>&#160;<br/>“ All things that were created and exist upon the earth are dependent on the arrangement of the heavenly bodies. "(Ibn Ezra on Ps. 33:3).<br/>&#160;<br/>&#160;<br/>“One who knows the ways of the spheres knows the mind of the most high.”(Ibn Ezra on Ps. 19:1).<br/>[1]<br/>&#160;<br/>“A Human being’s rational faculty can comprehend the truth which the heavens declare and the firmament shows. It can accomplish the aforementioned by employing the vision of the corporeal eye and the perception of the eye of the inner soul.”( Ibid.)<br/>&#160;<br/>According to Ibn Ezra the fate of individuals and nations are determined by the arrangement of the heavenly bodies. However,&#160; “ God granted wisdom to man and implanted in his heart the intelligence to receive power from on high to add to his good or to diminish his evil.” (Ibn Ezra&#160; on Ex. 7:3.) Thus by observing the Torah, clinging to God, and by studying the laws of astrology man can avert the fate that the stars have in store for them. <br/><br/> <br/>[1]&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Ibn Ezra on Ps. 19:1.</fn> and Poetry.&#160;</li>
 
<li><b>Occupation</b> – Poet,<fn>While in Spain Ibn Ezra was primarily known as a poet. He later reminisced: <br/>In days of old in my youth;<br/>I composed poems;<br/> I placed them as pearls;<br/>On the necks of the Hebrews.<br/>See Kahana Vol. 1, p.22.</fn>&#160;teacher, and Bible commentator</li>
 
<li><b>Occupation</b> – Poet,<fn>While in Spain Ibn Ezra was primarily known as a poet. He later reminisced: <br/>In days of old in my youth;<br/>I composed poems;<br/> I placed them as pearls;<br/>On the necks of the Hebrews.<br/>See Kahana Vol. 1, p.22.</fn>&#160;teacher, and Bible commentator</li>
 
<li><b>Family</b> – Son Isaac&#160;– Isaac was a poet of note who spent most of his life in the Near East; Isaac is reported to have converted to Islam while in Babylonia.<fn>See Chapter 3 of Al-Charizi's Tahkemoni. Quoted in Ha-Shirah Ha-ivrit Bi-Sefarad U-Ve-Provance, ed. Chaim Shirman (Jerusalem and Tel Aviv Bialik Institute and Devir, 1956), p. 112. J. L. Fleisher disputes this. See his, Eleh Toledot Yitzhak ben Avraham in Apiryon , Year 5, No.1. This is also disputed by David Kahana. See his Rabbi Avraham ibn Ezra. Warsaw 1922. Vol. 2 pp.78-81. According to Kahana Isaac’s patron converted to Islam and the apostasy was mistakenly attributed to Isaac.</fn>&#160; He later returned to Judaism. A heartrending lament by Ibn Ezra<fn>David Goldstein, The Jewish Poets of Spain (London: Penguin 1965) p. 161.</fn> reveals that Isaac predeceased his father.<fn>For Isaac’s biography see Yitzhak ibn Ezra Shirim, Ed.&#160; Menahem H. Schmelzer, &#160;(New York: Jewish Theological Semi­nary, 1979), p. 9-11 and Sarah Katz Fair Verses of the Jewish Adalusian Poets. (Heb) Rubin Mass Lits. Jerusalem` 1997. Pp 101-126.</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Family</b> – Son Isaac&#160;– Isaac was a poet of note who spent most of his life in the Near East; Isaac is reported to have converted to Islam while in Babylonia.<fn>See Chapter 3 of Al-Charizi's Tahkemoni. Quoted in Ha-Shirah Ha-ivrit Bi-Sefarad U-Ve-Provance, ed. Chaim Shirman (Jerusalem and Tel Aviv Bialik Institute and Devir, 1956), p. 112. J. L. Fleisher disputes this. See his, Eleh Toledot Yitzhak ben Avraham in Apiryon , Year 5, No.1. This is also disputed by David Kahana. See his Rabbi Avraham ibn Ezra. Warsaw 1922. Vol. 2 pp.78-81. According to Kahana Isaac’s patron converted to Islam and the apostasy was mistakenly attributed to Isaac.</fn>&#160; He later returned to Judaism. A heartrending lament by Ibn Ezra<fn>David Goldstein, The Jewish Poets of Spain (London: Penguin 1965) p. 161.</fn> reveals that Isaac predeceased his father.<fn>For Isaac’s biography see Yitzhak ibn Ezra Shirim, Ed.&#160; Menahem H. Schmelzer, &#160;(New York: Jewish Theological Semi­nary, 1979), p. 9-11 and Sarah Katz Fair Verses of the Jewish Adalusian Poets. (Heb) Rubin Mass Lits. Jerusalem` 1997. Pp 101-126.</fn></li>
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<li>The Alomohades &#160;gave the Jews the choice of conversion to Islam, emigration or death.</li>
 
<li>The Alomohades &#160;gave the Jews the choice of conversion to Islam, emigration or death.</li>
 
<li>Ibn Ezra wrote &#160;an elegy lamenting the destruction of the Jewish communities in Spain by the Almohades.&#160; It is a unique poem, for it is the only “clear cut example of a poetical Jewish reaction to an outbreak of Islamic persecution.”<fn>Cohen. M. <i>Under Crescent and Cross.</i> Princeton, N.J. 1994 p. 183.</fn><br/>&#160;<br/>"O woe! Misfortune from heaven has fallen upon Sefarad [Spain];<br/>My eyes, my eyes flow with tears.<br/>...................................................<br/>"The Exile dwelt there blamelessly in safety<br/>Without interruption for a thousand and seventy years.<br/>But the day came when her people were banished and she became like a widow. " <fn>Ibid.</fn>...</li>
 
<li>Ibn Ezra wrote &#160;an elegy lamenting the destruction of the Jewish communities in Spain by the Almohades.&#160; It is a unique poem, for it is the only “clear cut example of a poetical Jewish reaction to an outbreak of Islamic persecution.”<fn>Cohen. M. <i>Under Crescent and Cross.</i> Princeton, N.J. 1994 p. 183.</fn><br/>&#160;<br/>"O woe! Misfortune from heaven has fallen upon Sefarad [Spain];<br/>My eyes, my eyes flow with tears.<br/>...................................................<br/>"The Exile dwelt there blamelessly in safety<br/>Without interruption for a thousand and seventy years.<br/>But the day came when her people were banished and she became like a widow. " <fn>Ibid.</fn>...</li>
<li>The first (1095)&#160;and second&#160;&#160;crusades.(1150).......................................................................................................<br/><br/><br/> <br/><br/>
+
<li>In addition, the first (1095)&#160;and second&#160;&#160;crusades.(1150) &#160;took place during his lifetime........................................................................................................<br/><br/><br/> <br/><br/>
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
 
<li>–</li>
 
<li>–</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</li>
 
</li>
<li><b>World outlook</b> –&#160;</li>
+
<li><b>World outlook</b> – &#160;</li>
 +
<li>According to I.E. man’s rational soul separates a human being from the rest of the animal kingdom. The soul is a tabula rasa when first placed in the body. It is put there in order to be developed. If a human being develops his rational soul, then it acquires eternal life. The commandments of the Torah keep the body and the mind pure, so that &#160;the soul can fulfill its destiny.</li>
 +
<li>"The soul is destined to return to God the glorious who gave her. She was placed in the body to be shown the Lord’s work, to study the works of her Master and to observe His commandments."</li>
 +
<li>"Man’s soul is unique. When it is first placed in the body… it is like a tablet set before a scribe. When God’s writing is inscribed upon this tablet…then the soul clings to God both while it is yet in man and later after it leaves the human body."<br/><br/>"It is only when a person knows the sciences and the secret of God’s<br/>Throne and the “Chariot” and knows God, his soul cleaves to<br/>God while he is yet alive and continues clinging to God after it<br/>leaves his body". (See H. Norman Strickman,The Secret of the Torah; A Translation of Ibn Ezra's Yesod Mora Ve-Sod Ha-Torah New Jersey, 1995, p. 148-149. Yesod Mora: 10:2).</li>
 +
<li>Ibn Ezra was...well versed in the philological, scientific and philosophical studies cultivated by Arabs and Jews in his native land. " (I. Husik, A History of Medieval Jewish Philosophy, New York 1916, p. 187.)</li>
 +
<li>Ibn Ezra was a Neo-Platonists (ibid. p.184).Julius Guttmann referred to him as “the last in the line of Jewish Neoplatonists”.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</subcategory>
 
</subcategory>
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<li><b>Biblical commentaries</b> – &#160;Commentary on the Pentateuch, Short Commentary; Long commentary on Exodus, Edited by Asher Weiser. Mosad Ha-Rav Kook 1976.</li>
 
<li><b>Biblical commentaries</b> – &#160;Commentary on the Pentateuch, Short Commentary; Long commentary on Exodus, Edited by Asher Weiser. Mosad Ha-Rav Kook 1976.</li>
 
<li>Commentary on the Pentateuch, Torat Chaim. Mosad Ha-Rav Kook, 1986&#160;</li>
 
<li>Commentary on the Pentateuch, Torat Chaim. Mosad Ha-Rav Kook, 1986&#160;</li>
 +
<li>Commentary on the Pentateuch; Chumash Mechokekei &#160;Yehudah, R. Yehudah Leib ben R. Yitzchak Krinsky, reprint, N.Y. 1975.</li>
 
<li>Commentary on Isaiah. Mikra'ot Gedolot; Ibn Ezra on Isaiah, Ed. and translated by Michael Friedlander.</li>
 
<li>Commentary on Isaiah. Mikra'ot Gedolot; Ibn Ezra on Isaiah, Ed. and translated by Michael Friedlander.</li>
 
<li>The Minor Prophets, Mikra'ot Gedolot</li>
 
<li>The Minor Prophets, Mikra'ot Gedolot</li>
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</ul>
 
</ul>
 
</li>
 
</li>
<li><b>Jewish thought</b> – There are many parallels between the teachings of Ibn Ezra and those of Maimonides (1138–1204). A &#160;strong case can be made that the works of Ibn Ezra greatly influenced Maimonides.<fn>See:<br/> H. Norman Strickman, Abraham ibn Ezra's Yesod Mora, Vol. 12.pp.159-165.<br/><br/> I. Twersky, Did R. Abraham ibn Ezra Influence Maimonides? In&#160;Rabbi. Abraham ibn Ezra: Studies In The Writings Of a Twelfth Century Jewish Polymath. Harvard University Press. 1993</fn>&#160;Ibn Ezra also had &#160; great influence on the Chasidei Ashkenaz.<fn>See &#160;Joseph Dan, Rabbi <i>Judah He-Hasid</i> (Heb), Israel, 2005. pp.122-130;&#160;<br/>&#160;Joseph Isaac&#160;Lifshitz,<i> One God; Many Images :Dialectical Thought In Hasidei</i><br/><i>Ashkenaz</i> (Heb.), Israel, 2015. pp 68-72. &#160;</fn></li>
+
<li><b>Jewish thought</b> – There are many parallels between the teachings of Ibn Ezra and those of Maimonides (1138–1204). A &#160;strong case can be made that the works of Ibn Ezra &#160;influenced Maimonides.<fn>See:<br/> H. Norman Strickman, Abraham ibn Ezra's Yesod Mora, Vol. 12.pp.159-165.<br/><br/> I. Twersky, Did R. Abraham ibn Ezra Influence Maimonides? In&#160;Rabbi. Abraham ibn Ezra: Studies In The Writings Of a Twelfth Century Jewish Polymath. Harvard University Press. 1993</fn>&#160;Ibn Ezra also impacted e on the Chasidei Ashkenaz.<fn>See &#160;Joseph Dan, Rabbi <i>Judah He-Hasid</i> (Heb), Israel, 2005. pp.122-130;&#160;<br/>&#160;Joseph Isaac&#160;Lifshitz,<i> One God; Many Images :Dialectical Thought In Hasidei</i><br/><i>Ashkenaz</i> (Heb.), Israel, 2015. pp 68-72. &#160;</fn></li>
 
<li><b>Misattributed works</b> – &#160;Commentary to Proverbs.</li>
 
<li><b>Misattributed works</b> – &#160;Commentary to Proverbs.</li>
 
</ul>
 
</ul>
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<subcategory>Supercommentaries
 
<subcategory>Supercommentaries
 
<ul>
 
<ul>
<li> –</li>
+
<li>–</li>
</ul>
+
</ul>
 
</subcategory>
 
</subcategory>
 
</category>
 
</category>

Version as of 06:33, 20 March 2016

Ibn Ezra – Intellectual Profile

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Ibn Ezra
Name
R. Avraham ben Meir Ibn Ezra
ר' אברהם בן מאיר אבן עזרא, ראב"ע
Dates1092 – 1167
LocationAndalusia / Italy / Provence / France / England
WorksCommentaries on Torah and part of Nakh, math, science, and grammar works.
Exegetical Characteristics
Influenced byR. Saadia Gaon, R. Yonah ibn Janach, R. Yehudah Hayuj
Impacted onMost Jewish Bible commentators. His though  great impact on Chasidei  Ashkenzaz

Background



Rabbi Abraham ben Meir ibn Ezra was one of the outstanding personalities produced by medieval Andalusian Jewry.  He has been described as a Polymath.1[  He was a noted poet,2 mathematician, astrologer, grammarian, and philosopher. According to Leon Weinberger, Ibn Ezra  “was one of the best known and admired Jewish figures in the West. His Pisan Tables in astronomy were the authoritative guides for Roger Bacon…, Nicolas of Cusa…, and Pico della Pirandola…, and he was remembered for his pioneering efforts in introducing the mathematics of the Arabs to the Europeans." However, above all he was one of the greatest Bible commentators of all time.  He was born in 1092 C.E.  In Tudela, Spain, and died in 1164.3[3] His place of death is unknown.
 

 
[3]According to a statement found in several codices, Ibn Ezra (henceforth I.E.) died on a Monday, on the first day of 1 Adar  4927 (January 23, 1167) at the age of seventy-five.  If this date is accepted, then I.E. was born in 1092.  See M. Friedlander, ed. and trans., The Commentary of Ibn Ezra on Isaiah (London, 1873), p. Xxvii n. 54.  However, H. Graetz believes that I.E. was born between 1088 and 1089.  See H. Graetz, Divre Yeme Yisra'el, ed. and trans., S. P. Rabinowitz, Vol. 4, p. 212 (Warsaw, 1916).  Also see J.L.  Fleisher, Be-ezu Shanah Met Rabbenu Avraham ibn Ezra. pp. 5-16, in R. Avraham ibn Ezra, Kovetz Ma’amarim Al Toledatav Vi-Yetzirotav (Tzion. Tel Aviv, 1970).

Life

  • Name – 
    • Hebrew name – Avraham ben Meir ibn Ezra4
    • _ name – 
  • Dates – 1092-11675
  • Location – Spain, Italy,France, Provence, England. Some maintain that  Ibn Ezra  visited  Egypt, Israel, Babylonia and India. However, there is no real evidence to back up these assertions.
  • Education – Bible, Talmud6, Midrash, Grammar, Philosophy, Mathematics, Astronomy, Astrology,7 and Poetry. 
  • Occupation – Poet,8 teacher, and Bible commentator
  • Family – Son Isaac – Isaac was a poet of note who spent most of his life in the Near East; Isaac is reported to have converted to Islam while in Babylonia.9  He later returned to Judaism. A heartrending lament by Ibn Ezra10 reveals that Isaac predeceased his father.11
  • Teachers – 
  • Contemporaries –   R. Yehuda Ha-Levi,12 Rabbi Moshe ibn Ezra,13 Rabbi Joseph ibn Tzadik,14  Rashbam,15 R. Tam.16
  • Students – 
  • Time period –  Almohades invasion of  Moslem Spain ( 1147).
  • The Alomohades  gave the Jews the choice of conversion to Islam, emigration or death.
  • Ibn Ezra wrote  an elegy lamenting the destruction of the Jewish communities in Spain by the Almohades.  It is a unique poem, for it is the only “clear cut example of a poetical Jewish reaction to an outbreak of Islamic persecution.”17
     
    "O woe! Misfortune from heaven has fallen upon Sefarad [Spain];
    My eyes, my eyes flow with tears.
    ...................................................
    "The Exile dwelt there blamelessly in safety
    Without interruption for a thousand and seventy years.
    But the day came when her people were banished and she became like a widow. " 18...
  • In addition, the first (1095) and second  crusades.(1150)  took place during his lifetime........................................................................................................




  • World outlook –  
  • According to I.E. man’s rational soul separates a human being from the rest of the animal kingdom. The soul is a tabula rasa when first placed in the body. It is put there in order to be developed. If a human being develops his rational soul, then it acquires eternal life. The commandments of the Torah keep the body and the mind pure, so that  the soul can fulfill its destiny.
  • "The soul is destined to return to God the glorious who gave her. She was placed in the body to be shown the Lord’s work, to study the works of her Master and to observe His commandments."
  • "Man’s soul is unique. When it is first placed in the body… it is like a tablet set before a scribe. When God’s writing is inscribed upon this tablet…then the soul clings to God both while it is yet in man and later after it leaves the human body."

    "It is only when a person knows the sciences and the secret of God’s
    Throne and the “Chariot” and knows God, his soul cleaves to
    God while he is yet alive and continues clinging to God after it
    leaves his body". (See H. Norman Strickman,The Secret of the Torah; A Translation of Ibn Ezra's Yesod Mora Ve-Sod Ha-Torah New Jersey, 1995, p. 148-149. Yesod Mora: 10:2).
  • Ibn Ezra was...well versed in the philological, scientific and philosophical studies cultivated by Arabs and Jews in his native land. " (I. Husik, A History of Medieval Jewish Philosophy, New York 1916, p. 187.)
  • Ibn Ezra was a Neo-Platonists (ibid. p.184).Julius Guttmann referred to him as “the last in the line of Jewish Neoplatonists”.

Works

  • Biblical commentaries –  Commentary on the Pentateuch, Short Commentary; Long commentary on Exodus, Edited by Asher Weiser. Mosad Ha-Rav Kook 1976.
  • Commentary on the Pentateuch, Torat Chaim. Mosad Ha-Rav Kook, 1986 
  • Commentary on the Pentateuch; Chumash Mechokekei  Yehudah, R. Yehudah Leib ben R. Yitzchak Krinsky, reprint, N.Y. 1975.
  • Commentary on Isaiah. Mikra'ot Gedolot; Ibn Ezra on Isaiah, Ed. and translated by Michael Friedlander.
  • The Minor Prophets, Mikra'ot Gedolot
  • Job, Mikraot Gedolot.
  • Song of Songs. Mikra'ot Gedolot.
  • Ecclesiastes. Mikra'ot Gedolot.
  •  Daniel. Mikra'ot Gedollot
     Psalms.Mikra'ot Gedolot.
  • .  The Five Scrolls. Mikra’ot Gedollot
  • Rabbinics – 
    • Talmudic novellae – No such works.
    • Halakhic codes – No such works
    • Responses to the works of others – No such works.
    • Responsa –  No such work.
  • Jewish thought – There are many parallels between the teachings of Ibn Ezra and those of Maimonides (1138–1204). A  strong case can be made that the works of Ibn Ezra  influenced Maimonides.19 Ibn Ezra also impacted e on the Chasidei Ashkenaz.20
  • Misattributed works –  Commentary to Proverbs.

Torah Commentary

Characteristics

  • Verse by verse / Topical – Basically a verse by verse commentary. However, there are many exceptions. His commentary contains long essays on philosophical issues, on God's name,21 on the Priestly Garments, on the Ten Commandments, the Golden Calf and other themes. The essays are occasionally introduced with the words Abraham the Authors says, or the Words of Abraham.
  • Genre – 
  • Structure
  • Peshat and derash –  Emphasis on Peshat.22 Rabbinic interpretations  are to be accepted  with regards to halakhic practice even in cases where they do not appear to be in keeping with the literal meaning of the text.23 Aggadic interpretations which are not in keeping with the literal meaning of the text do not have to be taken at face value.24 Ibn Ezra  employs philosophy,25 numerology26 and astrology27 to explain biblical  texts.

Methods

  • – 

Themes

  • God is incorporeal.
  • God is the All.
  • Purpose of man is to know God, obey His laws, and cling to God.
  • Defend Rabbinic Judaism from attacks by Karaites. 

Textual Issues

  • Manuscripts – 
  • Printings – 
  • Textual layers – 

Sources

Significant Influences

  • Earlier Sources – R. Saadiah Gaon (892-942 C.E.) R. Judah ibn Chayyuj; R. Jonah ibn Janach; R Menahchem ben Saruk; Dunash ben Labrat (920-990 C.E.)
  • Teachers – 
  • Foils – 

Occasional Usage

Possible Relationship.


  • According to Ezra Fleischer, evidence from the Cairo Geneza reveals that Ibn Ezra's son Isaac,  married Judah Ha-Levi's daughter.28 However, it should be noted that in all his references to Judah Ha-levi in his commentaries, Ibn Ezra never mentions this.

Impact

Later exegetes

Supercommentaries