Ibn Avitor, Joseph ben Isaac ben Shtnash, active 10th century-11th century

Enlarge text Shrink text
  • Personality
| מספר מערכת 987007258066105171
Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
אביתור, יוסף בן יצחק אבן שטנש אבן
Name (Latin)
Ibn Avitor, Joseph ben Isaac ben Shtnash, active 10th century-11th century
Other forms of name
Avitor, Yosef ben Yizhaq Ibn, 10th cent
Avitor, Yosef Ben Yizhaq Ibn Shatanash, Ibn, 10th cent
Ibn Shatanash, Yosef Ben Avitor, 10th cent
Joseph Ibn Abitur, 10th cent
Abitur, Joseph Ibn, 10th cent
Ibn Abitur, Joseph, 'ibn Shatanash, 10th cent
Ibn Avitor, Yosef Ben Yizhaq, 10th cent
Ibn Abitur, Joseph ben Isaac, 10th-11th cent
יוסף אבן אביתור
יוסף בן יצחק אבן אביתור
אבן אביתור, יוסף בן יצחק אבן שטנש
אביתור, יוסף בן יצחק שטנש אבן
אבן-שטנאס, יוסף
שטנאס, יוסף
יוסף בן אביתור
בן שטנאס, יוסף
אבן-אביתור, יוסף בן יצחק
Start period
09
End period
10
Place of birth
Merida
Place of death
Damascus (Syria)
Gender
male
Biographical or Historical Data
מידע על שם: : נקרא גם אבן-שטאנש.
מקום לידה: Merida
מקום לידה: מרידה Merida], ספרד]
מקום פטירה: דמשק
מקום פטירה: Damascus
תאריך פטירה עברי: אחר ד אלפים תשע"ז [1012].
היגר למזרח התיכון לפני ד אלפים תשל"ו [976].
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
Wikidata: Q551536
Library of congress: no2003019842
Sources of Information
  • Record enhanced with data from Bibliography of the Hebrew Book database
  • ח' שירמן, השירה העברית בספרד ובפרובאנס, א, ירושלים-תל-אביב (תשט"ו), עמ' 56-53.
Wikipedia description:

Joseph ibn Abitur was a Spanish rabbi of around the 10th century. He was a student of Moses ben Hanoch. Abitur was from a very prestigious Spanish family from the city of Mérida. His great great grandfather was a communal and Rabbinic leader. Besides being a great Torah scholar, Abitur was also a paytan of note. He also wrote a commentary on the Bible in Hebrew. When Moses ben Hanoch's son Hanoch was chosen to succeed his father, Abitur felt compelled to leave Spain and travel to the yeshivoth in Bavel. On his way he stopped in Egypt before arriving in Baghdad. He eventually went to Damascus, where he died. He wrote many teshuvoth, some of which are extant. According to the history book Sefer ha-Qabbalah, during his stay in Egypt, Ibn Abitur produced an Arabic translation of the Talmud for the Fatimid Caliph al-Hakim bi-Amr Llah. Most of Ibn Abitur's poems remain unpublished. In 2021, Dr. Yehoshua Granat published a monograph on Psalms and the poetry of Ibn Abitur, which includes an edition of 34 poetic compositions by Ibn Abitur, some of them massive works of hundreds of lines. Even this just begins to scratch the surface of publishing Ibn Abitur's poems, which number over a thousand.

Read more on Wikipedia >