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Elia del Medigo

Elia del Medigo, also called Elijah Delmedigo or Elias ben Moise del Medigo and sometimes known to his contemporaries as Helias Hebreus Cretensis or in Hebrew Elijah Mi-Qandia (c. 1458 – c. 1493). According to Jacob Joshua Ross, "while the non-Jewish students of Delmedigo may have classified him as an “Averroist”, he clearly saw himself as a follower of Maimonides". But, according to other scholars, Delmedigo was clearly a strong follower of Averroes' doctrines, even the more radical ones: unity of intellect, eternity of the world, autonomy of reason from the boundaries of revealed religion.

This article is about Elia del Medigo. For his descendant, the 17th-century scientist and philosopher, see Joseph Solomon Delmedigo.

Born in Candia, on the island of Crete (which at that time was under the control of the Venetian Republic), whither his family had emigrated from Germany, he spent ten years in Rome and in Padua in northern Italy, returning to Candia at the end of his life.


He is remembered for a number of translations, commentaries on Averroes (Ibn Rushd in Arabic) (notably a commentary on Averroes' Substantia Orbis in 1485), for his influence on many Italian Platonists of the early Renaissance (especially Giovanni Pico della Mirandola), and for his treatise on Jewish philosophy, Sefer Beḥinat ha-Dat (The Examination of Religion), published many years after his death, in 1629.

Popular culture[edit]

Elia del Medigo is likely the inspiration for the fictional character Judah del Medigo, in "The Secret Book of Grazia dei Rossi" by Jacqueline Park.

Greek scholars in the Renaissance

The , article on Averroeism – [2]

Jewish Encyclopedia

Italian Ashkenazi website –

[3]

article on del Medigo – [4]

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Eight Philosophers of the Italian Renaissance. Stanford University Press (Stanford California, 1964.)

Paul Oskar Kristeller

Giovanni Licata, "Delmedigo, Elijah", in Encyclopedia of Renaissance Philosophy, ed. M. Sgarbi, 2019

[5]

Sefer Behinat Hadat of Elijah Del-Medigo, with introduction, notes and commentary by Jacob Joshua Ross, Tel-Aviv: Chaim Rosenberg School of Jewish Studies, 1984

critical edition

Giovanni Licata, La via della ragione. Elia del Medigo e l’averroismo di Spinoza, Eum, Macerata, 2013, pp. 1–422,  978-88-6056-352-1. The book contains Hebrew text and Italian translation of Elia del Medigo’s "Sefer Beḥinat ha-Dat"

ISBN

The Medieval World – Europe 1100–1350 by Friedrich Heer.

Michael Engel, "Elijah Del Medigo and Paduan Aristotelianism", Bloomsbury, 2016