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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ECG-EMS |
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ELDAD BEN MAHLI , also surnamed had-Dani, Abu-Dani, David-had-Dani, or the Danite, Jewish traveller, was the sup-posed author of a Jewish travel-narrative of the 9th century A.D., which enjoyed great authority in the middle ages, especially on the question of the Lost Ten Tribes. Eldad first set out to visit his Hebrew brethren in Africa and Asia. His vessel was wrecked, and he fell into the hands of cannibals; but he was saved by his leanness, and by the opportune invasion of a neighbouring tribe. After spending four years with his new captors, he was ransomed by a fellow-countryman, a merchant of the tribe of Issachar. He then (according to his highly fabulous narrative) visited the territory of Issachar, in the mountains of Media and Persia; he also describes the abodes of Zabulon, on the " other side " of the Paran Mountains, extending to Armenia and the Euphrates; of Reuben, on another side of the same mountains; of Ephraim and Half Manasseh, in Arabia, not far from Mecca; and of Simeon and the other Half of Manasseh, in Chorazin, six months' journey from Jerusalem. Dan, he declares, sooner than join in Jeroboam's scheme of an Israelite war against Judah, had migrated to Cush
Apart from these tales, we have the genuine Eldad, a celebrated Jewish traveller and philologist; who flourished c. A.D. 83o89o; to whom the work
Cordova , and whose authority, as to the lost tribes, is supported by a great Hebrew doctor
rector of the Academy at Sura (A.D. 889898). It is possible that a certain relationship exists (as suggested by Epstein and supported by D. H. Muller) between the famous apocryphal Letter of Prester John (of c. A.D. 1165) and the narrative of Eldad; but the affinity is not close. Eldad is quoted as an authority on linguistic difficulties by the leading medieval Jewish grammarians and lexicographers.The work
original
in 1563, under the title of Eldad Danius de Judaeis alausis eorumque in Aethiopia . imperio, and was afterwards incorporated in the translator's Chronologia Hebraeorum of 1584; a German version appeared at Prague in 1695, and another at Jessnitz in 1723. In 1838 E. Carmoly edited and translated a fuller recension which he had found in a MS. from the library of Eliezer Ben Hasan, for-warded to him by David Zabach of Morocco (see Relation d'Eldad le Danite, Paris, 1838). Both forms are printed by Dr Jellinek in his Bet-ha-iltidrasch, vols. ii. p. 102, &c., and iii. p. 6, &c. ( Leipzig
Leipzig
Kitto
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