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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SCY-SHA |
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SEADIAH (or SAADIA; in Arabic Said) BEN JOSEPH (892-942) was born in A.D. 892 at Dilaz in the Fayyum, whence he is often called al-Fayyumi. Although he is justly regarded as the greatest figure in the literary and political history of medieval Judaism, nothing certain is known of his father or of his early life. Even the names of his teachers, generally recorded in the case of Jewish scholars, are unknown, with the exception of a certain Abu Kathir, who is himself obscure, and left no writings. Saadia's literary work is in fact the more remarkable since it suddenly appears at a time when learning seemed to be dead both in East and West. Since the completion of the Talmud very little of any literary importance, if we except certain midrashim, had been produced among the orthodox (Rabbanite) Jews, although the Babylonian schools at Sura and Pumbeditha continued to enjoy a somewhat intermittent prosperity. On the other hand, learning was cultivated among the Qaraites (q.v.; see also HEBREW LITERATURE), a sect of Jews who rejected the oral tradition, restricting their practice to the ordinances of scripture (migra). It even seemed for a time as if conservative heresy would prevail against progressive orthodoxy. In Saadia, however, the Rabbanites found a powerful champion. Almost his first work, written at the age of twenty-three, was an attack on the teaching of 'Allan, the founder of Qaraism, who lived in the 8th century. This, like most of Saadia's polemical writings, is no longer extant, but we can gather something of its contents from references in the author's other works, and from the statements of his opponents. The controversy turned largely on the calendar, which of course involved the dates of festivals, and, since the Rabbanite calendar had come down from ancient times, opened up the whole question of oral tradition and the authority of the Talmud. The conflict raged for many years, the chief
recent
melancholia
That some of the many works of Saadia, in spite of their merits, have been neglected, and others partly or entirely lost, is not as surprising as it appears at first sight. They were for the most part written in Arabic, the vernacular of the Jews in the East, so that after the break-up of the Babylonian schools in the middle of the iith century, they would only be studied in Spain, the new centre of Jewish learning, and in Egypt. After the expulsion of the Jews from Spain, Arabic practically ceased to be used by them for literary purposes, and in the rest of Europe (except perhaps in S. Italy) it was never understood. Even some Hebrew works, of great interest
1 An excellent account of these is given by Poznanski in the Jewish Quarterly Review, x. 238 if.(against David ben Zakkai), both in Hebrew, some fragments have been recovered recently. Closely allied to his polemical writings are his exegetical works. He translated most of the Bible into Arabic, and commented on at least some of the books. The memorial edition2 contains (I) the version of the Pentateuch (1893), (3) of Isaiah (1896), (5) of Job (1899), (6) of Proverbs (1894), the last three with commentary. The translation of the 5 Meghilloth, and of Daniel (with commentary), usually ascribed to Saadia, is not really by him, but a genuine translation of Daniel, with commentary, exists in manuscript. There is also ascribed to him a midrashic work on the Decalogue. These all, no doubt, exhibit the defects necessary to the time in which their author lived. But it must be remembered that Saadia was a pioneer
original
The grammatical work called Agron, a sort of dictionary, is now lost, as are also the Kutub al-Lughah and perhaps other treatises on Hebrew grammar. The explanation of the 70 (really 90) hapaxlegomena in the Bible is still extant, and a poem on the number of letters in the Bible. On Talmudic subjects again little is preserved beyond the Kitab al-Mawarith, which was published as vol. ix. of the U uvres completes, together with the short treatise in Hebrew on the 13 Middoth or canons of exegesis of R. Ishmael and some Responsa mostly in Hebrew. The translation of the Mishna, the introduction to the Talmud and other works of the kind are known only by repute. Of the Siddur or arrangement of the liturgy
periodicals
His philosophical works are (I) a commentary on the Sefer Vezira, a mystical treatise ascribed to the patriarch Abraham, which, as the foundation of the Kabbala, had great influence on Jewish thought, and was the subject of numerous commentaries; (2) the Kitab al-Amandt w`al-I`tigadat (Book of Beliefs and Convictions), written in 933, called, in the Hebrew translation by Judah ibn Tibbon, Emfinoth we-De`oth. Its system is based on reason in conjunction with revelation, the two being not opposed, but mutually complementary. It is thus concerned, as the title implies, with the rational foundation of the faith, and deals with creation, the nature of God, revelation, free will, the soul, the future life and the doctrine of the Messiah. It shows a thorough knowledge of Aristotle, on whom much of the argument is based, and incidentally refutes the views of Christians, Moslems, Brahmins and sceptics such as IIivi. From its nature, however, the work, although of great interest
2 (Euvres completes de R. Saadia, ed. by J. Derenbourg (Paris, 1893 ff.). religionsphilosophische Lehre Saadja Gaons," in Baeumker's Beitrage, iv. 4 (Munster, 1903) (containing a German translation of part iii. of the Kitab al-Atria-nett) ; A. Harkavy, Studien, v. (St Petersburg
Cambridge , 1903) (texts from the Geniza, repr. from the Jewish Quarterly Review). (A. Cv.)End of Article: SEADIAH (or SAADIA; in Arabic Said) BEN JOSEPH (892-942) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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