Eldad the Danite
Eldad ben Mahli ha-Dani, English Eldad
the Danite (flourished 9th century),
Jewish traveller and philologist who was
generally credited with the authorship
of a fanciful geographical narrative
that exerted an enduring influence
throughout the Middle Ages. This
possibly gave rise to the legend of
Prester John, the mighty Oriental
priest-potentate of fabulous wealth and
power.
Probably originally from southern
Arabia, Eldad visited Mesopotamia,
Egypt, North Africa, and Spain and
caused a stir by his account of the Ten
Lost Tribes of Israel. He himself
claimed to be a descendant of the
Danites, who, together with the tribes
of Naphtali, Asher, and Gad, were said
to have established a Jewish kingdom in
Cush (Kush), variously interpreted as
Ethiopia or, roughly, present-day Sudan.
His veracity was challenged largely
because the ritual prescriptions he
described diverged from those of the
Talmud, the rabbinical compendium of
law, lore, and commentary. His Hebrew
narrative, Sefer Eldad, established his
reputation as a philologist whom leading
medieval Jewish grammarians and
lexicographers quoted as an authority on
linguistic difficulties. It appeared in
several languages and in widely
deviating versions. The first edition
was published at the Italian city of
Mantua in 1480.