Abraham bar Hiyya
Abraham bar Hiyya, also called
Abraham Bar Hiyya Ha-nasi (Hebrew: “the
Prince”) (b. c. 1065—d. c. 1136),
Spanish Jewish philosopher, astronomer,
astrologer, and mathematician whose
writings were among the first scientific
and philosophical works to be written in
Hebrew. He is sometimes known as
Savasorda, a corruption of an Arabic
term indicating that he held some civic
office in the Muslim administration of
Barcelona.
In addition to translating scientific
books from Arabic into Latin and Hebrew,
Abraham also wrote a number of original
works, among them a scientific
encyclopaedia (the first in the Hebrew
language) and a book on mathematics,
Ḥibbur ha-Meshiḥah ve-ha-Tishboret
(“Treatise on Measurement and
Calculation”), which, in its Latin
translation, Liber Embadorum (1145),
became a principal textbook in western
European schools. Other notable works by
Abraham include the philosophical
treatise Hegyon ha-Nefesh ha-Aẓuva
(Meditation of the Sad Soul), which
dealt with the nature of good and evil,
ethical conduct, and repentance; and
Megillat ha-Megalleh (“Scroll of the
Revealer”), in which he outlined his
view of history, based on astrology and
purporting to forecast the messianic
future.