About: Sefer Refuot

An Entity of Type: Convention105667613, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Sefer Refuot (Hebrew: ספר רפואות, "The Book of Medicines"), also known as Sefer Asaph (Hebrew: ספר אסף, "The Book of Asaph"), is the earliest-known medical book written in Hebrew. Attributed or dedicated to Asaph the Physician (also known as Asaph ben Berechiah; possibly a Byzantine Jew; or possibly identifiable with Asif ibn Barkhiya, a legendary mystical polymath vizier in Arabic folklore, associated with King Solomon) and one Yoḥanan ben Zabda, who may have lived in Byzantine Palestine or Mesopotamia between the 3rd and 6th Centuries CE (though this is very uncertain, and some have suggested that Asaph and Yoḥanan were both legendary sages in Jewish tradition, to whom the text was dedicated; not its literal authors). The date of the text is uncertain, with most manuscripts coming from t

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Der Eid des Assaf (oder Eid des Asaph) ist ein antiker medizinethischer Verhaltenskodex für jüdische Ärzte, vergleichbar dem bekannten Eid des Hippokrates, der Ärzten jedwedes Tun zu Ungunsten des Patienten verbietet. Der Text des Eids findet sich im „Buch der Heilmittel“ (hebräisch ספר רפואות, Sefer Refuot) oder „Buch Assaf“ (hebräisch ספר אסף, Sefer Assaf), dem ältesten bekannten medizinischen Werk in hebräischer Sprache. Es wird den Autoren Assaf ben Berechiahu und Johanan ben Zabda zugeschrieben, die beide wohl im 5. Jahrhundert n. Chr. im Mittleren Osten lebten. Es enthält Auszüge aus klassischen hebräischen Texten, versehen mit Kommentaren und Auszügen heidnischer Autoren. Das Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center in der Nähe von Tel Aviv, eines der größten Krankenhäuser Israels, trägt heute den Namen Assafs. (de)
  • Sefer Refuot (Hebrew: ספר רפואות, "The Book of Medicines"), also known as Sefer Asaph (Hebrew: ספר אסף, "The Book of Asaph"), is the earliest-known medical book written in Hebrew. Attributed or dedicated to Asaph the Physician (also known as Asaph ben Berechiah; possibly a Byzantine Jew; or possibly identifiable with Asif ibn Barkhiya, a legendary mystical polymath vizier in Arabic folklore, associated with King Solomon) and one Yoḥanan ben Zabda, who may have lived in Byzantine Palestine or Mesopotamia between the 3rd and 6th Centuries CE (though this is very uncertain, and some have suggested that Asaph and Yoḥanan were both legendary sages in Jewish tradition, to whom the text was dedicated; not its literal authors). The date of the text is uncertain, with most manuscripts coming from the late medieval era; though the lack of Arabian medical knowledge in the book implies it may have originally been written much earlier. (en)
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 40579712 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 9688 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1079717641 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Der Eid des Assaf (oder Eid des Asaph) ist ein antiker medizinethischer Verhaltenskodex für jüdische Ärzte, vergleichbar dem bekannten Eid des Hippokrates, der Ärzten jedwedes Tun zu Ungunsten des Patienten verbietet. Der Text des Eids findet sich im „Buch der Heilmittel“ (hebräisch ספר רפואות, Sefer Refuot) oder „Buch Assaf“ (hebräisch ספר אסף, Sefer Assaf), dem ältesten bekannten medizinischen Werk in hebräischer Sprache. Es wird den Autoren Assaf ben Berechiahu und Johanan ben Zabda zugeschrieben, die beide wohl im 5. Jahrhundert n. Chr. im Mittleren Osten lebten. Es enthält Auszüge aus klassischen hebräischen Texten, versehen mit Kommentaren und Auszügen heidnischer Autoren. Das Assaf HaRofeh Medical Center in der Nähe von Tel Aviv, eines der größten Krankenhäuser Israels, trägt heute (de)
  • Sefer Refuot (Hebrew: ספר רפואות, "The Book of Medicines"), also known as Sefer Asaph (Hebrew: ספר אסף, "The Book of Asaph"), is the earliest-known medical book written in Hebrew. Attributed or dedicated to Asaph the Physician (also known as Asaph ben Berechiah; possibly a Byzantine Jew; or possibly identifiable with Asif ibn Barkhiya, a legendary mystical polymath vizier in Arabic folklore, associated with King Solomon) and one Yoḥanan ben Zabda, who may have lived in Byzantine Palestine or Mesopotamia between the 3rd and 6th Centuries CE (though this is very uncertain, and some have suggested that Asaph and Yoḥanan were both legendary sages in Jewish tradition, to whom the text was dedicated; not its literal authors). The date of the text is uncertain, with most manuscripts coming from t (en)
rdfs:label
  • Eid des Assaf (de)
  • Sefer Refuot (en)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License