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This volume is both a continuation of the five already published titles in the series (2011-21) and an addition to the Concise Dictionary of Novel Medical and General Hebrew Terminology from the Middle Ages. It continues mapping the medical terminology featured in medieval Hebrew medical works in order to facilitate study of medical terms that do not appear in the existing dictionaries as well as identifying the medical terminology used by specific authors and translators in order to identify anonymous medical material.
The terminology discussed in this volume has been derived from fourteen different sources, including translations of Ibn al-Jazzar's Zad al-musafir by Moses ibn Tibbon (Sefer ?edat ha-Derakhim) and the otherwise unknown Abraham ben Isaac (Sefer ?edah la-Ore?im), as well as the translation of Constantine the African?s Latin version (Viaticum) prepared by Do'eg ha-Edomi (Sefer Ya?ir Netiv).
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This volume is both a continuation of the five already published titles in the series (2011-21) and an addition to the Concise Dictionary of Novel Medical and General Hebrew Terminology from the Middle Ages. It continues mapping the medical terminology featured in medieval Hebrew medical works in order to facilitate study of medical terms that do not appear in the existing dictionaries as well as identifying the medical terminology used by specific authors and translators in order to identify anonymous medical material.
The terminology discussed in this volume has been derived from fourteen different sources, including translations of Ibn al-Jazzar's Zad al-musafir by Moses ibn Tibbon (Sefer ?edat ha-Derakhim) and the otherwise unknown Abraham ben Isaac (Sefer ?edah la-Ore?im), as well as the translation of Constantine the African?s Latin version (Viaticum) prepared by Do'eg ha-Edomi (Sefer Ya?ir Netiv).