Abū ʿAlī ʿĪsā ibn Isḥāq ibn Zurʿa (; 943–1008) was a medieval physician and philosopher. He was born in
Abbasid
The Abbasid Caliphate ( or ; ar, الْخِلَافَةُ الْعَبَّاسِيَّة, ') was the third caliphate to succeed the Islamic prophet Muhammad. It was founded by a dynasty descended from Muhammad's uncle, Abbas ibn Abdul-Muttalib ...
Baghdad
Baghdad (; ar, بَغْدَاد , ) is the capital of Iraq and the second-largest city in the Arab world after Cairo. It is located on the Tigris near the ruins of the ancient city of Babylon and the Sassanid Persian capital of Ctesiphon. I ...
to a Syriac Jacobite Christian family. He was a student of
Yahya ibn Adi Abū Zakarīyā’ Yaḥyá ibn ʿAdī (''John, father of Zachary, son of Adi'') known as Yahya ibn Adi (893–974) was a Syriac Jacobite Christian philosopher, theologian and translator working in Arabic.
Biography
Yahya ibn Adi was born in Tikrit ...
. He was accused of engaging in trade with the Byzantines and convicted. His possessions were confiscated and he died in Baghdad in 1008.
Ibn Zurʿa may be the philosopher "Antecer" cited by
Pedro Gallego
Pedro González Pérez (c. 1197 – 19 November 1267), known as Pedro Gallego ( la, Petrus Gallecus or ''Gallegus''), was a Franciscan scholar and prelate. He was the first bishop of Cartagena from the diocese's restoration in 1248 until ...
in his
Latin
Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through the power of the ...
works of the 13th century, if the latter is a garbled version of Avençer.
[Hugo Marquant]
"Pedro Gallego OFM (†1267) y la ciencia: ¿Escritor, compilador, traductor? Una reflexión traductológica"
in Antonio Bueno García (ed.), ''La Labor de traducción de los franciscanos'' (Editorial Cisneros, 2013), pp. 127–144, at p. 13 of the PDF.
Notes
References
*Marc Bergé, ''Les Arabes'' (1978), p. 343.
*Herbert Fergus Thomson, ''Four Treatises by Isa Ibn Zura'' (1952).
*
10th-century philosophers
Aristotelian philosophers
Christian philosophers
Syriac–Arabic translators
Syriac Orthodox Christians
People from Baghdad
943 births
1008 deaths
10th-century Arabic writers
Physicians from the Abbasid Caliphate
Christianity in the Abbasid Caliphate
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