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MAIMONIDES

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 431 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MAIMONIDES  , the

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common name of
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RABBI MOSES BEN MAIMON (1135-1204), also known from the initials of these last words as RAMBAM, Jewish philosopher . His
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life falls into three epochs, which may be typified by the towns in which they were passed, viz . Cordova,
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Fez and Cairo . He was born in Cordova on the loth of March 1135, the
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eve of
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Passover; he had a
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brother, David, and one
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sister . His early years were spent in his native
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town, which had then just passed the zenith of its glory . The Arab rulers had fostered the development of science,
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art,
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medicine, philosophy, literature and learning . All these influences played their
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part in the
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education of Maimonides, whose
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father, besides training him in all branches of
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Hebrew and Jewish scholarship, implanted in the youth a sound knowledge of these secular studies as well . In 1148 Cordova was taken from the last Fatimite
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caliph by the victorious Almohades, who had spread over Spain from N . Africa . These militant revivalists strove to re-establish
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Islam in what they considered its
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primitive simplicity . They laid
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great stress on the unity of
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God, and tolerated neither
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schism within the faith nor dissent without . The position of the orthodox
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Spanish Jews became intolerable, and Maimon, after ten years of hard-
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ships, wanderings and escapes, decided to take his
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family out of the country .

He settled in Fez . The years which Maimonides spent there (116o—1165) were memorable for his friendship with Abdul Arab

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Ibn Muisha—a Moslem poet and theologian—and for the commencement of his
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literary activity . His energies were diverted towards stimulating the religious feelings of his brethren and combating assimilation . In consequence he became alarmed for his own safety, and in 1165
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left for
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Egypt, where he settled after a passing visit to the
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Holy
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Land . Cordova taught him the humanities; Fez humanity . Cairo, besides giving him prominence at court and in the Jewish community, was the centre of the almost
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world-wide influence which he exercised over Jewry by his monumental writings and dominant personality . By 1177 Maimonides was the recognized chief of the Cairene congregation and consulted on important matters by communities far and wide . Here he was joined by his most famous
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disciple, Joseph Aknin . But his early life in Egypt was fraught with deep sorrow . His father died soon after their arrival, and Maimonides himself suffered severely from prostration and sickness . His brother David, jointly with whom he carried on a trade in gems, was shipwrecked in the
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Indian Ocean . With him perished the entire fortune of the family .

Forced to

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earn a livelihood, Maimonides turned to medicine . The fame of his skill eventually brought him the appointment of
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body physician to Saladin, to whom, it is said, he was so attached that when Richard I. wrote from
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Ascalon, offering him a similar
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post at the
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English court, Maimonides refused . He married the sister of Ibn al Mali, one of the royal secretaries . In 1186, his son Abraham was born . His remaining years were spent in ceaseless activity and in controversy, which he sought to avoid . He died amidst universal sorrow and veneration . The
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works of Maimonides fall into three periods: (a) To the Spanish period belong his commentary on the whole
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Talmud (not fully carried out), a
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treatise on the
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calendar (Maamar ha-ibbur), a treatise on logic (Milloth Higgayon), and his commentary on the Mishnah (this was called Siraj or Maor, i.e . "
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Light ": begun 1158, completed 1168 in Egypt) . (b) While he was in Fez, he wrote an essay on the Sanctification of the Name of God (Maamar Kiddush Hashem, Iggereth Hashemad) . (c) The works written in Egypt were: Letter to the Yemenites (Iggereth Teman or Pethah Tiqvah) ; Responsa on questions of law; Biblical and Rabbinical Code (Misnheh Torah or Yad Hahazaka, completed 118o) ; Sepher hamitzvoth, an abbreviated handbook of the preceding; and his great philosophical
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work Moreh Nebuhim or " the guide of the perplexed " (119o) . To these must be added certain portions of the Mishnah commentary, such as the " Eight Chapters," the discussion on
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reward and punishment and immortality, the Jewish Creed, which have acquired fame as
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independent works . The influence of Moses ben Maimon is incalculable .

" From Moses unto Moses there arose not one like Moses," is the

verdict of posterity . Maimonides was the great exponent of reason in faith and toleration in
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theology . One of the main services to
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European thought of the " Guide" was its independent criticism of some of Aristotle's principles . His codification of the Talmud was equally appreciated in the study of the scholar and in
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practical life . Christian
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Europe owed much to Maimonides . Not only did his " Guide " influence
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scholasticism in general, but it was from his Code that the Church derived its
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medieval knowledge of the Synagogue . A
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complete bibliography will be found in Maimonides, by David Yellin and Israel Abrahams (
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London, 1903); the final chapter of that work gives a
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summary of the influence of Maimonides on Christian philosophers such as Aquinas, and Jewish such as Spinoza . The " Guide " has been translated into English by M . Friedlander (1881–1885; new ed., 1905) . See also Jewish Encyclopedia, articles s.v., and the volumes edited by Guttmann, Moses ben Maimon (
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Leipzig, 1908, &c.) . (H .

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