-
Isaac ben
Baruch Albalia (Hebrew: יִצְחָק בֶּן בָּרוּךְ אַלבּאליה, Yiṣḥaq ben
Barukh Albalia; 1035–1094) was an
Andalusian Jewish mathematician, astronomer...
- is
illustrated by two incidents. When his
opponent Isaac Albalia died,
Alfasi adopted Albalia's son. When
Alfasi was
himself on the
point of death, he recommended...
- or
Ravad I or
Ravaad I or Ra'avad I. His
maternal grandfather was
Isaac Albalia. Some
scholars believe he was the Arabic-into-Latin
translator known as...
-
words toledot or tulaytula,
meaning "migration" or "wandering". The Abu
Albalia family traced its
ancestry to Baruch, a
skilled silk
weaver who, according...
-
among the
Spanish Christians."
Dunash ben
Labrat (920–990), poet
Isaac Albalia,
astronomer and
rabbi at
Granada Jehiel ben Asher, poet
Joseph ibn Migash...
-
directing at the same time an
important yeshiva.
Among his
students were
Isaac Albalia and
Isaac ibn Ghiyyat.
Joseph launched into a
series of
backfired intrigues...
- (approximate date)
Hermann of Salm,
German nobleman (approximate date)
Isaac Albalia,
Andalusian Jewish astronomer (d. 1094)
Leofwine Godwinson,
English nobleman...
-
Caliphate Abraham ibn Daud was a
student of
Rabbi Baruch ben
Yitzhak Ibn
Albalia, his
maternal uncle. Ibn Daud's
philosophical work
written in Arabic, Al-'akidah...
- Mu'allam of Seville,
besides his
schoolmates Joseph ibn
Migas and
Baruch Albalia and the
grammarian Abraham ibn Ezra. In Córdoba,
Judah addressed a touching...
-
Seljuk sultan of
Aleppo Badr al-Jamali,
Fatimid vizier and
statesman Isaac Albalia,
Andalusian Jewish astronomer (b. 1035)
Jonathan I, Italo-Norman count...