Jewish Geography

  • 1 Replies
  • 3600 Views
*

17 November

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 1337
  • +5/-2
Jewish Geography
« on: February 14, 2011, 02:49:49 PM »
Shabbetai Ambron
(1901 Jewish Encyclopedia)
http://arabic.studylight.org/enc/tje/view.cgi?n=1376

A philosophical writer; lived in Rome in the first half of the eighteenth century. His life-work was a book on the universe, with the somewhat ambitious title "Pancosmosophia." It was first mentioned in the Venice "Giornale de' Letterati" (1710), and soon after in the Leipsic "Neuer Bucher-Saal der Gelehrten Welt." According to these sources, the author made a systematic attempt to refute the astronomical views of Ptolemy, Copernicus, and Tycho Brahe, and to set up a cosmogony, the underlying principle of which was that the earth was flat. He attempted to support his views by an appeal to Jewish tradition. The author had already prepared some hundred copperplates to illustrate his theories, when the Roman Inquisition prohibited the printing of the work. Ambron sent his manuscripts to Venice, but here also his efforts were frustrated by the papal nuncio, Mottei. On learning that German scholars were interested in his work, he sent it with the plates to the publisher of the "Neuer Bucher-Saalder Gelehrten-Welt," who promised to print it. The work, however, has not been published, and all trace is lost of the manuscript.

Ambron also devoted considerable work to a projected Bibliotheca Rabbinica, with the intention of correcting Bartolocci's errors and misconceptions. This manuscript shared the fate of the foregoing.

In 1721_he is known to have been a member of the Roman Congrega. In a pasquil written against Lorenzo Ganganelli (later Pope Clemens XIV.) it is said: "Denam e Ambrun amo como fratelli - Uno inglese, uno ebreo, che fe il signore" (He loved Denam and Ambrun like brothers - one was an Englishman, the other a Jew who played the role of a lord).

Bibliography: Giornale de' Letterati d'Italia, ii. 521-524, Venice, 1710; Neuer B?cher-Saal der Gelehrten-Welt 1710,_1712, 1713, ii. 180, iv. 328 et seq., xxv. 66, xxvi. 143; Journal des Savants, November, 1712; Wolf, Bibl. Hebr. i. 1022; Nepi-Ghirondi, Toledot Gedole Yisrael, p. 328; Furst, Bibl. Jud. iii. 183; Benjacob, Oẓar ha-Sefarim, p. 159; Steinschneider, Literaturblatt des Orients, 1843, p. 223; Vogelstein and Rieger, Gesch. d. Juden in Rom, ii. 278-281.M. B.

------------------------------------------

Thanks to "Ski" for locating this information.  

It appears that in his old age Rabbi Ambron befriended and possibly influenced the young Franciscan priest Giovanni Ganganelli who later became the pope that suppressed the jesuits.
« Last Edit: April 02, 2011, 08:16:58 PM by 17 November »

*

17 November

  • Flat Earth Believer
  • 1337
  • +5/-2
Re: Jewish Geography
« Reply #1 on: April 02, 2011, 08:17:46 PM »
The Sun's Path at Night
By Rabbi Natan Slifkin

http://www.zootorah.com/RationalistJudaism/TheSunsPathAtNight.pdf

Thanks again to Ski for finding this essay which sheds some light on the history of jewish opinion towards the shape of the earth.