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Asaph the Jew

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medical oath of Asafa ha-Rofe

Asaph the Jew (English: /ˈ.sæfˈðəˈdʒu/ Ay-saf, Hebrew: אסף היהודי Asaph HaYehudi), also known as Asaph ben Berechiah and Asaph the Physician (Hebrew: אסף הרופא Asaph HaRofè) is a figure mentioned in the ancient Jewish medical text the Sefer Refuot (lit. “Book of Medicines”). Thought by some to have been a Byzantine Jew[1] and the earliest known Hebrew medical writer,[2] he is however a rather uncertain figure who some have suggested is identifiable with the legendary mystical vizier Asif ibn Barkhiya of Arabian folklore, associated with King Solomon.[3] Scholars in favor of Asaph’s historicity suggest that he might have lived somewhere between the 3rd and 7th Centuries CE, possibly in Byzantine Palaestina or Mesopotamia. However, the text itself from which Asaph is known seems to place him between Hippocrates and Pedanius Dioscorides, which if chronological would imply that he might have been thought to have been between the 5th Century BCE and 1st Century CE, though this is very uncertain. The Sefer Refuot, the only known historical Jewish text to mention Asaph (and which he may have written or contributed to), is the earliest known Hebrew medical work, and thus of great historical significance.[4] The "Oath of Asaph" found in the text resembles the Hippocratic Oath[2][5] and in part also Charaka Samhita (in Sanskrit),[6] and was taken by medical students at their graduation.[7]

The Yitzhak Shamir Medical Center of Israel was named after him until 2017.

References

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  1. ^ Holo, J. Byzantine Jewry in the Mediterranean Economy 2009, p. 174
  2. ^ a b Rosner, Fred (1995). "Oath of Asaph". Medicine in the Bible and the Talmud: Selections from Classical Jewish Sources. KTAV Publishing House. pp. 182–186. ISBN 9780881255065.
  3. ^ Lieber, Elinor (1984). "Asaf's "Book of Medicines": A Hebrew Encyclopedia of Greek and Jewish Medicine, Possibly Compiled in Byzantium on an Indian Model". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 38: 233–249. doi:10.2307/1291508. ISSN 0070-7546. JSTOR 1291508.
  4. ^ Shatzmiller, Joseph (1994). Jews, Medicine, and Medieval Society. University of California Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780520080591.
  5. ^ Vaisrub, Samuel; A. Denman, Michael; Naparstek, Yaakov; Gilon, Dan (2008). "Medicine". Encyclopaedia Judaica. The Gale Group.
  6. ^ Suss, Richard A. (2024). "First Do No Harm Is Proverbial, Not Hippocratic". OSF Preprints: 7-8, 30. doi:10.31219/osf.io/c23jq.
  7. ^ "Oath of Asaph". Encyclopedia of Bioethics. The Gale Group Inc. 2004.