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Nathan ben Eliezer ha-Me'ati : ウィキペディア英語版 | Nathan ben Eliezer ha-Me'ati Nathan ben Eliezer ha-Me'ati〔Nathan of Cento, Nathan da Cento.〕 was an Italian Jewish translator, the earliest known member of the Ha-Me'ati family that flourished at Rome in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. He was called the "Prince of Translators" and the "Italian Tibbonide". ==Life==
He lived in Rome from 1279 to 1283. His native place seems to have been Cento, hence his name "Me'ati," which is the Hebrew equivalent of "Cento" (= 100). After acquiring many languages during long wanderings, he settled at Rome, where he translated scientific and especially medical works from Arabic into Hebrew. This was to take the place, as he declared, of the medical literature of the Jews which had existed even at the time of Solomon but had been lost, and to silence the mockery of the Christians, who said that the Jews had no such literature.
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