162 Roger Swineshead
(Benedictine, Glastonbury)
163 Siger of Courtrai (Paris;
logic)
164 Nicolas Trivet (Oxford;
Dominican Thomist)
165 Hugh of Castro Novo
(Scotist)
166 Antonius Andreas (Scotist)
167 John of Reading (Oxford;
Franciscan; Scotist
anti-Ockham)
168 Richard Rolle of Hampole
(mystic hermit poet)
169 Nicolas Bonet (Paris; nat
sci)
170 Siegbert of Beck (Carmelite;
Thomist)
171 John of Jandun (Paris;
quasi-Averroist)
172 Peter of Abagno (Padua,
Paris; medicine, Averroist?)
173 William Peter of Godin
(Avignon; Dominican
Thomist)
174 Armand of Belvezer (France;
Dominican Thomist)
175 Bernard Lombardi (France;
Dominican Thomist)
176 Durand of Aureliaco (France;
Dominican Thomist)
177 Augustinus Triumphus (Paris,
Padua; Augustinian;
Thomist)
178 Angelo of Arezzo (Bologna;
Averroist)
179 Taddeo of Parma (Bologna;
medicine; Averroist)
180 Michael of Massa
(Augustinian; nat phil)
181 John of Sterngasse (Cologne
Albertist Neoplatonist)
182 Gerhard of Sterngasse
(Cologne Albertist
Neoplatonist)
183 Nicolas of Strasbourg
(Cologne Albertist
Neoplatonist)
184 John of Lichtenberg (Cologne;
Dominican Thomist)
185 Henry of Lubeck (Cologne;
Dominican Thomist)
186 Thomas of Erfurt
(grammarian)
187 John Aurifaber (Erfurt,
logic)
Figure 9.5. Jewish Philosophers
within Christendom, 1135–1535:
Maimonidists, Averroists, and
Kabbalists
1135
1 Yehuda ben Barzilai
(Barcelona)
2 Abraham ben Isaac of
Narbonne (Provence)
3 Samuel the Hasid (Speyer, f.
Hasidism)
1165
4 Jehudah the Hasid (Worms
Hasidist)
5 Abraham ben David (or
Rabad) (f. Kabbalah school,
Provence)
6 Jacob ha-Nazir
[49 Fig. 8.5] Judah ibn Tibbon (fled
Spain in Almohad invasion to
southern France; tr.)
1200
7 Isaac the Blind (Narbonne
school of Kabbalah)
8 Eleazar ben Jehudah (Worms
Hasidist)
Keys to Figures • 935