Travel Account
Jacob ben Nathaniel
ca. 1187
The places in the land of Israel, and the graves of the righteous that are there, which were composed by R. Jacob ben R. Nathaniel ha-Kohen when he entered the land of Israel.
I, Jacob ben R. Nathaniel ha-Kohen, traveled—with great difficulty, but with the help of the Holy One—to the land of Israel. There, I saw the graves of our righteous…
This untitled Hebrew account reports descriptions of holy places, tombs, and other interesting tidbits, including the distances between various locales. Although called a travel account, this work does not follow a route that an individual could have taken. The account also records encounters with non-Jews near the tombs of biblical characters and the wondrous structures that dotted the Jewish landscape across the Middle East. This kind of text would have been popular among European Jews interested in learning about communities and places that they could never visit. Jacob also describes the famous lighthouse of Alexandria, which was constructed in the third century CE and became a ruin in the late medieval period.
Related Guide
Early Medieval History and Travel Writing
Creator Bio
Jacob ben Nathaniel
Very little is known about the life of Jacob ben Nathaniel ha-Kohen, who possibly hailed from Provence, in southern France. His only known work is an account of interesting landmarks in the Middle East and the land of Israel.
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