In 1570, Almosnino wrote a lengthy
Hebrew commentary on the Biblical "Five scrolls"—the books of Canticles, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, and Esther—under the title
Yede Mosheh ("The Hands of Moses"); also an exposition of the
Talmudical treatise
Abot "
Ethics of the Fathers" called
Pirkei Moshe, published at Salonica in 1563; and a collection of sermons delivered upon various occasions, particularly
funeral orations, entitled
Meammeẓ. Koah ("Reenforcing Strength.") These were published in Hebrew by his son Simon, the expense being defrayed by two other sons, Abraham and Absalom. Another Hebrew work by Almosnino was
Tefillah le-Mosheh ("The Prayer of Moses"), an
apologetic work on the
Pentateuch, published at Salonica in 1563, and republished at
Kraków in 1598 and 1805. Almosnino also wrote a
homiletic in
Judaeo-Spanish,
Regimiento de la Vida, which is written as a guide to his son about how one should live his life, treats among other things of the origin of
good and evil, the influence of the stars,
Providence, the
moral life, education of children, and
free will. To this was appended a chapter on "Dreams, Their Origin and True Nature," written, as it is stated, at the request of Don
Joseph Nasi,
Duke of Naxos. The work was printed in
Rashi script at the press of
Joseph Jaabez, Salonica, 1564, and was republished at Venice in 1604, and at Salonica in 1729. An appendix of five pages contains a list of difficult Spanish words, occurring therein, translated into Hebrew. An edition in Spanish letters was published by Samuel Mendes de Sola and associates in Amsterdam, 1729, dedicated to Aaron David Pinto. This work is considered one of the rarest in the Spanish language. A historical work by Almosnino,
Extremos y Grandezas de Constantinopla, also in Spanish with Hebrew characters, was transliterated and republished by Jacob Cansino, Madrid, 1638. According to
Moritz Steinschneider (
Die Hebräischen Uebersetzungen des Mittelalters und die Juden als Dolmetscher, p. 215), Moses Almosnino was also author of a commentary upon
Aristotle's
Ethics.
Eliakim Carmoly (p. 12) mentions it under the title of
Pene Mosheh ("The Face of Moses"), stating that it was written by Moses at Palestria near Salonica, and that his son Simon, after his father's death, desired to publish it (1584). ==References==