Career
He has been identified with the physician Judah b. Isaac of Barcelona, who is praised as a poet by First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Ḥarizi (ch 46), but he may also have lived at Burgos. Judah is a master of the "mosaic" style, and skillfully applies Biblical and Talmudic phrases.
His humor is spontaneous.
He is the author of Milḥemet ha-Ḥokmah weha-"Osher and Minḥat Yehudah Sone ha-Nashim. The former work (called also Melek Rab) is in the style of the "maḳamah," in rimed prose interspersed with short poems.
lieutenant was written in 1214, and is addressed to the nasi Todros ha-Levi Abulafia, who is called upon, at the end of the work, to act as judge in a poetical dispute. lieutenant appeared at Constantinople in 1543 (?), and was probably printed for the last time as an appendix to Abraham ben Ḥasdai"s Ben ha-Melek weha-Nazir (Warsaw, 1894).
Minḥat Yehudah Sone ha-Nashim (called also Sefer Zeraḥ or Taḥkemoni) likewise is written in the style of the maḳamah.
lieutenant is a humorous satire on women, and is a much better piece of work than the Milḥemet. lieutenant was written in 1218 and dedicated to Abraham al-Fakhkhar (ben ha-Yoẓer). Like the Milḥemet, it appears to have been first printed at Constantinople, in 1543, the last reprint being in Eliezer Ashkenazi"s Ṭa"am Zeḳenim (Frankfort-on-the-Main, 1854).