Ibrahim ibn Yuhanna (Arabic: إبراهيم بن يوحنا) was a Byzantine bureaucrat, translator, and author from Antioch in the late 10th and early 11th centuries.[1][2][3] He held the title of protospatharios and is often identified by this title in Arabic sources. Little is known for certain about his life, but he recounts in the Life of Christopher that he was a child in Antioch in the time of Patriarch Christopher and just before, meaning the late 950s and early 960s.[4] He evidently found success in the imperial bureaucracy after the Byzantines conquered Antioch in 969, given his elevated title. The Life describes events in the time of Patriarch Nicholas II (1025–1030), so Ibrahim must have lived at least to the very late 1020s.
^Graf, Georg (1947). Geschichte der christlichen arabischen Literatur. Vatican City: Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana. pp. II:45–48.
^ abNasrallah, Joseph (1983). Histoire du mouvement littéraire dans l’eglise melchite du Ve au XXe siècle. Leuven: Éditions Peeters. pp. III:1:289–305.
^ abZayat, Habib (1952). "Vie du patriarche melkite d'Antioche Christophore (†967) par le protospathaire Ibrahim b. Yuhanna: Document inédit du Xe siècle". Proche-Orient chrétien. 2: 11–38, 333–366.
^Treiger, Alexander (2019). "Greek into Arabic in Byzantine Antioch: ʿAbdallāh ibn al-Faḍl's 'Book of the Garden' (Kitāb ar-Rawḍa)". In Chitwood, Z; Pahlitzsch, J (eds.). Ambassadors, Artists, Theologians: Byzantine Relations with the Near East from the Ninth to the Thirteenth Centuries. Mainz: Veröffentlichungen des WissenschaftsCampus Mainz. p. 224.
^Brock, Sebastian (1990). "Syriac Manuscripts Copied on the Black Mountain, near Antioch". In Schulz, Regine; Görg, Manfred (eds.). Lingua restituta orientalis. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. pp. 62, 66–67.