Great Scientists and Scholars
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Muslim scientists
and scholars have contributed immensely to human knowledge especially in the
period between 8th and 14th century CE. However, their contributions have been
largely ignored, forgotten or have gone un-acknowledged. On this site you can
read fascinating accounts of some of the most talented Muslim scholars in
history whose contributions have left lasting marks in the annals of science,
astronomy, medicine, surgery, engineering and philosophy.
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Contents:
Jabir Ibn Haiyan
Mohammad Bin Musa al-Khawarizmi
Yaqub Ibn Ishaq al-Kindi
Thabit Ibn Qurra
Ali Ibn Rabban al-Tabari
Omar al-Khayyam
Abu Hamid al-Ghazali
Abu Marwan Ibn Zuhr
Al-Idrisi
Ibn Rushd
Ibn al-Baitar died
Nasir al-Din al-Tusi
Jalal al-Din Rumi
Ibn al-Nafis
Ibn Khaldun
Ibn Sina - doctor of doctors
El Zahrawi - father of surgery
Ibn Battuta - the great traveller
Caesarean Birth - an Islamic view
Water Raising Machines
Abu Abdullah al-Battani
Al-Farghani
Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi
Abu al-Nasr al-Farabi
Abul Hasan Ali al-Masu'di
Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi
Abul Wafa Muhammad al-Buzjani
Abu Ali Hasan Ibn al-Haitham
Abu al-Hasan al-Mawardi
Abu Raihan al-Biruni
1.JABIR IBN
HAIYAN
(Died 803 C.E.)
Jabir Ibn Haiyan,
the alchemist Geber of the Middle Ages, is generally known as the father of
chemistry. Abu Musa Jabir Ibn Hayyan, sometimes called al-Harrani and al-Sufi,
was the son of the druggist (Attar). The precise date of his birth is the
subject of some discussion, but it is established that he practised medicine
and alchemy in Kufa around 776 C.E. He is reported to have studied under Imam
Ja'far Sadiq and the Ummayed prince Khalid Ibn Yazid. In his early days, he
practised medicine and was under the patronage of the Barmaki Vizir during the
Abbssid Caliphate of Haroon al-Rashid. He shared some of the effects of the
downfall of the Barmakis and was placed under house arrest in Kufa, where he
died in 803 C.E.
Jabir's major
contribution was in the field of chemistry. He introduced experimental
investigation into alchemy, which rapidly changed its character into modern
chemistry. On the ruins of his well-known laboratory remained after centuries,
but his fame rests on over 100 monumental treatises, of which 22 relate to
chemistry and alchemy. His contribution of fundamental importance to chemistry
includes perfection of scientific techniques such as crystalization,
distillation, calcination, sublimation and evaporation and development of
several instruments for the same. The fact of early development of chemistry as
a distinct branch of science by the Arabs, instead of the earlier vague ideas,
is well-established and the very name chemistry is derived from the Arabic word
al-Kimya, which was studied and developed extensively by the Muslim scientists.
Perhaps Jabir's
major practical achievement was the discovery of mineral and others acids,
which he prepared for the first time in his alembic (Anbique). Apart from
several contributions of basic nature to alchemy, involving largely the
preparation of new compounds and development of chemical methods, he also
developed a number of applied chemical processes, thus becoming a pioneer in
the field of applied science. His achievements in this field include
preparation of various metals, development of steel, dyeing of cloth and
tanning of leather, varnishing of water-proof cloth, use of manganese dioxide
in glass-making, prevention of rusting, letterring in gold, identification of
paints, greases, etc. During the course of these practical endeavours, he also
developed aqua regia to dissolve gold. The alembic is his great invention,
which made easy and systematic the process of distillation. Jabir laid great
stress on experimentation and accuracy in his work.
Based on their
properties, he has described three distinct types of substances. First, spirits
i.e. those which vaporise on heating, like camphor, arsenic and ammonium
chloride; secondly, metals, for example, gold, silver, lead, copper, iron, and
thirdly, the category of compounds which can be converted into powders. He thus
paved the way for such later classification as metals, non-metals and volatile
substances.
Although known as
an alchemist, he did not seem to have seriously pursued the preparation of
noble metals as an alchemist; instead he devoted his effort to the development
of basic chemical methods and study of mechanisms of chemical reactions in
themselves and thus helped evolve chemistry as a science from the legends of
alchemy. He emphasised that, in chemical reactions, definite quantities of
various substances are involved and thus can be said to have paved the way for
the law of constant proportions.
A large number of
books are included in his corpus. Apart from chemistry, he also contributed to
other sciences such as medicine and astronomy. His books on chemistry,
including his Kitab-al-Kimya, and Kitab al-Sab'een were translated into Latin
and various European languages. These translations were popular in Europe for
several centuries and have influenced the evolution of modern chemistry.
Several technical terms devised by Jabir, such as alkali, are today found in
various European languages and have become part of scientific vocabulary. Only
a few of his books have been edited and published, while several others
preserved in Arabic have yet to be annotated and published.
Doubts have been
expressed as to whether all the voluminous work included in the corpus is his
own contribution or it contains later commentaries/additions by his followers.
According to Sarton, the true worth of his work would only be known when all
his books have been edited and published. His religious views and philosophical
concepts embodied in the corpus have been criticised but, apart from the
question of their authenticity, it is to be emphasised that the major
contribution of Jabir lies in the field of chemistry and not in religion. His
various breakthroughs e.g., preparation of acids for the first time, notably
nitric, hydrochloric, citric and tartaric acids, and emphasis on systematic
experimentation are outstanding and it is on the basis of such work that he can
justly be regarded as the father of modern chemistry. In the words of Max
Mayerhaff, the development of chemistry in Europe can be traced directly to
Jabir Ibn Haiyan.
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2.YAQUB IBN ISHAQ
AL-KINDI
(800-873 C.E.)
Abu Yousuf Yaqub
Ibn Ishaq al-Kindi was born at Kufa around 800 C.E. His father was an official
of Haroon al-Rashid. Al-Kindi was a contemporary of al-Mamun, al-Mu'tasim and
al-Mutawakkil and flourished largely at Baghdad. He vas formally employed by
Mutawakkil as a calligrapher. On account of his philosophical views, Mutawakkil
was annoyed with him and confiscated all his books. These were, however,
returned later on. He died in 873 C.E. during the reign of al-M'utamid.
Al-Kindi was a
philosopher, mathematician, physicist, astronomer, physician, geographer and
even an expert in music. It is surprising that he made original contributions
to all of these fields. On account of his work he became known as the
philosopher of the Arabs.
In mathematics,
he wrote four books on the number system and laid the foundation of a large
part of modern arithmetic. No doubt the Arabic system of numerals was largely
developed by al- Khawarizmi, but al-Kindi also made rich contributions to it.
He also contributed to spherical geometry to assist him in astronomical
studies.
In chemistry, he
opposed the idea that base metals can be converted to precious metals. In
contrast to prevailing alchemical views, he was emphatic that chemical
reactions cannot bring about the transformation of elements. In physics, he
made rich contributions to geometrical optics and wrote a book on it. This book
later on provided guidance and inspiration to such eminent scientists as Roger
Bacon.
In medicine, his
chief contribution comprises the fact that he was the first to systematically
determine the doses to be adminis- tered of all the drugs known at his time.
This resolved the conflic- ting views prevailing among physicians on the dosage
that caused difficulties in writing recipes.
Very little was
known on the scientific aspects of music in his time. He pointed out that the
various notes that combine to produce harmony, have a specific pitch each.
Thus, notes with too low or too high a pitch are non-pleatant. The degree of
harmony depends on the frequency of notes, etc. He also pointed out the fact
that when a sound is produced, it generates waves in the air which strike the
ear-drum. His work contains a notation on the determination of pitch.
He was a prolific
writer, the total number of books written by him was 241, the prominent among
which were divided as follows:
Astronomy 16,
Arithmetic 11, Geometry 32, Medicine 22,
Physics 12,
Philosophy 22, Logic 9, Psychology 5, ar,d Music 7.
In addition,
various monographs written by him concern tides, astronomical instruments,
rocks, precious stones, etc. He was also an early translator of Greek works
into Arabic, but this fact has largely been over-shadowed by his numerous
original writings. It is unfortunate that most of his books are no longer
extant, but those existing speak very high of his standard of scholarship and
contribution. He was known as Alkindus in Latin and a large number of his books
were translated into Latin by Gherard of Cremona. His books that were
translated into Latin during the Middle Ages comprise Risalah dar Tanjim,
Ikhtiyarat al-Ayyam, Ilahyat-e-Aristu, al-Mosiqa, Mad-o-Jazr, and Aduiyah
Murakkaba.
Al-Kindi's
influence on development of science and philosophy was significant in the
revival of sciences in that period. In the Middle Ages, Cardano considered him
as one of the twelve greatest minds. His works, in fact, lead to further
development of various subjects for centuries, notably physics, mathematics,
medicine and music.
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3.MOHAMMAD BIN
MUSA AL-KHAWARIZMI
(Died 840 C.E.)
Abu Abdullah
Mohammad Ibn Musa al-Khawarizmi was born at Khawarizm (Kheva), south of Aral
sea. Very little is known about his early life, except for the fact that his
parents had migrated to a place south of Baghdad. The exact dates of his birth
and death are also not known, but it is established that he flourished under
Al- Mamun at Baghdad through 813-833 and probably died around 840 C.E.
Khawarizmi was a
mathematician, astronomer and geographer. He was perhaps one of the greatest
mathematicians who ever lived, as, in fact, he was the founder of several
branches and basic concepts of mathematics. In the words of Phillip Hitti, he
influenced mathematical thought to a greater extent than any other medieval
writer. His work on algebra was outstanding, as he not only initiated the
subject in a systematic form but he also developed it to the extent of giving
analytical solutions of linear and quadratic equations, which established him
as the founder of Algebra. The very name Algebra has been derived from his
famous book Al-Jabr wa-al-Muqabilah. His arithmetic synthesised Greek and Hindu
knowledge and also contained his own contribution of fundamental importance to
mathematics and science. Thus, he explained the use of zero, a numeral of
fundamental importance developed by the Arabs. Similarly, he developed the
decimal system so that the overall system of numerals, 'algorithm' or
'algorizm' is named after him. In addition to introducting the Indian system of
numerals (now generally known as Arabic numerals), he developed at length
several arithmetical procedures, including operations on fractions. It was
through his work that the system of numerals was first introduced to Arabs and
later to Europe, through its translations in European languages. He developed
in detail trigonometric tables containing the sine functions, which were
probably extrapolated to tangent functions by Maslama. He also perfected the geometric
representation of conic sections and developed the calculus of two errors,
which practically led him to the concept of differentiation. He is also
reported to have collaborated in the degree measurements ordered by Mamun
al-Rashid were aimed at measuring of volume and circumference of the earth.
The development
of astronomical tables by him was a significant contribution to the science of
astronomy, on which he also wrote a book. The contribution of Khawarizmi to
geography is also outstanding, in that not only did he revise Ptolemy's views
on geography, but also corrected them in detail as well as his map of the
world. His other contributions include original work related to clocks,
sundials and astrolabes.
Several of his
books were translated into Latin in the early 12th century. In fact, his book
on arithmetic, Kitab al-Jam'a wal- Tafreeq bil Hisab al-Hindi, was lost in
Arabic but survived in a Latin translation. His book on algebra, Al-Maqala fi
Hisab-al Jabr wa-al- Muqabilah, was also translated into Latin in the 12th
century, and it was this translation which introduced this new science to the
West "completely unknown till then". He astronomical tables were also
translated into European languages and, later, into Chinese. His geography
captioned Kitab Surat-al-Ard, together with its maps, was also translated. In
addition, he wrote a book on the Jewish calendar Istikhraj Tarikh al-Yahud, and
two books on the astrolabe. He also wrote Kitab al-Tarikh and his book on
sun-dials was captioned Kitab al-Rukhmat, but both of them have been lost.
The influence of
Khawarizmi on the growth of science, in general, and mathematics, astronomy and
geography in particular, is well established in history. Several of his books
were readily translated into a number of other languages, and, in fact,
constituted the university textbooks till the 16th century. His approach was
systematic and logical, and not only did he bring together the then prevailing
knowledge on various branches of science, particularly mathematics, but also
enriched it through his original contribution. No doubt he has been held in
high repute throughout the centuries since then.
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4.THABIT IBN
QURRA
(836-901 C.E.)
Thabit Ibn Qurra
Ibn Marwan al-Sabi al-Harrani was born in the year 836 C.E. at Harran (present
Turkey). As the name indicates he was basically a member of the Sabian sect,
but the great Muslim mathematician Muhammad Ibn Musa Ibn Shakir, impressed by
his knowledge of languages, and realising his potential for a scientific
career, selected him to join the scientific group at Baghdad that was being
patronised by the Abbasid Caliphs. There, he studied under the famous Banu Musa
brothers. It was in this setting that Thabit contributed to several branches of
science, notably mathematics, astronomy and mechanics, in addition to
translating a large number of works from Greek to Arabic. Later, he was
patronised by the Abbasid Caliph al-M'utadid. After a long career of
scholarship, Thabit died at Baghdad in 901 C.E.
Thabit's major
contribution lies in mathematics and astronomy. He was instrumental in
extending the concept of traditional geometry to geometrical algebra and
proposed several theories that led to the development of non-Euclidean
geometry, spherical trigonometry, integral calculus and real numbers. He
criticised a number of theorems of Euclid's elements and proposed important
improvements. He applied arithmetical terminology to geometrical quantities,
and studied several aspects of conic sections, notably those of parabola and
ellipse. A number of his computations aimed at determining the surfaces and
volumes of different types of bodies and constitute, in fact, the processes of
integral calculus, as developed later.
In astronomy he
was one of the early reformers of Ptolemic views. He analysed several. problems
related to the movements of sun and moon and wrote treatises on sun-dials.
In the fields of
mechanics and physics he may be recognised as the founder of statics. He
examined conditions of equilibrium of bodies, beams and levers.
In addition to
translating a large number of books himself, he founded a school of translation
and supervised the translation of a further large number of books from Greek to
Arabic.
Among Thabit's writings
a large number have survived, while several are not extant. Most of the books
are on mathematics, followed by astronomy and medicine. The books have been
written in Arabic but some are in Syriac. In the Middle Ages, some of his books
were translated into Latin by Gherard of Cremona. In recent centuries, a number
of his books have been translated into European languages and published.
He carried
further the work of the Banu Musa brothers and later his son and grandson
continued in this tradition, together with the other members of the group. His
original books as well as his translations accomplished in the 9th century
exerted a positive influence on the development of subsequent scientific
research.
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5.ALI IBN RABBAN
AL-TABARI
(838-870 C.E.)
This accomplished
Hakim was the tutor of the unparalleled physician Zakariya al-Razi. Luck
favoured the disciple more than the teacher in terms of celebrity. As compared
to Razi people know very little about his teacher Ali.
Ali Bin Rabban's
surname was Abu al-Hasan, the full name being Abu al-Hasan Ali Bin Sahl Rabban
al-Tabari. Born in 838 C.E. his father Sahl hailed from a respectable Jew
family. The nobility and sympathy inherent in his very nature soon endeared him
to his countrymen so much so that they used to call him Rabban which implies
"my leader".
Professionally
Sahl was an extremely successful physician. He had command over the art of
calligraphy too. Besides he had a deep insight into the disciplines of
Astronomy, Philosophy, Mathematics and Literature. Some complicated articles of
Batlemus's book al-Mijasti came to be resolved by way of Sahl's scholarly
expertise, translators preceding him had failed to solve the mystery.
Ali received his
education in the disciplines of Medical science and calligraphy from his able
father Sahl and attained perfection in these fields. He had also mastered
Syriac and Greek languages to a high degree of proficiency.
Ali hailed from a
Israelite family. Since he had embraced Islam, he is classified amongst Muslirn
Scholars. This family belonged to Tabristan's famous city Marv.
The fame acquired
by Ali Bin Rabban did not simply account for the reason that a physician of the
stature of Zakariya al-Razi was amongst his disciple. In fact the main cause
behind his exalta- tion lies in his world-renowned treatise Firdous al-Hikmat.
Spread over seven
parts, Firdous al-Hikmat is the first ever Medical encyclopaedia which
incorporates all the branches of medical science in its folds. This work has
been published in this century (20th century) only. Prior to this publication
only five of his manuscripts were to be found scattered in libraries the world
over. Dr. Mohammed Zubair Siddiqui compared and edited the manuscripts. In his
preface he has provided extremely useful information regarding the book and the
author and, wherever felt necessary, explanatory notes have been written to
facilitate publication of this work on modern publishing standards.
Later on this
unique work was published with the cooperation of English and German institutions.
Following are the details of its all seven parts:
1. Part one:
Kulliyat-e-Tibb. This part throws light on contempo- rary ideology of medical
science. In that era these principles formed the basis of medical science.
2. Part two:
Elucidation of the organs of the human body, rules for keeping good health and
comprehensive account of certain muscular diseases.
3. Part three:
Description of diet to be taken in conditions of health and disease.
4. Part four: All
diseases right from head to toe. This part is of profound significance in the
whole book and comprises twelve papers:
i) General causes
relating to eruption of diseases. ii) Diseases of the head and the brain. iii)
Diseases relating to the eye, nose, ear, mouth and the teeth. iv) Muscular diseases
(paralysis and spasm). v) Diseases of the regions of the chest, throat and the
lungs. vi) Diseases of the abdomen. vii) Diseases of the liver. viii) Diseases
of gallbladder and spleen. ix) Intestinal diseases. x) Different kinds of
fever. xi) Miscellaneous diseases- brief explanation of organs of the body.
xii) Examination of pulse and urine. This part is the largest in the book and
is almost half the size of the whole book.
5. Part five:
Description of flavour, taste and colour.
6. Part six:
Drugs and poison.
7. Part seven:
Deals with diverse topics. Discusses climate and astronomy. Also contains a
brief mention of Indian medicine.
Though he wrote
Firdous al-Hikmat in Arabic but he simultaneously translated it into Syriac. He
has two more compilations to his credit namely Deen-o-Doulat and Hifdh
al-Sehhat. The latter is available in manuscript-form in the library of Oxford
University. Besides Medical science, he was also a master of Philosophy,
Mathematics and Astronomy. He breathed his last around 870 C.E.
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6.ABU ABDULLAH
AL-BATTANI
(868-929 C.E.)
Abu Abdallah
Muhammad Ibn Jabir Ibn Sinan al-Battani al-Harrani was born around 858 C.E. in
Harran, and according to one account, in Battan, a State of Harran. Battani was
first educated by his father Jabir Ibn San'an al-Battani, who was also a
well-known scientist. He then moved to Raqqa, situated on the bank of the
Euphrates, where he received advanced education and later on flourished as a scholar.
At the beginning of the 9th century, he migrated to Samarra, where he worked
till the end of his life in 929 C.E. He was of Sabian origin, but was himself a
Muslim.
Battani was a
famous astronomer, mathematician and astrologer. He has been held as one of the
greatest astronomists of Islam. He is responsible for a number of important
discoveries in astronomy, which was the result of a long career of 42 years of
research beginning at Raqqa when he was young. His well-known discovery is the
remarkably accurate determination of the solar year as being 365 days, 5 hours,
46 minutes and 24 seconds, which is very close to the latest estimates. He
found that the longitude of the sun's apogee had increased by 16° , 47' since
Ptolemy. This implied the important discovery of the motion of the solar
apsides and of a slow variation in the equation of time. He did not believe in
the trapidation of the equinoxes, although Copernicus held it.
Al-Battani
determined with remarkable accuracy the obliquity of the ecliptic, the length
of the seasons and the true and mean orbit of the sun. He proved, in sharp
contrast to Ptolemy, the variation of the apparent angular diameter of the sun
and the possibility of annular eclipses. He rectified several orbits of the
moon and the planets and propounded a new and very ingenious theory to
determine the conditions of visibility of the new moon. His excellent
observations of lunar and solar eclipses were used by Dunthorne in 1749 to
determine the secular acceleration of motion of the moon. He also provided very
neat solutions by means of orthographic projection for some problems of
spherical trigonometry.
In mathematics,
he was the first to replace the use of Greek chords by sines, with a clear
understanding of their superiority.He also developed the concept of cotangent
and furnished their table in degrees.
He wrote a number
of books on astronomy and trigonometry. His most famous book was his
astronomical treatise with tables, which was translated into Latin in the 12th
century and flourished as De scienta stellerum — De numeris stellerum et
motibus. An old translation of this is available of the Vatican. His Zij was,
in fact, more accurate than all others written by that time.
His treatise on
astronomy was extremely influential in Europe till the Renaissance, with
translations available in several languages. His original discoveries both in
astronomy and trigonometry were of great consequence in the development of
these sciences.
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7.AL-FARGHANI
(C. 860 C.E.)
Abu'l-Abbas Ahmad
ibn Muhammad ibn Kathir al-Farghani, born in Farghana, Transoxiana, was one of
the most distinguished astronomers in the service of al-Mamun and his
successors. He wrote "Elements of Astronomy" (Kitab fi al-Harakat
al-Samawiya wa Jawami Ilm al-Nujum i.e. the book on celestial motion and
thorough science of the stars), which was translated into Latin in the 12th
century and exerted great influence upon European astronomy before Regiomontanus.
He accepted Ptolemy's theory and value of the precession, but thought that it
affected not only the stars but also the planets. He determined the diameter of
the earth to be 6,500 miles, and found the greatest distances and also the
diameters of the planets.
Al-Farghani's
activities extended to engineering. According to Ibn Tughri Birdi, he
supervised the construction of the Great Nilometer at al-Fustat (old Cairo). It
was completed in 861, the year in which the Caliph al-Mutawakkil, who ordered
the construction, died. But engineering was not al-Farghani's forte, as
transpires from the following story narrated by Ibn Abi Usaybi'a.
Al-Mutawakkil had
entrusted the two sons of Musa ibn Shakir, Muhammad and Ahmad, with supervising
the digging of a canal named al-Ja'fari. They delegated the work to
Al-Farghani, thus deliberately ignoring a better engineer, Sind ibn Ali, whom,
out of professional jealousy, they had caused to be sent to Baghdad, away from
al-Mutawakkil's court in Samarra. The canal was to run through the new city,
al-Ja'fariyya, which al-Mutawakkil had built near Samarra on the Tigris and
named after himself. Al-Farghani committed a grave error, making the beginning
of the canal deeper than the rest, so that not enough water would run through
the length of the canal except when the Tigris was high. News of this angered
the Caliph, and the two brothers were saved from severe punishment only by the
gracious willingness of Sind ibn Ali to vouch for the correctness of
al-Farghani's calculations, thus risking his own welfare and possibly his life.
As had been correctly predicted by astrologers, however, al-Mutawakkil was
murdered shortly before the error became apparent. The explanation given for
Al-Farghani's mistake is that being a theoretician rather than a practical
engineer, he never successfully completed a construction.
The Fihrist of
Ibn al-Nadim, written in 987, ascribes only two works to Al-Farghani: (1)
"The Book of Chapters, a summary of the Almagest" (Kitab al-Fusul,
Ikhtiyar al-Majisti) and (2) "Book on the Construction of Sun-dials"
(Kitab 'Amal al-Rukhamat).
The Jawami, or
'The Elements' as we shall call it, was Al- Farghani's best-known and most
influential work. Abd al-Aziz al-Qabisi (d. 967) wrote a commentary on it,
which is preserved in the Istanbul manuscript, Aya Sofya 4832, fols. 97v-114v.
Two Latin translations followed in the 12th century. Jacob Anatoli produced a
Hebrew translation of the book that served as a basis for a third Latin
version, appearing in 1590, whereas Jacob Golius published a new Latin text
together with the Arabic original in 1669. The influence of 'The Elements' on
mediaeval Europe is clearly vindicated by the presence of innumerable Latin
manuscripts in European libraries.
References to it
by medieval writers are many, and there is no doubt that it was greatly
responsible for spreading knowledge of Ptolemaic astronomy, at least until this
role was taken over by Sacrobosco's Sphere. But even then, 'The Elements' of
Al-Farghani continued to be used, and Sacrobosco's Sphere was evidently
indebted to it. It was from 'The Elements' (in Gherard's translation) that
Dante derived the astronomical knowledge displayed in the 'Vita nuova' and in
the 'Convivio'.
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8.MOHAMMAD IBN
ZAKARIYA AL-RAZI
(864-930 C.E.)
Abu Bakr Mohammad
Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (864-930 C.E.) was born at Ray, Iran. Initially, he was
interested in music but later on he learnt medicine, mathematics, astronomy,
chemistry and philosophy from a student of Hunayn Ibn Ishaq, who was well
versed in the ancient Greek, Persian and Indian systems of medicine and other
subjects. He also studied under Ali Ibn Rabban. The practical experience gained
at the well-known Muqtadari Hospital helped him in his chosen profession of
medicine. At an early age he gained eminence as an expert in medicine and
alchemy, so that patients and students flocked to him from distant parts of
Asia.
He was first
placed in-charge of the first Royal Hospital at Ray, from where he soon moved
to a similar position in Baghdad where he remained the head of its famous
Muqtadari Hospital for along time. He moved from time to time to various
cities, specially between Ray and Baghdad, but finally returned to Ray, where
he died around 930 C.E. His name is commemorated in the Razi Institute near
Tehran.
Razi was a Hakim,
an alchemist and a philosopher. In medicine, his contribution was so
significant that it can only be compared to that of Ibn Sina. Some of his works
in medicine e.g. Kitab al- Mansoori, Al-Hawi, Kitab al-Mulooki and Kitab
al-Judari wa al- Hasabah earned everlasting fame. Kitab al-Mansoori, which was
translated into Latin in the 15th century C.E., comprised ten volumes and dealt
exhaustively with Greco-Arab medicine. Some of its volumes were published
separately in Europe. His al-Judari wal Hasabah was the first treatise on
smallpox and chicken-pox, and is largely based on Razi's original contribution:
It was translated into various European languages. Through this treatise he became
the first to draw clear comparisons between smallpox and chicken-pox. Al-Hawi
was the largest medical encyclopaedia composed by then. It contained on each
medical subject all important information that was available from Greek and
Arab sources, and this was concluded by him by giving his own remarks based on
his experience and views. A special feature of his medical system was that he
greatly favoured cure through correct and regulated food. This was combined
with his emphasis on the influence of psychological factors on health. He also
tried proposed remedies first on animals in order to evaluate in their effects
and side effects. He was also an expert surgeon and was the first to use opium
for anaesthesia.
In addition to
being a physician, he compounded medicines and, in his later years, gave
himself over to experimental and theoretical sciences. It seems possible that
he developed his chemistry independently of Jabir Ibn Hayyan. He has portrayed
in great detail several chemical reactions and also given full descriptions of
and designs for about twenty instruments used in chemical investigations. His
description of chemical knowledge is in plain and plausible language. One of
his books called Kitab-al-Asrar deals with the preparation of chemical materials
and their utilization. Another one was translated into Latin under the name
Liber Experi- mentorum, He went beyond his predecessors in dividing substances
into plants, animals and minerals, thus in a way opening the way for inorganic
and organic chemistry. By and large, this classification of the three kingdoms
still holds. As a chemist, he was the first to produce sulfuric acid together
with some other acids, and he also prepared alcohol by fermenting sweet
products.
His contribution
as a philosopher is also well known. The basic elements in his philosophical
system are the creator, spirit, matter, space and time. He discusses their
characteristics in detail and his concepts of space and time as constituting a
continuum are outstanding. His philosophical views were, however, criticised by
a number of other Muslim scholars of the era.
He was a prolific
author, who has left monumental treatises on numerous subjects. He has more
than 200 outstanding scientific contributions to his credit, out of which about
half deal with medicine and 21 concern alchemy. He also wrote on physics,
mathematics, astronomy and optics, but these writings could not be preserved. A
number of his books, including Jami-fi-al-Tib, Mansoori, al-Hawi, Kitab
al-Jadari wa al-Hasabah, al-Malooki, Maqalah fi al- Hasat fi Kuli wa
al-Mathana, Kitab al-Qalb, Kitab al-Mafasil, Kitab-al- 'Ilaj al-Ghoraba, Bar
al-Sa'ah, and al-Taqseem wa al-Takhsir, have been published in various European
languages. About 40 of his manuscripts are still extant in the museums and
libraries of Iran, Paris, Britain, Rampur, and Bankipur. His contribution has
greatly influenced the development of science, in general, and medicine, in
particular.
________________________________________
9.ABU AL-NASR
AL-FARABI
(870-950 C.E.)
Abu Nasr Mohammad
Ibn al-Farakh al-Farabi was born in a small village Wasij, near Farab in
Turkistan in 259 A.H. (870 C.E.). His parents were originally of Persian
descent, but his ancestors had migrated to Turkistan. Known as al-Phrarabius in
Europe, Farabi was the son of a general. He completed his earlier education at
Farab and Bukhara but, later on, he went to Baghdad for higher studies, where
he studied and worked for a long time viz., from 901 C.E. to 942 C.E. During
this period he acquired mastery over several languages as well as various
branches of knowledge and technology. He lived through the reign of six Abbasid
Caliphs. As a philosopher and scientist, he acquired great proficiency in
various branches of learning and is reported to have been an expert in
different languages.
Farabi travelled
to many distant lands and studied for some time in Damascus and Egypt, but
repeatedly came back to Baghdad, until he visited Saif al-Daula's court in
Halab (Allepo). He became one of the constant companions of the King, and it
was here at Halab that his fame spread far and wide. During his early years he
was a Qadi (Judge), but later on the took up teaching as his profession. During
the course of his career, he had suffered great hardships and at one time was
the caretaker of a garden. He died a bachelor in Damascus in 339 A.H./950 C.E.
at the age of 80 years.
Farabi
contributed considerably to science, philosophy, logic, sociology, medicine,
mathematics and music. His major contributions seem to be in philosophy, logic
and sociology and, of course, stands out as an Encyclopedist. As a philosopher,
he may be classed as a Neoplatonist who tried to synthesize Platonism and
Aristotelism with theology and he wrote such rich commentaries on Aristotle's
physics, meteorology, logic, etc., in addition to a large number of books on
several other subjects embodying his original contribution, that he came to be
known as the 'Second Teacher' (al-Mou'allim al-Thani) Aristotle being the
First.
One of the important contributions of Farabi was to make the study of
logic more easy by dividing it into two categories viz., Takhayyul (idea) and
Thubut (proof).
In sociology he
wrote several books out of which Ara Ahl al-Madina al-Fadila became famous. His
books on psychology and metaphysics were largely based on his own work. He also
wrote a book on music, captioned Kitab al-Musiqa. He was a great expert in the
art and science of music and invented several musical instruments, besides
contributing to the knowledge of musical notes. It has been reported that he
could play his instrument so well as to make people laugh or weep at will. In
physics he demonstrated the existence of void.
Although many of
his books have been lost, 117 are known, out of which 43 are on logic, 11 on
metaphysics, 7 on ethics, 7 on political science, 17 on music, medicine and
sociology, while 11 are commentaries. Some of his more famous books include the
book Fusus al-Hikam, which remained a text book of philosophy for several
centuries at various centres of learning and is still taught at some of the
institutions in the East. The book Kitab al-lhsa al 'Ulum discusses
classification and fundamental principles of science in a unique and useful
manner. The book Ara Ahl al-Madina al- Fadila 'The Model City' is a significant
early contribution to sociology snd political science.
Farabi exercised
great influence on science and knowledge for several centuries. Unfortunately,
the book Theology of Aristotle, as was available to him at that time was
regarded by him as genuine, although later on it turned out to be the work of
some Neoplatonic writer. Despite this, he was regarded the Second Teacher in philosophy
for centuries and his work, aimed at synthesis of philosophy and sufism, paved
the way for Ibn Sina's work.
________________________________________
10.ABUL HASAN ALI
AL-MASU'DI
(DIED 957 C.E.)
Abul Hasan Ali
Ibn Husain Ibn Ali Al-Masu'di was a descendant of Abdallah Ibn Masu'd, a
companion of the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him). An expert geographer, a
physicist and historian, Masu'di was born in the last decade of the 9th century
C.E., his exact date of birth being unknown. He was a Mutazilite Arab, who
explored distant lands and died at Cairo, in 957 C.E.
He travelled to
Fars in 915 C.E. and, after staying for one year in Istikhar, he proceeded via
Baghdad to India, where he visited Multan and Mansoora before returning to
Fars. From there he travelled to Kirman and then again to India. Mansoora in
those days was a city of great renown and was the capital of the Muslim state
of Sind. Around it, there were many settlements/townships of new converts to
Islam. In 918 C.E., Masu'di travelled to Gujrat, where more than 10,000 Arab
Muslims had settled in the sea-port of Chamoor.
He also travelled to Deccan,
Ceylon, Indo-China and China, and proceeded via Madagascar, Zanjibar and Oman
to Basra.
At Basra he
completed his book Muruj-al-Thahab, in which he has described in a most
absorbing manner his experience of various countries, peoples and climates. He
gives accounts of his personal contacts with the Jews, Iranians, Indians and
Christians. From Basra he moved to Syria and from there to Cairo, where he
wrote his second extensive book Muruj al-Zaman in thirty volumes. In this book
he has described in detail the geography and history of the countries that he
had visited. His first book was completed in 947 C.E. He also prepared a supplement,
called Kitab al-Ausat, in which he has compiled historical events
chronologically. In 957 C.E., the year of his death, he completed his last book
Kitab al-Tanbih wa al-Ishraf, in which he has given a summary of his earlier
book as well as an errata.
Masu'di is
referred to as the Herodotus and Pliny of the Arabs. By presenting a critical
account of historical events, he initiated a change in the art of historical
writing, introducing the elements of analysis, reflection and criticism, which
was later on further improved by Ibn Khaldun. In particular, in al-Tanbeeh he
makes a systematic study of history against a perspective of geography,
sociology, anthropology and ecology. Masu'di had a deep insight into the causes
of rise and fall of nations.
With his
scientific and analytical approach he has given an account of the causes of the
earthquake of 955 C.E., as well as the discussions of the water of the Red Sea
and other problems in the earth sciences. He is the first author to make
mention of windmills, which were invented by the Muslims of Sijistan.
Masu'di also made
important contributions to music and other fields of science. In his book Muruj
al-Thahab he provides important information on early Arab music as well as
music of other countries.
His book Muruj
al-Thahab wa al-Ma'adin al-Jawahir (Meadows of Gold and Mines of Precious
Stones) has been held as 'remarkable' because of the 'catholicity of its
author, who neglected no source of information and of his truly scientific
curiosity'. As mentioned above, it was followed by his treatise Muruj al-Zaman.
In addition to writing a supplement Kitab al-Ausat, he completed Kitab
al-Tanbih wa al-Ishraf towards the end of his career. It is, however,
unfortunate that, out of his 34 books as mentioned by himself in Al-Tanbih,
only three have survived, in addition to Al-Tanbih itself.
Some doubts have
been expressed about some claims related to his extensive travelling e.g., upto
China and Madagascar, but the correct situation cannot be assessed due to the
loss of his several books. Whatever he has recorded was with a scientific
approach and constituted an important contribution to geography, history and
earth sciences. It is interesting to note that he was one of the early
scientists who propounded several aspects of evolution viz., from minerals to
plant, plant to animal and animal to man. His researches and views extensively
influenced the sciences of historiography, geography and earth sciences for
several countries.
________________________________________
11.ABU AL-QASIM
AL-ZAHRAWI
(936-1013 C.E.)
Abul Qasim Khalaf
ibn al-Abbas al-Zahrawi (known in the west as Abulcasis) was born in 936 C.E.
in Zahra in the neighbourhood of Cordova. He became one of the most renowned
surgeons of the Muslim era and was physician to King Al-Hakam-II of Spain.
After a long medical career, rich with significant original contribution, he
died in 1013 C.E.
He is best known
for his early and original breakthroughs in surgery as well as for his famous
Medical Ecyclopaedia called Al-Tasrif, which is composed of thirty volumes
covering different aspects of medical science. The more important part of this
series comprises three books on surgery, which describe in detail various
aspects of surgical treatment as based on the operations performed by him,
including cauterization, removal of stone from the bladder, dissection of
animals, midwifery, stypics, and surgery of eye, ear and throat. He perfected
several delicate operations, including removal of the dead foetus and amputation.
Al-Tasrif was
first translated by Gherard of Cremona into Latin in the Middle Ages. It was
followed by several other editors in Europe. The book contains numerous
diagrams and illustrations of surgical instruments, in use or developed by him,
and comprised a part of the medical curriculum in European countries for many
centuries. Contrary to the view that the Muslims fought shy of surgery,
Al-Zahrawi's Al-Tasrif provided a monumental collection for this branch of
applied science.
Al-Zahrawi was the
inventor of several surgical instruments, of which three are notable: (i) an
instrument for internal examina- tion of the ear, (ii) an instrument for
internal inspection of the urethra, and (iii) and instrument for applying or
removing foreign bodies from the throat. He specialized in curing disease by
cauterization and applied the technique to as many as 50 different operations.
In his book
Al-Tasrif, Al-Zahrawi has also discussed the preparation of various medicines,
in addition to a comprehensive account of surgical treatment in specialized
branches, whose modern counterparts are E.N.T., Ophthalmology, etc. In
connection with the preparation of medicines, he has also described in detail
the application of such techniques as sublimation and decantation. Al-Zahrawi
was also an expert in dentistry, and his book contains sketches of various
instruments used thereof, in addition to a description of various important
dental operations. He discussed the problem of non-aligned or deformed teeth
and how to rectify these defects. He developed the technique of preparing
artificial teeth and of replacement of defective teeth by these. In medicine,
he was the first to describe in detail the unusual disease, haemophelia.
There can be no
doubt that Al-Zahrawi influenced the field of medicine and surgery very deeply
and the principles laid down by him were recognized as authentic in medical
science, especially surgery, and these continued to influence the medical world
for five centuries. According to Dr. Cambell (History of Arab Medicine), his
principles of medical science surpassed those of Galen in the European medical
curriculum.
________________________________________
12.ABUL WAFA
MUHAMMAD AL-BUZJANI
(940-997 C.E.)
Abul Wafa
Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Yahya Ibn Ismail al-Buzjani was born in Buzjan,
Nishapur in 940 C.E. He flourished as a great mathematician and astronomer at
Baghdad and died in 997/998 C.E. He learnt mathematics in Baghdad. In 959 C.E.
he migrated to Iraq and lived there till his death.
Abul Wafa's main
contribution lies in several branches of mathematics, especially geometry and
trigonometry. In geometry his contribution comprises solution of geometrical
problems with opening of the compass; construction of a square equivalent to
other squares; regular polyhedra; construction of regular hectagon taking for
its side half the side of the equilateral triangle inscribed in the same
circle; constructions of parabola by points and geometrical solution of the
equations:
x4 = a and x4 +
ax3 = b
Abul Wafa's
contribution to the development of trigonometry was extensive. He was the first
to show the generality of the sine theorem relative to spherical triangles. He
developed a new method of constructing sine tables, the value of sin 30' being
correct to the eighth decimal place. He also developed relations for sine (a+b)
and the formula:
2 sin2 (a/2) = 1
- cos a , and
sin a = 2 sin
(a/2) cos (a/2)
In addition, he
made a special study of the tangent and calculated a table of tangents. He
introduced the secant and cosecant for the first time, knew the relations
between the trigonometric lines, which are now used to define them, and
undertook extensive studies on conics.
Apart from being
a mathematician, Abul Wafa also contributed to astronomy. In this field he
discussed different movernents of the moon, and discovered 'variation'. He was
also one of the last Arabic translators and commentators of Greek works.
He wrote a large
number of books on mathematics and other subjects, most of which have been lost
or exist in modified forms. His contribution includes Kitab 'Ilm al-Hisab, a
practical book of arithmetic, al-Kitab al-Kamil (the Complete Book), Kitab
al-Handsa (Applied Geometry). Apart from this, he wrote rich commentaries on
Euclid, Diophantos and al-Khawarizmi, but all of these have been lost. His
books now extant include Kitab 'Ilm al-Hisab, Kitab al- Handsa and Kitab
al-Kamil.
His astronomical
knowledge on the movements of the moon has been criticized in that, in the case
of 'variation' the third inequality of the moon as he discussed was the second
part of the 'evection'. But, according to Sedat, what he discovered was the
same that was discovered by Tycho Brache six centuries later. Nonetheless, his
contribution to trigonometry was extremely significant in that he developed the
knowledge on the tangent and introduced the secant and cosecant for the first
time; in fact a sizeable part of today's trigonometry can be traced back to
him.
________________________________________
13.ABU ALI HASAN
IBN AL-HAITHAM
(965-1040 C.E.)
Abu Ali Hasan Ibn
al-Haitham was one of the most eminent physicists, whose contributions to
optics and the scientific methods are outstanding. Known in the West as
Alhazen, Ibn al-Haitham was born in 965 C.E. in Basrah, and was educated in
Basrah and Baghdad. Thereafter, he went to Egypt, where he was asked to find
ways of controlling the flood of the Nile. Being unsuccessful in this, he
feigned madness until the death of Caliph al-Hakim. He also travelled to Spain
and, during this period, he had ample time for his scientific pursuits, which
included optics, mathematics, physics, medicine and development of scientific
methods on each of which he has left several outstanding books.
He made a
thorough examination of the passage of light through various media and
discovered the laws of refraction. He also carried out the first experiments on
the dispersion of light into its constituent colours. His book
Kitab-al-Manadhir was translated into Latin in the Middle Ages, as also his
book dealing with the colours of sunset. He dealt at length with the theory of
various physical phenomena like shadows, eclipses, the rainbow, and speculated
on the physical nature of light. He is the first to describe accurately the
various parts of the eye and give a scientific explanation of the process of
vision. He also attempted to explain binocular vision, and gave a correct
explanation of the apparent increase in size of the sun and the moon when near
the horizon. He is known for the earliest use of the camera obscura. He
contradicted Ptolemy's and Euclid's theory of vision that objects are seen by
rays of light emanating from the eyes; according to him the rays originate in
the object of vision and not in the eye. Through these extensive researches on
optics, he has been considered as the father of modern Optics.
The Latin
translation of his main work, Kitab-al-Manadhir, exerted a great influence upon
Western science e.g. on the work of Roger Bacon and Kepler. It brought about a
great progress in experimental methods. His research in catoptrics centred on
spherical and parabolic mirrors and spherical aberration. He made the important
observation that the ratio between the angle of incidence and refraction does
not remain constant and investigated the magnifying power of a lens. His
catoptrics contain the important problem known as Alhazen's problem. It
comprises drawing lines from two points in the plane of a circle meeting at a
point on the circumference and making equal angles with the norrnal at that
point. This leads to an equation of the fourth degree.
In his book Mizan
al-Hikmah Ibn al-Haitham has discussed the density of the atmosphere and
developed a relation between it and the height. He also studied atmospheric
refraction. He discovered that the twilight only ceases or begins when the sun
is 19° below the horizon and attempted to measure the height of the atmosphere
on that basis. He has also discussed the theories of attraction between masses,
and it seems that he was aware of the magnitude of acceleration due to gravity.
His contribution
to mathematics and physics was extensive. In mathematics, he developed
analytical geometry by establishing linkage between algebra and geometry. He
studied the mechanics of motion of a body and was the first to maintain that a
body moves perpetually unless an external force stops it or changes its
direction of motion. This would seem equivalent to the first law of motion.
The list of his
books runs to 200 or so, very few of which have survived. Even his monumental
treatise on optics survived through its Latin translation. During the Middle
Ages his books on cosmology were translated into Latin, Hebrew and other
languages. He has also written on the subject of evolution a book that deserves
serious attention even today.
In his writing,
one can see a clear development of the scientific methods as developed and
applied by the Muslims and comprising the systematic observation of physical
phenomena and their linking together into a scientific theory. This was a major
breakthrough in scientific methodology, as distinct from guess and gesture, and
placed scientific pursuits on a sound foundation comprising systematic
relationship between observation, hypothesis and verification.
Ibn al-Haitham's
influence on physical sciences in general, and optics in particular, has been
held in high esteem and, in fact, it ushered in a new era in optical research,
both in theory and practice.
________________________________________
14.ABU AL-HASAN
AL-MAWARDI
(972-1058 C.E.)
Abu al-Hasan Ali
Ibn Muhammad Ibn Habib al-Mawardi was born at Basrah in 972 C.E. He was
educated at first in Basrah where, after completion of his basic education, he
learned Fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) from the jurist Abu al-Wahid al-Simari. He
then went to Baghdad for advanced studies under Sheikh Abd al-Hamid and
Abdallah al-Baqi. His proficiency in jurisprudence Ethics, Political science
and literature proved useful in securing a respectable career for him. After
his initial appointment as Qadi (Judge), he was gradually promoted to higher
offices, till he became the Chief Justice at Baghdad. The Abbasid Caliph
al-Qaim bi Amr Allah appointed him as his roving ambassador and sent him to a
number of countries as the head of special missions. In this capacity he played
a key role in establishing harmonious relations between the declining Abbasid
Caliphate and the rising powers of Buwahids and Seljukes. He was favoured with
rich gifts and tributes by most Sultans of the time. He was still in Baghdad
when it was taken over by Buwahids. Al-Mawardi died in 1058 C.E.
Al-Mawardi was a
great jurist, mohaddith, sociologist and an expert in Political Science. He was
a jurist in the school of Fiqh and his book Al-Hawi on the principles of
jurisprudence is held in high repute.
His contribution
in political science and sociology comprises a number of monumental books, the
most famous of which are Kitab al-Ahkam al-Sultania, Qanun al-Wazarah, and
Kitab Nasihat al-Mulk. The books discuss the principles of political science,
with special reference to the functions and duties of the caliphs, the chief
minister, other ministers, relationships between various elements of public and
govemment and measures to strengthen the government and ensure victory in war.
Two of these books, al-Ahkam al-Sultania and Qanun al-Wazarah have been
published and also translated into various languages. He is considered as being
the author/supporter of the 'Doctrine of Necessity' in political science. He
was thus in favour of a strong caliphate and discouraged unlimited powers
delegated to the Governors, which tended to create chaos. On the other hand, he
has laid down clear principles for election of the caliph and qualities of the
voters, chief among which are attainment of a degree of intellectual level and
purity of character.
In ethics, he
wrote Kitab Aadab al-Dunya wa al-Din, which became a widely popular book on the
subject and is still read in some Islamic countries.
Al-Mawardi has
been considered as one of the most famous thinkers in political science in the
middle ages. His original work influenced the development of this science,
together with the science of sociology, which was further developed later on by
Ibn Khaldun.
________________________________________
15.ABU RAIHAN AL-BIRUNI
(973-1048 C.E.)
Abu Raihan
Mohammad Ibn Ahmad al-Biruni was one of the well-known figures associated with
the court of King Mahmood Ghaznawi, who was one of the famous Muslim kings of
the 11th century C.E. Al-Biruni was a versatile scholar and scientist who had
equal facility in physics, metaphysics, mathematics, geography and history.
Born in the city of Kheva near "Ural" in 973 C.E., he was a
contemporary of the well-known physician Ibn Sina. At an early age, the fame of
his scholarship went around and when Sultan Mahmood Ghaznawi conquered his
homeland, he took al-Biruni along with him in his journeys to India several
times and thus he had the opportunity to travel all over India during a period
of 20 years. He learnt Hindu philosophy, mathematics, geography and religion
from thre Pandits to whom he taught Greek and Arabic science and philosophy. He
died in 1048 C.E. at the age of 75, after having spent 40 years in thus
gathering knowledge and making his own original contributions to it.
He recorded
observations of his travels through India in his well-known book Kitab al-Hind
which gives a graphic account of the historical and social conditions of the
sub-continent. At the end of this book he makes a mention of having translated
two Sanskrit books into Arabic, one called Sakaya, which deals with the
creation of things and their types, and the second, Patanjal dealing with what
happens after the spirit leaves the body. His descriptions of India were so
complete that even the Aein-i-Akbari written by Abu-al- Fadal during the reign
of Akbar, 600 years later, owes a great deal to al-Biruni's book. He observed
that the Indus valley must be considered as an ancient sea basin filled up with
alluvials.
On his return
from India, al-Biruni wrote his famous book Qanun-i Masoodi (al-Qanun
al-Masudi, fi al-Hai'a wa al-Nujum), which he dedicated to Sultan Masood. The
book discusses several theories of astronomy, trigonometry, solar, lunar, and
planetary motions and relative topics. In another well-known book al-Athar
al-Baqia, he has attempted a connected account of ancient history of nations
and the related geographical knowledge. In this book, he has discussed the
rotation of the earth and has given correct values of latitudes and longitudes
of various places. He has also made considerable contribution to several
aspects of physical and economic geography in this book.
His other
scientific contributions include the accurate determination of the densities of
18 different stones. He also wrote the Kitab-al-Saidana, which is an extensive
materia medica that combines the then existing Arabic knowledge on the subject
with the Indian medicine. His book the Kitab-al-Jamahir deals with the
properties of various precious stones. He was also an astrologer and is reputed
to have astonished people by the accuracy of his predictions. He gave a clear
account of Hindu numerals, elaborating the principle of position. Summation of
a geometric progression appropos of the chess game led to the number:
1616° - 1 =
18,446,744,073,709,551,619.
He developed a
method for trisection of angle and other problems which cannot be solved with a
ruler and a compass alone. Al-Biruni discussed, centuries before the rest of
the world, the question whether the earth rotates around its axis or not. He was
the first to undertake experiments related to astronomical phenomena. His
scientific method, taken together with that of other Muslim scientists, such as
Ibn al-Haitham, laid down the early foundation of modern science. He
ascertained that as compared with the speed of sound the speed of light is
immense. He explained the working of natural springs and artesian wells by the
hydrostatic principle of communicating vessels. His investigations included
description of various monstrosities, including that known as
"Siamese" twins. He observed that flowers have 3,4,5,6, or 18 petals,
but never 7 or 9.
He wrote a number
of books and treatises. Apart from Kitab-al- Hind (History and Geography of
India), al-Qanun al-Masudi (Astro- nomy, Trigonometry), al-Athar al-Baqia
(Ancient History and Geography), Kitab al-Saidana (Materia Medica) and Kitab
al-Jawahir (Precious Stones) as mentioned above, his book al-Tafhim-li-Awail
Sina'at al-Tanjim gives a summary of mathematics and astronomy.
He has been
considered as one of the very greatest scientists of Islam, and, all
considered, one of the greatest of all times. His critical spirit, love of
truth, and scientific approach were combined with a sense of toleration. His
enthusiasm for knowledge may be judged from his claim that the phrase Allah is
Omniscient does not justify ignorance.
________________________________________
16.IBN SINA
(980-1037 C.E.)
Abu Ali
al-Hussain Ibn Abdallah Ibn Sina was born in 980 C.E. at Afshana near Bukhara.
The young Bu Ali received his early education in Bukhara, and by the age of ten
had become well versed in the study of the Qur'an and various sciences. He
started studying philosophy by reading various Greek, Muslim and other books on
this subject and learnt logic and some other subjects from Abu Abdallah Natili,
a famous philosopher of the time. While still young, he attained such a degree
of expertise in medicine that his renown spread far and wide. At the age of 17,
he was fortunate in curing Nooh Ibn Mansoor, the King of Bukhhara, of an
illness in which all the well-known physicians had given up hope. On his
recovery, the King wished to reward him, but the young physician only desired
permission to use his uniquely stocked library.
On his father's
death, Bu Ali left Bukhara and travelled to Jurjan where Khawarizm Shah
welcomed him. There, he met his famous contemporary Abu Raihan al-Biruni. Later
he moved to Ray and then to Hamadan, where he wrote his famous book Al-Qanun fi
al-Tibb. Here he treated Shams al-Daulah, the King of Hamadan, for severe
colic. From Hamadan, he moved to Isphahan, where he completed many of his
monumental writings. Nevertheless, he continued travelling and the excessive
mental exertion as well as political turmoil spoilt his health. Finally, he
returned to Hamadan where he died in 1037 C.E.
\
He was the most
famous physician, philosopher, encyclopaedist, mathematician and astronomer of
his time. His major contribution to medical science was his famous book
al-Qanun, known as the "Canon" in the West. The Qanun fi al-Tibb is
an immense encyclo- paedia of medicine extending over a million words. It
surveyed the entire medical knowledge available from ancient and Muslim
sources. Due to its systematic approach, "formal perfection as well as its
intrinsic value, the Qanun superseded Razi's Hawi, Ali Ibn Abbas's Maliki, and
even the works of Galen, and remained supreme for six centuries". In
addition to bringing together the then available knowledge, the book is rich
with the author's original eontribution. His important original contribution
includes such advances as recognition of the contagious nature of phthisis and
tuberculosis; distribution of diseases by water and soil, and interaction
between psychology and health. In addition to describing pharmacological
methods, the book described 760 drugs and became the most authentic materia
medica of the era. He was also the first to describe meningitis and made rich
contributions to anatomy, gynaecology and child health.
His philosophical
encyclopaedia Kitab al-Shifa was a monu- mental work, embodying a vast field of
knowledge from philosophy to science. He classified the entire field as
follows: theoretical knowledge: physics, mathematics and metaphysics; and
practical knowledge: ethics, economics and politics. His philosophy synthesises
Aristotelian tradition, Neoplatonic influences and Muslim theology.
Ibn Sina also
contributed to mathematics, physics, music and other fields. He explained the
"casting out of nines" and its applica- tion to the verification of
squares and cubes. He made several astronomical observations, and devised a
contrivance similar to the vernier, to increase the precision of instrumental
readings. In physics, his contribution comprised the study of different forms
of energy, heat, light and mechanical, and such concepts as force, vacuum and
infinity. He made the important observation that if the perception of light is
due to the emission of some sort of particles by the luminous source, the speed
of light must be finite.
He propounded an interconnection between time and
motion, and also made investigations on specific gravity and used an air
thermo- meter.
In the field of
music, his contribution was an improvement over Farabi's work and was far ahead
of knowledge prevailing else- where on the subject. Doubling with the fourth
and fifth was a 'great' step towards the harmonic system and doubling with the
third seems to have also been allowed. Ibn Sina observed that in the series of
consonances represented by (n + 1)/n, the ear is unable to distinguish them
when n = 45. In the field of chemistry, he did not believe in the possibility
of chemical transmutation because, in his opinion, the metals differed in a
fundamental sense. These views were radically opposed to those prevailing at
the time. His treatise on minerals was one of the "main" sources of
geology of the Christian encyclopaedists of the thirteenth century. Besides
Shifa his well-known treatises in philosophy are al-Najat and Isharat.
________________________________________
17.OMAR
AL-KHAYYAM
(1044-1123 C.E.)
Ghiyath al-Din
Abul Fateh Omar Ibn Ibrahim al-Khayyam was born at Nishapur, the provincial
capital of Khurasan around 1044 C.E. (c. 1038 to 1048). Persian mathematician,
astronomer, philosopher, physician and poet, he is commonly known as Omar
Khayyam. Khayyam means the tent-maker, and although generally considered as
Persian, it has also been suggested that he could have belonged to the Khayyami
tribe of Arab origin who might have settled in Persia. Little is known about
his early life, except for the fact that he was educated at Nishapur and lived
there and at Samarqand for most of his life. He was a contemporary of Nidham
al-Mulk Tusi. Contrary to the available opportunities, he did not like to be
employed at the King's court and led a calm life devoted to search for
knowledge. He travelled to the great centres of learn- ing, Samarqand, Bukhara,
Balkh and Isphahan in order to study further and exchange views with the
scholars there. While at Samarqand he was patronised by a dignatory, Abu Tahir.
He died at Nishapur in 1123-24.
Algebra would
seem to rank first among the fields to which he contributed. He made an attempt
to classify most algebraic equations, including the third degree equations and,
in fact, offered solutions for a number of them. This includes geometric
solutions of cubic equations and partial geometric solutions of most other
equations. His book Maqalat fi al-Jabr wa al-Muqabila is a master- piece on
algebra and has great importance in the development of algebra. His remarkable
classification of equations is based on the complexity of the equations, as the
higher the degree of an equation, the more terms, or combinations of terms, it
will contain. Thus, Khayyam recognizes 13 different forms of cubic equatlon.
His method of solving equations is largely geometrical and depends upon an
ingenious selection of proper conics. He also developed the binomial expansion
when the exponent is a positive integer. In fact, he has been considered to be
the first to find the binomial theorem and determine binomial coefficients. In
geometry, he studied generalities of Euclid and contributed to the theory of
parallel lines.
The Saljuq
Sultan, Malikshah Jalal al-Din, called him to the new observatory at Ray around
1074 and assigned him the task of determining a correct solar calendar. This
had become necessary in view of the revenue collections and other
administrative matters that were to be performed at different times of the
year. Khayyam introduced a calendar that was remarkably accurate, and was named
as Al-Tarikh-al-Jalali. It had an error of one day in 3770 years and was thus
even superior to the Georgian calendar (error of 1 day in 3330 years).
His contributions
to other fields of science include a study of generalities of Euclid,
development of methods for the accurate determination of specific gravity, etc.
In metaphysics, he wrote three books Risala Dar Wujud and the recently
discovered Nauruz- namah. He was also a renowned astronomer and a physician.
Apart from being
a scientist, Khayyam was also a well-known poet. In this capacity, he has
become more popularly known in the Western world since 1839, when Edward
Fitzgerald published an English translation of his Rubaiyat (quatrains). This
has since become one of the most popular classics of world literature. It
should be appreciated that it is practically impossible to exactly translate
any literary work into another language, what to talk of poetry, especially
when it involves mystical and philosophical messages of deep complexity.
Despite this, the popularity of the translation of Rubaiyat would indicate the
wealth of his rich thought.
Khayyam wrote a
large number of books and monographs in the above areas. Out of these, 10 books
and thirty monographs have been identified. Of these, four concern mathematics,
three physics, three metaphysics, one algebra and one geometry.
His influence on
the development of mathematics in general and analytical geometry, in
particular, has been immense. His work remained ahead of others for centuries
till the times of Descartes, who applied the same geometrical approach in
solving cubics. His fame as a mathematician has been partially eclipsed by his
popularity as a poet; nonetheless his contribution as a philosopher and
scientist has been of significant value in furthering the frontiers of human
knowledge.
________________________________________
18.ABU HAMID
AL-GHAZALI
(1058-1128 C.E.)
Abu Hamid Ibn
Muhammad Ibn Muhammad al-Tusi al-Shafi'i al-Ghazali was born in 1058 C.E. in
Khorasan, Iran. His father died while he was still very young but he had the
opportunity of getting education in the prevalent curriculum at Nishapur and
Baghdad. Soon he acquired a high standard of scholarship in religion and
philosophy and was honoured by his appointment as a Professor at the Nizamiyah
University of Baghdad, which was recognised as one of the most reputed
institutions of learning in the golden era of Muslim history.
After a few
years, however, he gave up his academic pursuits and worldly interests and
became a wandering ascetic. This was a process (period) of mystical
transformation. Later, he resumed his teaching duties, but again left these. An
era of solitary life, devoted to contemplation and writing then ensued, which
led to the authorship of a number of everlasting books. He died in 1128 C.E. at
Baghdad.
Ghazali's major
contribution lies in religion, philosophy and sufism. A number of Muslim
philosophers had been following and developing several viewpoints of Greek
philosophy, including the Neoplatonic philosophy, and this was leading to
conflict with several Islamic teachings. On the other hand, the movement of
sufism was assuming such excessive proportions as to avoid observance of
obligatory prayers and duties of Islam. Based on his unquestionable scholarship
and personal mystical experience, Ghazali sought to rectify these trends, both
in philosophy and sufism.
In philosophy,
Ghazali upheld the approach of mathematics and exact sciences as essentially
correct. However, he adopted the techniques of Aristotelian logic and the
Neoplatonic procedures and employed these very tools to lay bare the flaws and
lacunae of the then prevalent Neoplatonic philosophy and to diminish the
negative influences of Aristotelianism and excessive rationalism. In contrast
to some of the Muslim philosophers, e.g., Farabi, he portrayed the inability of
reason to comprehend the absolute and the infinite. Reason could not transcend
the finite and was limited to the observation of the relative. Also, several
Muslim philosophers had held that the universe was finite in space but infinite
in time. Ghazali argued that an infinite time was related to an infinite space.
With his clarity of thought and force of argument, he was able to create a
balance between religion and reason, and identified their respective spheres as
being the infinite and the finite, respectively.
In religion,
particularly mysticism, he cleansed the approach of sufism of its excesses and
reestablished the authority of the orthodox religion. Yet, he stressed the
importance of genuine sufism, which he maintained was the path to attain the
absolute truth.
He was a prolific
writer. His immortal books include Tuhafut al-Falasifa (The Incoherence of the
Philosophers), Ihya al-'Ulum al-Islamia (The Rivival of the Religious Sciences),
"The Beginning of Guidance and his Autobiography", "Deliverance
from Error". Some of his works were translated into European languages in
the Middle Ages. He also wrote a summary of astronomy.
Ghazali's
influence was deep and everlasting. He is one of the greatest theologians of
Islam. His theological doctrines penetrated Europe, influenced Jewish and
Christian Scholasticism and several of his arguments seem to have been adopted
by St. Thomas Aquinas in order to similarly reestablish the authority of orthodox
Christian religion in the West. So forceful was his argument in the favour of
religion that he was accused of damaging the cause of philosophy and, in the
Muslim Spain, Ibn Rushd (Averros) wrote a rejoinder to his Tuhafut.
________________________________________
19.ABU MARWAN IBN
ZUHR
(1091-1161 C.E.)
Abu Marwan Abd
al-Malik Ibn Zuhr was born at Seville in 1091/c. 1094 C.E. After completing his
education and specializing in medicine, he entered the service of Almoravides
(Al-Murabatun), but after their defeat by the Al-Mohades (Al-Muwahadun), he
served under 'Abd al-Mu'min, the first Muwahid ruler. He died in Seville in
1161/c. 1162 C.E. As confirmed by George Sarton, he was not a Jew, but an
orthodox Muslim.
Ibn Zuhr was one
of the greatest physicians and clinicians of the Muslim golden era and has
rather been held by some historians of science as the greatest of them.
Contrary to the general practice of the Muslim scholars of that era, he
confined his work to only one field medicine. This enabled him to produce works
of everlasting fame.
As a physician,
he made several discoveries and breakthroughs. He described correctly, for the
first time, scabies, the itch mite and may thus be regarded as the first
parasitologist. Likewise, he prescribed tracheotomy and direct feeding through
the gullet and rectum in the cases where normal feeding was not possible. He
also gave clinical descriptions of mediastinal tumours, intestinal phthisis,
inflammation of the middle ear, pericarditis, etc.
His contribution
was chiefly contained in the monumental works written by him; out of these,
however, only three are extant. Kitab al-Taisir fi al-Mudawat wa al-Tadbir
(Book of Simplification concerning Therapeutics and Diet), written at the
request of Ibn Rushd (Averroes), is the most important work of Ibn Zuhr. It
describes several of Ibn Zuhr's original contributions. The book gives in
detail pathological conditions, followed by therapy. His Kitab al-Iqtisad fi
Islah al-Anfus wa al-Ajsad (Book of the Middle Course concerning the
Reformation of Souls and the Bodies) gives a summary of diseases, therapeutics
and hygiene written specially for the benefit of the layman. Its initial part
is a valuable discourse on psychology. Kitab al-Aghthiya (Book on Foodstuffs)
describes different types of food and drugs and their effects on health.
Ibn Zuhr in his
works lays stress on observation and experiment and his contribution greatly
influenced the medical science for several centuries both in the East and the
West. His books were translated into Latin and Hebrew and remained popular in
Europe as late as the advent of the 18th century.
________________________________________
20.AL-IDRISI
(1099-1166 C.E.)
Abu Abdallah
Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Abdallah Ibn Idris al-Qurtubi al-Hasani, was bom in
Ceuta, Spain, in 1099 C.E. He was educated in Cordova. Later he travelled far
and wide in connection with his studies and then flourished at the Norman court
in Palermo. The date of his death is controversial, being either 1166 or 1180
C.E.
Biographical
notes on him are to be found rathe rararely, and according to F. Pons Boigues
the underlying reason is the fact that the Arab biographers considered
al-Idrisi to be a renegade, since he had been associated with the court of a
Christian king and written in praise of him, in his work. The circumstances
which led him to settle in Sicily at the court of Roger II are not on record.
His major
contribution lies in medicinal plants as presented in his several books,
specially Kitab al-Jami-li-Sifat Ashtat al-Nabatat. He studied and reviewed all
the literature on the subject of medicinal plants and formed the opinion that
very little original material had been added to this branch of knowledge since
the early Greek work. He, therefore, collected plants and data not reported
earlier and added this to the subject of botany, with special reference to
medicinal plants. Thus, a large number of new drugs plants together with their
evaluation became available to the medical practitioners. He has given the
names of the drugs in six languages: Syriac, Greek, Persian, Hindi, Latin and
Berber.
In addition to
the above, he made original contributions to geography, especially as related
to economics, physical factors and cultural aspects. He made a planishere in
silver for King Roger II, and described the world in Al-Kitab al-Rujari
(Roger's Book), also entitled Nuzhat al-Mushtaq fi Ikhtiraq al-Afaq (The
delight of him who desires to journey through the climates). This is
practically a geographical encyclopaedia of the time, containing information
not only on Asia and Africa, but also Western countries.
Al-Idrisi, later
on, also compiled another geographical encyclo- paedia, larger than the former
entitled Rawd-Unnas wa-Nuzhat al-Nafs (Pleasure of men and delight of souls)
also known as Kitab al- Mamalik wa al-Masalik.
Apart from botany
and geography, Idrisi also wrote on fauna, zoology and therapeutical aspects.
His work was soon translated into Latin and, especially, his books on geography
remained popular both in the East and the West for several centuries.
________________________________________
21.IBN RUSHD
(1128-1198 C.E.)
Abu'l Waleed
Muhammad Ibn Ahmad Ibn Muhammad Ibn Rushd, known as Averroes in the West, was
born in 1128 C.E. in Cordova, where his father and grandfather had both been
judges. His grandfather was well versed in Fiqh (Maliki School) and was also
the Imam of the Jamia Mosque of Cordova. The young Ibn Rushd received his
education in Cordova and lived a quiet life, devoting most of his time to
learned-pursuits. He studied philoso- phy and law from Abu J'afar Haroon and
from Ibn Baja; he also studied medicine.
Al-Hakam, the
famous Umayyad Caliph of Spain, had construc- ted a magnificent library in
Cordova, which housed 500,000 books, He himself had studied many of these and
made brief marginal comments on them. This rich collection laid the foundation
for intellectual study in Spain and provided the background for men like Ibn
Rushd, who lived 2 centuries later.
Abu Yaqub, the
Caliph of Morocco, called him to his capital and appointed him as his physician
in place of Ibn Tufail. His son Yaqub al-Mansur retained him for some time but
soon Ibn Rushd's views on theology and philosophy drew the Caliph's wrath. All
his books, barring strictly scientific ones, were burnt and he was banished to
Lucena. However, as a result of intervention of several leading scholars he was
forgiven after about four years and recalled to Morocco in 1198; but he died
towards the end of the same year.
Ibn Rushd made
remarkable contributions. in philosophy, logic, medicine, music and
jurisprudence. In medicine his well- known book Kitab al-Kulyat fi al-Tibb was
written before 1162 C.E. Its Latin translation was known as 'Colliget'. In it,
Ibn Rushd has thrown light on various aspects of medicine, including the
diagnoses, cure and prevention of diseases. The book concentrates on specific
areas in comparison of Ibn Sina's wider scope of al-Qanun, but contains several
original observations of Ibn Rushd.
In philosophy,
his most important work Tuhafut al-Tuhafut was written in response to
al-Ghazali's work. Ibn Rushd was criticised by many Muslim scholars for this
book, which, neverthe- less, had a profound influence on European thought, at
least until the beginning of modern philosophy and experimental science. His
views on fate were that man is neither in full control of his destiny nor is it
fully predetermined for him. He wrote three commenlaries on the works of
Aristotle, as these were known then through Arabic translations. The shortest
Jami may be considered as a summary of the subject. The intermediate was
Talkhis and the longest was the Tafsir. These three commentaries would seem to
correspond to different stages in the education of pupils; the short one was
meant for the beginners, then the intermediate for the students familiar with
the subject, and finally the longest one for advanced studies. The longest
commentary was, in fact, an original contribution as it was largely based on
his analysis including interpretation of Qu'ranic concepts.
In the field of
music, Ibn Rushd wrote a commentary on Aristotle's book De Anima. This book was
translated into Latin by Mitchell the Scott.
In astronomy he
wrote a treatise on the motion of the sphere, Kitab fi-Harakat al-Falak. He
also summarised Almagest and divided it into two parts: description of the
spheres, and movement of the spheres. This summary of the Almagest was
translated from Arabic into Hebrew by Jacob Anatoli in 1231.
According to Ibn
al-Abbar, Ibn Rushd's writings spread over 20,000 pages, the most famous of
which deal with philosophy, medicine and jurisprudence. On medicine alone he
wrote 20 books. Regarding jurisprudence, his book Bidayat al-Mujtahid
wa-Nihayat- al-Muqtasid has been held by Ibn Jafar Thahabi as possibly the best
book on the Maliki School of Fiqh. Ibn Rushd's writings were translated into
various languages, including Latin, English, German and Hebrew. Most of his commentaries
on philosophy are preserved in the Hebrew translations, or in Latin
translations from the Hebrew, and a few in the original Arabic, generally in
Hebrew script. This reveals his wider acceptance in the West in comparison to
the East. The commentary on zoology is entirely lost. Ibn Rushd also wrote
commentaries on Plato's Republic, Galen's treatise on fevers, al- Farabi's
logic, etc. Eighty-seven of his books are still extant.
Ibn Rushd has
been held as one of the greatest thinkers and scientists of the 12th century.
According to Philip Hitti, Ibn Rushd influenced Western thought from the 12th
to the 16th centuries. His books were included in the syllabi of Paris and
other universities till the advent of modern experimental sciences.
________________________________________
22.IBN AL-BAITAR
(DIED 1248 C.E.)
Abu Muhammad
Abdallah Ibn Ahmad Ibn al-Baitar Dhiya al-Din al-Malaqi was one of the greatest
scientists of Muslim Spain and was the greatest botanist and pharmacist of the
Middle Ages. He was born in the Spanish city of Malaqa (Malaga) towards the end
of the 12th century. He learned botany from Abu al-Abbas al-Nabati, a learned
botanist, with whom he started collecting plants in and around Spain. In 1219
he left Spain on a plant-collecting expedition and travelled along the northern
coast of Africa as far as Asia Minor.
The exact modes of his travel (whether by
land or sea) are not known, but the major stations he visited include Bugia,
Qastantunia (Constantinople), Tunis, Tripoli, Barqa and Adalia. After 1224 he
entered the service of al-Kamil, the Egyptian Governor, and was appointed chief
herbalist. In 1227 al-Kamil extended his domination to Damascus, and Ibn
al-Baitar accompanied him there which provided him an opportunity to collect
plants in Syria His researches on plants extended over a vast area:including
Arabia and Palestine, which he either visited or managed to collect plants from
stations located there. He died in Damascus in 1248.
Ibn Baitar's
major contribution, Kitab al-Jami fi al-Adwiya al- Mufrada, is one of the
greatest botanical compilations dealing with medicinal plants in Arabic. It
enjoyed a high status among botanists up to the 16th century and is a
systematic work that embodies earlier works, with due criticism, and adds a
great part of original contribution. The encyclopaedia comprises some 1,400
different items, largely medicinal plants and vegetables, of which about 200
plants were not known earlier. The book refers to the work of some 150 authors
mostly Arabic, and it also quotes about 20 early Greek scientists. It was
translated into Latin and published in 1758.
His second
monumental treatise Kitab al-Mlughni fi al-Adwiya al-Mufrada is an
encyclopaedia of medicine. The drugs are listed in accordance with their
therapeutical value. Thus, its 20 different chapters deal with the plants
bearing significance to diseases of head, ear, eye, etc. On surgical issues he
has frequently quoted the famous Muslim surgeon, Abul Qasim Zahrawi. Besides
Arabic, Baitar has given Greek and Latin names of the plants, thus facilitating
transfer of knowledge.
Ibn Baitar's
contributions are characterised by observation, analysis and classification and
have exerted a profound influence on Eastern as well as Western botany and
medicine. Though the Jami was translated/published late in the western
languages as mentioned above, yet many scientists had earlier studied various
parts of the book and made several references to it.
________________________________________
23.NASIR AL-DIN
AL-TUSI
(1201-1274 C.E.)
Abu Jafar
Muhammad Ibn Muhammad Ibn al-Hasan Nasir al-Din al-Tusi was born in Tus
(Khurasan) in 1201 C.E. He learnt sciences and philosophy from Kamal al-Din Ibn
Yunus and others. He was one of those who were kidnapped by Hasan Bin Sabah's
agents and sent to Almut, Hasan's stronghold. In 1256 when Almut was conquered
by the Mongols, Nasir al-Din joined Halagu's service. Halagu Khan was deeply
impressed by his knowledge, including his astrological competency; appointed
him as one of his ministers, and, later on, as administrator of Auqaf. He was
instrumental in the establishment and progress of the observatory at Maragha.
In his last year of life he went to Baghdad and died there.
Nasir al-Din was
one of the greatest scientists, philosaphers, mathematicians, astronomers,
theologians and physicians of the time and was a prolific writer. He made
significant contributions to a large number of subjects, and it is indeed
difficult to present his work in a few words. He wrote one or several treatises
on different sciences and subjects including those on geometry, algebra,
arithmetic, trigonometry, medicine, metaphysics, logic, ethics and theology. In
addition he wrote poetry in Persian.
In mathematics, his
major contribution would seem to be in trigonometry, which was compiled by him
as a new subject in its own right for the first time. Also he developed the
subject of spherical trigonometry, including six fundamental formulas for the
solution of spherical right-angled triangles.
As the chief
scientist at the observatory established under his supervision at Maragha, he
made significant contributions to astronomy. The observatory was equipped with
the best possible instruments, including those collected by the Mongol armies
from Baghdad and other Islamic centres. The instruments included astrolabes,
representations of constellations, epicycles, shapes of spheres, etc. He
himself invented an instrument 'turquet' that contained two planes. After the
devoted work of 12 years at the observatory and with the assistance of his
group, he produced new astronomical tables called Al-Zij-Ilkhani dedicated to
Ilkhan (Halagu Khan).
Although Tusi had contemplated completing the tables in
30 years, the time required for the completion of planetary cycles, but he had
to complete them in 12 years on orders from Halagu Khan. The tables were
largely based on original observa- tions, but also drew upon the then existing
knowledge on the subject. The Zij Ilkhani became the most popular tables among
astronomers and remained so till the 15th century. Nasir al-Din pointed out
several serious shortcomings in Ptolemy's astronomy and foreshadowed the later
dissatisfaction with the system that culminated in the Copernican reforms.
In philosophy,
apart from his contribution in logic and meta- physics, his work on ethics
entitled Akhlaq-i-Nasri became the most important book on the subject, and
remained popular for centuries. His book Tajrid-al-'Aqaid was a major work on
al-Kalam (Islamic Scholastic Philosophy) and enjoyed widespread popularity.
Several commentaries were written on this book and even a number of
supercommentaries on the major commentaries, Sharh Qadim and Sharh Jadid.
The list of his
known treatises is exhaustive; Brockelmann lists 56 and Sarton 64. About
one-fourth of these concern mathe- matics, another fourth astronomy, another
fourth philosophy and religion, and the remainder other subjects. The books,
though originally written in Arabic and Persian, were translated into Latin and
other European languages in the Middle Ages and several of these have been
printed.
Tusi's influence
has been significant in the development of science, notably in mathematics and
astronomy. His books were widely consulted for centuries and he has been held
in high repute for his rich contributions.
________________________________________
24.JALAL AL-DIN
RUMI
(1207-1273 C.E.)
Jalal al-Din
Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Mohammad Ibn Husain al-Rumi was born in 604 A.H.
(1207/8 C.E.) at Balkh (now Afghanistan). His father Baha al-Din was a renowned
religious scholar. Under his patronage, Rumi received his early education from
Syed Burhan-al-Din. When his age was about 18 years, the family (after several
migrations) finally settled at Konya and at the age of 25,
Rumi was sent to
Aleppo for advanced education and later to Damascus. Rumi continued with his
education till he was 40 years old, although on his father's death Rumi
succeeded him as a professor in the famous Madrasah at Konya at the age of
about 24 years. He received his mystical training first at the hands of Syed
Burhan al-Din and later he was trained by Shams al-Din Tabriz. He became famous
for his mystical insight, his religious knowledge and as a Persian poet. He
used to teach a large number of pupils at his Madrasah and also founded the
famous Maulvi Order in Tasawwuf. He died in 672 A.H. (1273 C.E.) at Konya,
which subsequently became a sacred place for dancing derveshes of the Maulvi
Order.
His major
contribution lies in Islamic philosophy and Tasawwuf. This was embodied largely
in poetry, especially through his famous Mathnawi. This book, the largest
mystical exposition in verse, discusses and offers solutions to many
complicated problems in metaphysics, religion, ethics, mysticism, etc.
Fundamentally, the Mathnawi highlights the various hidden aspects of Sufism and
their relationship with the worldly life. For this, Rumi draws on a variety of
subjects and derives numerous examples from everyday life. His main subject is the
relationship between man and God on the one hand, and between man and man, on
the other. He apparently believed in Pantheism and portrayed the various stages
of man's evolution in his journey towards the Ultimate.
Apart from the
Mathnaui, he also wrote his Diwan (collection of poems) and Fihi-Ma-Fih (a
collection of mystical sayings). How- ever, it is the Mathnawi itself that has
largely transmitted Rumi's message. Soon after its completion, other scholars
started writing detailed commentaries on it, in order to interpret its rich
propositions on Tasawwuf, Metaphysics and Ethics. Several commentaries in
different languages have been written since then.
His impact on
philosophy, literature, mysticism and culture, has been so deep throughout
Central Asia and most Islamic countries that almost all religious scholars,
mystics, philosophers, sociologists and others have referred to his verses
during all these centuries since his death. Most difficult problems in these
areas seem to get simpli- fied in the light of his references. His message
seems to have inspired most of the intellectuals in Central Asia and adjoining
areas since his time, and scholars like Iqbal have further developed Rumi's
concepts. The Mathnawi became known as the interpretation of the Qur'an in the
Pahlavi language. He is one of the few intellectuals and mystics whose views
have so profoundly affected the world-view in its higher perspective in large
parts of the Islamic World.
________________________________________
25.IBN AL-NAFIS
(1213-1288 C.E.)
Ala-al-Din Abu
al-Hasan Ali Ibn Abi al-Hazm al-Qarshi al- Damashqi al-Misri was born in 607
A.H. of Damascus. He was educated at the Medical College-cum-Hospital founded
by Nur al- Din Zangi. In medicine his teacher was Muhaththab al-Din Abd al-
Rahim. Apart from medicine, Ibn al-Nafis learnt jurisprudence, literature and
theology. He thus became a renowned expert on Shafi'i School of Jurisprudence
as well as a reputed physician.
After acquiring
his expertise in medicine and jurisprudence, he moved to Cairo where he was
appointed as the Principal at the famous Nasri Hospital. Here he imparted
training to a large number of medical specialists, including Ibn al-Quff
al-Masihi, the famous surgeon. He also served at the Mansuriya School at Cairo.
When he died in 678 A.H. he donated his house, library and clinic to the
Mansuriya Hospital.
His major
contribution lies in medicine. His approach comprised writing detailed
commentaries on early works, critically evaluating them and adding his own
original contribution. Hlis major original contribution of great significance
was his discovery of the blood's circulatory system, which was re-discovered by
modern science after a lapse of three centuries. He was the first to correctly
describe the constitution of the lungs and gave a description of the bronchi
and the interaction between the human body's vessels for air and blood. Also,
he elaborated the function of the coronary arteries as feeding the cardiac
muscle.
The most
voluminous of his books is Al-Shamil fi al-Tibb, which was designed to be an
encyclopaedia comprising 300 volumes, but it could not be completed due to his
death. The manuscript is available at Damascus. His book on ophthalmology is
largely an original contribution and is also extant. However, his book that
became most famous was Mujaz al-Qanun and a number of commentaries were written
on this. His own commentaries include one on Hippocrates' book. He wrote
several volumes on Ibn Sina's Qanun, that are still extant. Likewise he wrote a
commentary on Hunayn Ibn Ishaq's book. Another famous book embodying his
original contribution was on the effects of diet on health. entitled Kitab
al-Mukhtar fi al-Aghdhiya.
Ibn Al-Nafis'
works integrated the then existing medical know- ledge and enriched it, thus
exerting great influence on the development of medical science, both in the
East and the West. However, only one of his books was translated into Latin at
early stages and, therefore, a part of his work remained unknown to Europe for
a long time.
________________________________________
26.IBN KHALDUN
(1332-1395 C.E.)
Abd al-Rahman Ibn
Mohammad is generally known as Ibn Khaldun after a remote ancestor. His
parents, originally Yemenite Arabs, had settled in Spain, but after the fall of
Seville, had migrated to Tunisia. He was born in Tunisia in 1332 C.E., where he
received his early education and where, still in his teens, he entered the
service of the Egyptian ruler Sultan Barquq. His thirst for advanced knowledge
and a better academic setting soon made him leave this service and migrate to
Fez.
This was followed by a long period of unrest marked by contemporary
political rivalries affecting his career. This turbulent period also included a
three year refuge in a small village Qalat Ibn Salama in Algeria, which
provided him with the opportunity to write Muqaddimah, the first volume of his
world history that won him an immortal place among historians, sociologists and
philosophers. The uncertainty of his career still continued, with Egypt
becoming his final abode where he spent his last 24 years. Here he lived a life
of fame and respect, marked by his appointment as the Chief Malakite Judge and
lecturing at the Al-Azhar University, but envy caused his removal from his high
judicial office as many as five times.
Ibn Khaldun's
chief contribution lies in philosophy of history and sociology. He sought to
write a world history preambled by a first volume aimed at an analysis of
historical events. This volume, commonly known as Muqaddimah or 'Prolegomena',
was based on Ibn Khaldun's unique approach and original contribution and became
a masterpiece in literature on philosophy of history and sociology. The chief
concern of this monumental work was to identify psychological, economic,
environmental and social facts that contribute to the advancement of human
civilization and the currents of history.
In this context, he analysed the
dynamics of group relationships and showed how group-feelings, al-'Asabiyya,
give rise to the ascent of a new civilisation and political power and how,
later on, its diffusion into a more general civilization invites the advent of
a still new 'Asabiyya in its pristine form. He identified an almost rhythmic
repetition of rise and fall in human civilization, and analysed factors
contributing to it. His contribution to history is marked by the fact that,
unlike most earlier writers interpreting history largely in a political
context, he emphasised environmental, sociological, psychological and economic
factors governing the apparent events. This revolutionised the science of
history and also laid the foundation of Umraniyat (Sociology).
Apart from the
Muqaddimah that became an important independent book even during the lifetime
of the author, the other volumes of his world history Kitab al-I'bar deal with
the history of Arabs, contemporary Muslim rulers, contemporary European rulers,
ancient history of Arabs, Jews, Greeks, Romans, Persians, etc., Islamic
History, Egyptian history and North-African history, especially that of Berbers
and tribes living in the adjoining areas. The last volume deals largely with
the events of his own life and is known as Al-Tasrif. This was also written in
a scientific manner and initiated a new analytical tradition in the art of
writing autobiography. A book on mathematics written by him is not extant.
Ibn Khaldun's
influence on the subject of history, philosophy of history, sociology,
political science and education has remained paramount ever since his life. His
books have been translated into many languages, both in the East and the West,
and have inspired subsequent development of these sciences. For instance, Prof.
Gum Ploughs and Kolosio consider Muqaddimah as superior in scholarship to
Machiavelli's The Prince written a century later, as the forrner bases the
diagnosis more on cultural, sociological, economic and psychological factors.
________________________________________
27.Ibn Sina
(Avicenna) - doctor of doctors
by Dr. Monzur
Ahmed
Ibn Sina was born
in 980 C.E. in the village of Afshana
near Bukhara which today is located in the far south of Russia. His father,
Abdullah, an adherent of the Ismaili sect, was from Balkh and his mother from a
village near Bukhara.
In any age Ibn
Sina, known in the West as Avicenna, would have been a giant among giants. He
displayed exceptional intellectual prowess as a child and at the age of ten was
already proficient in the Qur'an and the Arabic classics. During the next six
years he devoted himself to Muslim Jurisprudence, Philosophy and Natural
Science and studied Logic, Euclid, and the Almeagest.
He turned his
attention to Medicine at the age of 17 years and found it, in his own words,
"not difficult". However he was greatly troubled by metaphysical
problems and in particular the works of Aristotle. By chance, he obtained a
manual on this subject by the celebrated philosopher al-Farabi which solved his
difficulties.
By the age of 18
he had built up a reputation as a physician and was summoned to attend the
Samani ruler Nuh ibn Mansur (reigned
976-997 C.E.), who, in gratitude for Ibn Sina's services, allowed him to
make free use of the royal library, which contained many rare and even unique
books. Endowed with great powers of absorbing and retaining knowledge, this
Muslim scholar devoured the contents of the library and at the age of 21 was in
a position to compose his first book.
At about the same
time he lost his father and soon afterwards left Bukhara and wandered
westwards. He entered the services of Ali ibn Ma'mun, the ruler of Khiva, for a
while, but ultimately fled to avoid being kidnapped by the Sultan Mahmud of
Ghazna. After many wanderings he came to Jurjan, near the Caspian Sea,
attracted by the fame of its ruler, Qabus, as a patron of learning.
Unfortunately Ibn Sina's arrival almost coincided with the deposition and
murder of this ruler. At Jurjan, Ibn Sina lectured on logic and astronomy and
wrote the first part of the Qanun, his greatest work.
Abu Ali al-Husain
ibn Abdullah ibn Sina (980-1037 C.E.)
He then moved to
Ray, near modern Teheran and established a busy medical practice. When Ray was
besieged, Ibn Sina fled to Hamadan where he cured Amir Shamsud-Dawala of colic
and was made Prime Minister. A mutiny of soldiers against him caused his
dismissal and imprisonment, but subsequently the Amir, being again attacked by
the colic, summoned him back, apologised and reinstated him! His life at this
time was very strenuous: during the day he was busy with the Amir's services,
while a great deal of the night was passed in lecturing and dictating notes for
his books. Students would gather in his home and read parts of his two great
books, the Shifa and the Qanun, already composed.
Following the
death of the Amir, Ibn Sina fled to Isfahan after a few brushes with the law,
including a period in prison. He spent his final years in the services of the ruler
of the city, Ala al-Daula whom he advised on scientific and literary matters
and accompanied on military campaigns.
Friends advised
him to slow down and take life in moderation, but this was not in character.
"I prefer a short life with width to a narrow one with length", he
would reply. Worn out by hard work and hard living, Ibn Sina died in 1036/1 at
a comparatively early age of 58 years. He was buried in Hamadan where his grave
is still shown.
Al-Qifti states
that Ibn Sina completed 21 major and 24 minor works on philosophy, medicine,
theology, geometry, astronomy and the like. Another source (Brockelmann)
attributes 99 books to Ibn Sina comprising 16 on medicine, 68 on theology and
metaphysics 11 on astronomy and four on verse. Most of these were in Arabic;
but in his native Persian he wrote a large manual on philosophical science
entitled Danish-naama-i-Alai and a small treatise on the pulse.
His most
celebrated Arabic poem describes the descent of Soul into the Body from the
Higher Sphere. Among his scientific works, the leading two are the Kitab
al-Shifa
(Book of
Healing), a philosophical encyclopaedia based
upon Aristotelian
traditions and the al-Qanun al-Tibb
which represents
the final categorisation of Greco-Arabian thoughts on Medicine.
Of Ibn Sina's 16
medical works, eight are versified treatises on such matter as the 25 signs
indicating the fatal termination of illnesses, hygienic precepts, proved
remedies, anatomical memoranda etc. Amongst his prose works, after the great
Qanun, the treatise on cardiac drugs, of which the British Museum possesses
several fine manuscripts, is probably the most important, but it remains
unpublished.
The Qanun is, of
course, by far the largest, most famous and most important of Ibn Sina's works.
The work contains about one million words and like most Arabic books, is
elaborately divided and subdivided. The main division is into five books, of
which the first deals with general principles; the second with simple drugs
arranged alphabetically; the third with diseases of particular organs and
members of the body from the head to the foot; the fourth with diseases which
though local in their inception spread to other parts of the body, such as
fevers and the fifth with compound medicines.
The Qanun
distinguishes mediastinitis from pleurisy and recognises the contagious nature
of phthisis (tuberculosis of the lung) and the spread of disease by water and
soil. It gives a scientific diagnosis of ankylostomiasis and attributes the
condition to an intestinal worm.
The Qanun points out the importance of
dietetics, the influence of climate and environment on health and the surgical
use of oral anaesthetics. Ibn Sina advised surgeons to treat cancer in its
earliest stages, ensuring the removal of all the diseased tissue. The Qanun's
materia medica considers some 760 drugs, with comments on their application and
effectiveness. He recommended the testing of a new drug on animals and humans
prior to general use.
Ibn Sina noted
the close relationship between emotions and the physical condition and felt
that music had a definite physical and psychological effect on patients. Of the
many psychological disorders that he described in the Qanun, one is of unusual
interest: love sickness! ibn Sina is reputed to have diagnosed this condition
in a Prince in Jurjan who lay sick and whose malady had baffled local doctors.
Ibn Sina noted a fluttering in the Prince's pulse when the address and name of
his beloved were mentioned. The great doctor had a simple remedy: unite the
sufferer with the beloved.
The Arabic text
of the Qanun was published in Rome in 1593 and was therefore one of the
earliest Arabic books to see print. It was translated into Latin by Gerard of
Cremona in the 12th century. This 'Canon', with its encyclopaedic content, its
systematic arrangement and philosophical plan, soon worked its way into a
position of pre-eminence in the medical literature of the age displacing the works
of Galen, al-Razi and al-Majusi, and becoming the text book for medical
education in the schools of Europe. In the last 30 years of the 15th century it
passed through 15 Latin editions and one Hebrew. In recent years, a partial
translation into English was made. From the 12th-17th century, the Qanun served
as the chief guide to Medical Science in the West and is said to have
influenced Leonardo da Vinci. In the words of Dr. William Osler, the Qanun has
remained "a medical bible for a longer time than any other work".
Despite such
glorious tributes to his work, Ibn Sina is rarely remembered in the West today
and his fundamental contributions to Medicine and the European reawakening goes
largely unrecognised. However, in the museum at Bukhara, there are displays
showing many of his writings, surgical instruments from the period and
paintings of patients undergoing treatment. An impressive monument to the life
and works of the man who became known as the 'doctor of doctors' still stands
outside Bukhara museum and his portrait hangs in the Hall of the Faculty of
Medicine in the University of Paris.
Pre-op, 10th
century style - Ibn Sina is known to have operated on a friend's gall
bladder
Selected
References:
1. Edward G. Browne (1921) Arabian Medicine, London,
Cambridge University Press.
2. Ynez Viole
O'Neill (1973) in Mcgraw-Hill Encyclopaedia of World Biography vol I: Aalto to
Bizet.
3. Philip K.
Hitti (1970) History of the Arabs, 10th ed, London, Macmillan, pp 367-368
4. M.A. Martin
(1983) in The Genius of Arab Civilisation, 2nd ed, Edited by J.R. Hayes,
London, Eurabia Puplishing, pp 196-7
Almost a thousand
years ago at a time when Spain (Andulesia) was part of the Islamic empire,
there lived near the capital city of Cordoba one of the great, but now largely
forgotten, pioneers of surgery. He was known as El Zahrawi, though in European
languages his name is written in over a dozen different ways: Abulcases,
Albucasis, Bulcasis, Bulcasim, Bulcari, Alzahawi, Ezzahrawi, Zahravius,
Alcarani, Alsarani, Aicaravi, Alcaravius, Alsahrawi etc.
El Zahrawi is
believed to have been born in the city of El-Zahra, six miles northwest of
Cordoba, sometime between 936 and 940. It was here that he lived, studied,
taught and practised medicine and surgery until shortly before his death in
about 1013, two years after the sacking of El-Zahra.
Because El-Zahra
was pillaged and destroyed, little is known about its illustrious son El
Zahrawi. He was first mentioned by the Andalusian scholar Abu Muhammad bin Hazm
(993-1064), who listed him among the great physician- surgeons of Moorish
Spain. The first known biography of El Zahrawi, however, appeared in
al-Humaydi's Jadhwat al-Muqtabis (On Andalusian Savants), completed six decades
after El Zahrawi's death.
It is clear from
El Zahrawi's life history and from his writings that he devoted his entire life
and genius to the advancement of medicine as a whole and surgery in particular.
El Zahrawi wrote a medical encyclopaedia spanning 30 volumes which included
sections on surgery, medicine, orthopaedics, ophthalmology, pharmacology,
nutrition etc. This book was known as At-Tasrif and contained data that El
Zahrawi had accumulated during a career that spanned almost 50 years of
training, teaching and practice. He apparently travelled very little but had
wide experience in treating accident victims and war casualties.
In At-Tasrif, El
Zahrawi expressed his concern about the welfare of his students whom he called
"my children". He
emphasised the
importance of a good doctor patient relationship and took great care to ensure
the safety of his
patients and win
their trust irrespective of their social status. El Zahrawi's clinical methods
showed extreme foresight - he promoted the close observation of individual
cases in order to establish the most accurate diagnosis and the best possible
treatment. He insisted on compliance with ethical norms and warned against
dubious practices adopted by some physicians for purposes of material gain. He
also cautioned against quacks who claimed surgical skills they did not possess.
At-Tasrif
contains many original observations of historical interest. In it, El Zahrawi
elaborates on the causes and symptoms of disease and theorises on the
upbringing of
children and
youth and on the care of the aged and convalescent. In the section on
pharmacology and therapeutics, he covers areas such as cardiac drugs, emetics,
laxatives, cosmetology, dietetics, materia medica, weights and measures and
drug substitution.
At-Tasrif was
translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona in the 12th century and alongside
Avicenna's Canon, played a major role as a medical text in the universities of
Europe from the 12th to the 17th century AD. Two of El Zahrawi's treatises
deserve special mention. Firstly his 28th treatise, known in Latin as Liber
servitoris de preeparatione medicinarum simplicium, describes chemical
preparations, tablet making, filtering of extracts and related pharmaceutical
techniques. This treatise was printed in Venice in 1471 by Nicolaus Jensen.
Abu al-Qasim
Khalaf bin 'Abbas el-Zahrawi (940? - 1013 C.E.)
Perhaps the most
importance treatise is the one on surgery. This monumental work was the first
in Arabic to treat surgery independently and in detail. It included many
pictures of surgical instruments, most invented by El Zahrawi himself, and
explanations of their use. El Zahrawi was the first medical author to provide
illustrations of instruments used in surgery. There are approximately 200 such
drawings ranging from a tongue depressor and a tooth extractor to a catheter
and an elaborate obstetric device.
The variety of
operations covered is amazing. In this treatise El Zahrawi discussed
cauterisation, bloodletting,
midwifery and
obstetrics and the treatment of wounds. He described the exposure and division
of the temporal artery to relieve certain types of headaches, diversion of
urine into the rectum, reduction mammoplasty for excessively large breasts and
the extraction of cataracts. He wrote extensively about injuries to bones and
joints, even mentioning fractures of the nasal bones and of the vertebrae. In
fact 'Kocher's method' for reducing a dislocated shoulder was described in
At-Tasrif long before Kocher was born! El Zahrawi outlined the use of caustics
in surgery, fully described tonsillectomy, tracheotomy and craniotomy-
operations he had performed on a dead foetus. He explained how to use a hook to
extract a polyp tiom the nose, how to use a bulb syringe he had invented for
giving enemas to children and how to use a metallic bladder syringe and
speculum to extract bladder stones.
El Zahrawi was
the first to describethe so-called "Walcher position" in obstetrics;
the first to depict dental arches, tongue depressors and lead catheters and the
first to describe clearly the hereditary circumstances surrounding haemophilia.
He also described ligaturing of blood vessels long before Ambroise Pare.
\
Once At-Tasrif
was translated into Latin in the 12th century, El Zahrawi had a tremendous
influence on
surgery in the
West. The French surgeon Guy de Chauliac in his 'Great Surgery', completed in
about 1363, quoted At-Tasrif over 200 times. El Zahrawi was described by Pietro
Argallata (died 1423) as "without doubt the chief of all surgeons".
Jaques Delechamps (1513-1588), another French surgeon, made extensive use of
At-Tasrif in his elaborate commentary, confirming the great prestige of El
Zahrawi throughout the Middle Ages and up to the Renaissance.
Page from a 1531
Latin translation by Peter Argellata of El Zahrawi's treatise on surgical and
medical instruments.
Selected
References:
1. Hamareh S K in
The Genius of Arab Civilisation edited by J R Hayes; 2nd edition, 1983; Eurabia
(Publishing) Ltd; pp 198-200
2. El Afifi. S.
Kasr El Aini; Journal of Surgery 1960; I
3. Albucasis; On
Surgery and Instruments; English translation and commentary
by Spink M S and
Lewis G L; 1973
29.Ibn Battuta -
the great traveller
by A.S. Chughtai
"To the
world of today the men of medieval Christendom already seem remote and
unfamiliar. Their names and deeds are recorded in our history-books, their
monuments still adorn our cities, but our kinship with them is a thing unreal,
which costs an effort of imagination. How much more must this apply to the
great Islamic civilization, that stood over against medieval Europe, menacing
its existence and yet linked to it by a hundred ties that even war and fear
could not sever. Its monuments too abide, for those who may have the fortunate
to visit them, but its men and manners are to most of us utterly unknown, or
dimly conceived in the romantic image of the Arabian Nights. Even for the
specialist it is difficult to reconstruct their lives and see them as they
were. Histories and biographies there are in quantity, but the historians for
all their picturesque details, seldom show the ability to select the essential
and to give their figures that touch of the intimate which makes them live
again for the reader. It is in this faculty that Ibn Battuta excels."
Thus begins the
book, "Ibn Battuta, Travels in Asia andAfrica 1325-1354" published by
Routledge and Kegan Paul (1).
Abu Abdullah
Muhammad Ibn Battuta
Introduction
Abu Abdullah
Muhammad Ibn Battuta, also known as Shams ad - Din, was born at Tangier,
Morocco, on the 24th February 1304 C.E. (703 Hijra). He left Tangier on
Thursday, 14th June, 1325 C.E. (2nd Rajab 725 A.H.), when he was twenty one
years of age. His travels lasted for about thirty years, after which he
returned to Fez, Morocco at the court of Sultan Abu 'Inan and dictated accounts
of his journeys to Ibn Juzay. These are known as the famous Travels (Rihala) of
Ibn Battuta. He died at Fez in 1369 C.E.
Ibn Battuta was
the only medieval traveller who is known to have visited the lands of every
Muslim ruler of his time. He also travelled in Ceylon (present Sri Lanka),
China and Byzantium and South Russia. The mere extent of his travels is
estimated at no less than 75,000 miles, a figure which is not likely to have
been surpassed before the age of steam.
Travels
In the course of
his first journey, Ibn Battuta travelled through Algiers, Tunis, Egypt,
Palestine and Syria to Makkah. After visiting Iraq, Shiraz and Mesopotamia he
once more returned to perform the Hajj at Makkah and remained there for three
years. Then travelling to Jeddah he went to Yemen by sea, visited Aden andset
sail for Mombasa, East Africa. After going up to Kulwa he came back to Oman and
repeated pilgrimage to Makkah in 1332 C.E. via Hormuz, Siraf, Bahrain and
Yamama. Subsequently he set out with the purpose of going to India, but on
reaching Jeddah, he appears to have changed his mind (due perhaps to the
unavailability of a ship bound for India), and revisited Cairo, Palestine and
Syria, thereafter arriving at Aleya (Asia Minor) by sea and travelled across
Anatolia and Sinope. He then crossed the Black Sea and after long wanderings he
reached Constantinople through Southern Ukraine.
On his return, he
visited Khurasan through Khawarism (Khiva) and having visited all the important
cities such as Bukhara, Balkh, Herat, Tus, Mashhad and Nishapur, he crossed the
Hindukush mountains via the 13,000 ft Khawak Pass into Afghanistan and passing
through Ghani and Kabul entered India. After visiting Lahri (near modern
Karachi), Sukkur, Multan, Sirsa and Hansi, he reached Delhi. For several years
Ibn Battuta enjoyed the patronage of Sultan Mohammad Tughlaq, and was later
sent as Sultan's envoy to China. Passing through Cental India and Malwa he took
ship from Kambay for Goa, and after visiting many thriving ports along the
Malabar coast he reached the Maldive Islands, from which he crossed to Ceylon.
Continuing his journey, he landed on the Ma'bar (Coromandal) coast and once
more returning to the Maldives he finally set sail for Bengal and visited
Kamrup, Sylhet and Sonargaon (near Dhaka). Sailing along the Arakan coast he
came to Sumatra and later landed at Canton via Malaya and Cambodia. In China he
travelled northward to Peking through Hangchow. Retracing his steps he returned
to Calicut and taking ship came to Dhafari and Muscat, and passing through
Paris (Iran), Iraq, Syria, Palestine and Egypt made his seventh and last
pilgrimage to Makkah in November 1348 C.E. and then returned to his home town
of Fez. His travels did not end here - he later visited Muslim Spain and the
lands of the Niger across the Sahara.
On his return to
Fez, Ibn Battuta dictated the accounts ofhis travels to Ibn Juzay al-Kalbi
(1321-1356 C.E.) at the court of Sultan Abu Inan (1348-1358 C.E). Ibn Juzay
took three months to accomplish this work ,which he finished on 9th December
1355 C.E.
Writings
In order to
experience the flavour of Ibn Battuta's narrative one must sample a few
extracts. The following passage illustrates the system of social security in
operation in the Muslim world in the early 14th century C.E. :
"The variety
and expenditure of the religious endowmentsat Damascus are beyond computation.
There are endowments in aid of persons who cannot undertake the pilgrimage to
Makkah, out of which ate paid the expenses of those who go in their stead.
There are other endowments for supplying wedding outfits to girls whose families
are unable to provide them, and others for the freeing of prisoners. There are
endowments for travellers, out of the revenues of which they are given food,
clothing, and the expenses of conveyance to their countries. Then there are
endowments for the improvement and paving of the streets, because all the lanes
in Damascus have pavements on either side, on which the foot passengers walk,
while those who ride use the roadway in the centre". p.69, ref l
Here is another
example which describes Baghdad in the early 14th century C.E. :
"Then we
travelled to Baghdad, the Abode of Peace andCapital of Islam. Here there are
two bridges like that at Hilla, on which the people promenade night and day,
both men and women. The baths at Baghdad are numerous and excellently
constructed, most of them being painted with pitch, which has the appearance of
black marble. This pitch is brought from a spring between Kufa and Basra, from
which it flows continually. It gathers at the sides of the spring like clay and
is shovelled up and brought to Baghdad. Each establishment has a number of
private bathrooms, every one of which has also a wash-basin in the corner, with
two taps supplying hot and cold water. Every bather is given three towels, one
to wear round his waist when he goes in, another to wear round his waist when
he comes out, and the third to dry himself with." p.99, ref 1
In the next
example Ibn Battuta describes in great detailsome of the crops and fruits
encountered on his travels:
"From Kulwa
we sailed to Dhafari [Dhofar], at the extremity of Yemen. Thoroughbred horses
are exported from here to India, the passage taking a month with favouring
wind.... The inhabitants cultivate millet and irrigate it from very deep wells,
the water from which is raised in a large bucket drawn by a number of ropes. In
the neighbourhood of the town there are orchards with many banana trees. The
bananas are of immense size; one which was weighed in my presence scaled twelve
ounces and was pleasant to the taste and very sweet. They also grow betel-trees
and coco-palms, which are found only in India and the town of Dhafari."
p.113, ref 1
Another example
of In Battuta's keen observation is seen in the next passage:
"Betel-trees
are grown like vines on can trellises or else trained up coco-palms. They have
no fruit and are only grown for their leaves. The Indians have a high opinion
of betel, and if a man visits a friend and the latter gives him five leaves of
it, you would think he had given him the world, especially if he is a prince or
notable. A gift of betel is a far greater honour than a gift of gold and
silver. It is used in the following way: First one takes areca-nuts, which are
like nutmegs, crushes them into small bits and chews them. Then the betel
leaves are taken, a little chalk is put on them, and they are chewed with the
areca-nuts." p.114, ref 1
Ibn Battuta - The
Forgotten Traveller
Ibn Battuta's sea
voyages and references to shipping reveal that the Muslims completely dominated
the maritime activity of the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea, the Indian Ocean, and
the Chinese waters. Also it is seen that though the Christian traders were subject
to certain restrictions, most of the economic negotiations were transacted on
the basis of equality and mutual respect.
Ibn Battuta, one
of the most remarkable travellers of all time, visited China sixty years after
Marco Polo and in fact travelled 75,000 miles, much more than Marco Polo. Yet
Battuta is never mentioned in geography books used in Muslim countries, let
alone those in the West. Ibn Battuta's
contribution to geography is unquestionably as great as that of any
geographer yet the accounts of his travels are not easily accessible except to
the specialist. The omission of reference to Ibn Battuta's contribution in
geography books is not an isolated example. All great Musiims whether
historians, doctors, astronomers, scientists or chemists suffer the same fate.
One can understand why these great Muslims are ignored by the West. But the
indifference of the Muslim governments is incomprehensible. In order to combat
the inferiority complex that plagues the Muslim Ummah, we must rediscover the
contributions of Muslims in fields such
as science, medicine, engineering, architecture and astronomy. This will
encourage contemporary young Muslims to strive in these fields and not think
that major success is beyond their reach.
References
1. Ibn Buttuta,
Travels in Asia and Africa 1325-1345, Published by Routledge and Kegan Paul
(ISBN O 7100 9568 6)
2. The
Introduction to the "Voyages of Ibn Battutah" by Vincent Monteil in
The Islamic Review and Arab Affairs. March 1970: 30-37
30.Caesarean
Birth - an Islamic View
It is unfortunate
that the Western medical historians have not appreciated the value of the
writings of early Muslim scholars. On the contrary, for many centuries they
have made positive efforts to discredit the Muslims. As an example, it is a
generally held view in the West that surgical advancement was discouraged by
great Muslim physicians like Ibn Sina because, in his Al-Qanon he did not
emphasise surgical procedures. In these futile efforts it is forgotten that
Al-Qanon was primarily a treatise on internal medicine and not on surgery.
Many
European authors of later ages produced medical texts on similar patterns.
Moreover these shortsighted historians completely ignored surgical geniuses and
the contributions of people like Abu Qasim (known in the West as Al Bucasis).
In this context, the history of Caesarean section presents a good example. In
1863 a French medical historian by the name of C. Rique recorded that the
operation of Caesarean section was strictly prohibited in Islam . He went on to
say that according to Islamic jurists any child born by such an operation
should be killed immediately as a child of the Devil.
This author also quoted
the name of an unknown Arab to justify his conclusion. But even after
exhaustive searches this reference can not be found in the authentic Arabic
literature. From the middle of the last century until modem times, Rique's
statement has been quoted and referred to by many historians without
establishing the truth or its validity. The literature on this subject is
littered with references to the above quotation without even referring to the
original source. On the contrary, no medical historian has ever mentioned that
during the middle ages it was a well known belief in Europe that the devil or
the Antichrist would be born by Caesarean section before the end of the world.
This legend is mentioned and supported by a picture in a book published in 1898
by R. Procter and can be seen in the British Museum.
Unfortunately
worthwhile literature of the early Islamic period is scanty and scattered or
else is in the wrong hands. Many valuable manuscripts are either in private hands
used only as profitable investments or in museums all over Europe and America.
The Islamic states and the statesmen who can easily afford to collect and
compile copies of these manuscripts for free circulation have never shown any
interest in this wealth of inheritance. Lack of interest and research in these
early manuscripts has created an atmosphere of doubt and misinformation.
If someone cared
to devote time and effort searching through the available literature, a great a
deal of truth could easily be found buried under the sands of time. As regards
Caesarean section we know that in the pre-Islamic days the Romans used to
perform this operation after the death of a pregnant woman. This practice was
strictly governed by law. Jewish religious books have also mentioned various
rules in relation to a child born by an operation. If we go further back into
history, in India we find that the Buddha was possibly born by an operation.
A
famous Indian medical man by the name of Susruta wrote about such an operation
in 6th or 7th century B.C. All these rich sources relating to Caesarean section
were available to Muslim scholars of the Middle Ages, when a vast amount of
scientific literature was translated into Arabic. In fact many of the Syriac,
Creek and Sanskrit texts were only saved and are available to us because of
their Arabic translations whilst the originals are lost forever. Many of the
famous translators in the Islamic period were Christians or Jews. We known that
an Indian by the name of Manka was appointed to translate Susruta's works into
Arabic.
A unique and
extremely rare manuscript exists in Edinburgh University Library. It is
manuscript number 161 called
"Al-Asrar-al-Baqiyah-an-al-Qurun-al-Khaliydh" or the Chronological
History of Nations. It was written by the famous Muslim, Al-Beruni, who died at
the age of 78 in 1048 C.E. Al-Beruni has also left us a large volume on the
history of India and many other texts. He travelled extensively in pre-Muslim
India and his writings were greatly influenced by these experiences. In
particular he was impressed by medicinal plants form India. In the above
manuscript Al-Beruni has mentioned that Caesar Augustus (63 B.C. - 14 C.E.) was
born by post-mortem Caesarean section. He also wrote that a folk hero Ahmed-Ibn-Sahl
was born by Caesarean section after the death of his mother. Apart from these
two very relevant references he actually included a picture of the Caesarean
section in his book. Without any question this picture is the first ever
illustration of such an operation in a textbook and places its author at least
500 years ahead of others.
Another famous
name and contemporary of Al-Beruni was Firdousi (935-1025 C.E.), author of the
well known "Shahnama". In this 60 000 verses long poems he described
the birth of Rustum by Caesarean section. This lively and fascinating
description and use of anaesthesia during the operation is there for everyone
to read and provides convincing proof that the concept of Caesarean section was
mature and its use was an accepted fact.
When we seek help
from the religious authorities we discover no less than the towering figure of
Imam Abu Hanifah (699 -767 C.E.) who decreed that an operation on a living or
dead woman to save the life of an unborn child is allowed in Islam. This is mentioned
in a book called Radd-ul-Mukhtar published in 1844 in Egypt.
Further strong
evidence is available in the Fatawa Alamgeeria-a collection of Islamic decrees
compiled by Sheikh Nitzam -ud -Din of Burhanpur under the auspices of the
Mughal emperor, Aurangzeb, who himself was well versed in Islamic Sharia. In
this document there is a decree that if a pregnant woman dies and a child is
expected to be alive, then the child must be removed by operation. It goes on
to say that the operation should also be performed in order to save the life of
a mother when the child is known to be dead.
In conclusion it
can be proved that Caesarean section has never been prohibited by any Muslim
authority. On the contrary, the Muslims in the Middle ages were the first to
write about it in text and poetry and to illustrate the operation in pictures.
They also formulated rules governing religious matters to allow such a
procedure when the need arose.
Article by Dr.
N.H. Naqvi FFARCS
This article
originally appeared in Muslim Technologist, December 1989
Originally
compiled by Walid
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