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  1. Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám. English, French and German Translations Comparatively Arranged in Accordance with the Text of Edward Fitzgerald’s Version with Further Selections, Notes, Biographies, Bibliography and Other Material Collected and Edited by Nathan Haskell Dole. by Omar (fl. 11th century). KHAYYÁM, 1896
  2. 11th-Century Mathematicians: Alhazen, Omar Khayyám, Shen Kuo, Abu Rayhan Biruni, Su Song, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Ibn Yunus
  3. 11th-Century Scientists: 11th-Century Mathematicians, Alhazen, Omar Khayyám, Shen Kuo, Abu Rayhan Biruni, Su Song, Abraham Bar Hiyya, Ibn Yunus

81. Muslim American Society
important colleges. Omar Khayyam, the famous 11th century Persian poet,was born in Neyshabur and is buried there, reports the AP.
http://www.masnet.org/aroundworld.asp?id=965

82. Khayyam Mania!!!: Hollywood's Depiction Of The Great Persian Poet's Life
Kamroff s novel The Life, the Loves and the Adventures of Omar Khayyam he is aresearch staff assembles more than 300 books on 11th century Persia s history
http://www.payvand.com/news/03/mar/1039.html
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Events Add Events Search Events Shopping Bazar Books Music Film Payvand's Iran News ... Khayyam Mania!!!: Hollywood's depiction of the great Persian Poet's life By Darius Kadivar darius_kadivar_65@hotmail.com Persian Poet, humanist philosopher, and mathematician Omar Khayyam is probably the most famed of all Persian Poets in the West, ever since the translation by Victorian-era writer Edward Fitzgerald of a series of Quatrains known as the "Rubaiyaat" . It is probably the best-selling book in the entire history of English poetry. It exists in many editions and has Enjoyed massive popularity throughout the 20th century, many people have carried it around, taken it to war, kept it in the car, ordered it for reading on a putative desert island. The memorable quatrains appeal to all classes and conditions of men and women; they are still treasured by millions. This translation profoundly influenced the West's perception (or misperception) of Persia ( today known as Iran ) in the turn of the century. In fact as unusual as it may seem one of the original manuscripts of the

83. Fragments ~ From Floyd: January 2004 Archives
it. the rubaiyat Omar Khayyam - 11th century. Posted by fred1stat 0646 AM Comments (3) TrackBack. Time Wounds All Heels. Oy!
http://www.fragmentsfromfloyd.com/archives/2004_01.html
Fragments ~ from Floyd
Images in words and pixels from a quiet valley in Floyd County, Virginia. Main
January 31, 2004
The Way We Were
I'm still muddling through the archives of Fragments, revising and reordering the parts of the four seasons of life here that may become a little tome at some point. It is a love-hate experience to go back over pieces written on a morning long ago, then promptly forgotten. The advantages and disadvantages of writing for daily publication lies in the spontaneity of the writing... the Moving Finger writes...and the mind quickly forgets. And so going back through the archives is to open old trunks and boxes filled with precious and terrible mementos rediscovered. Some are comic. Some, tragic. "If there are no tears in the writing, there will be no tears in the reading" someone has said. This week, I'm working on Winter. Buster, our black lab, turned FOUR last winter. He was such a fine specimen and faithful companion during the turmoil of the past few years. Here is his birthday card . He died five months later. And, mistakenly in with winter posts, was this account I called the

84. Excerpts From Paramahansa Yogananda's Spiritual Interpretation Of Omar Khayyam's
The book reveals that Khayyam s actual name was Ghiyath ud Din Abu l Fatah Omarbin Ibrahim al Khayyam. Born in the 11th century, Khayyam was a physician, an
http://www.lifepositive.com/Spirit/masters/paramahansa-yogananda/rubaiyat.asp
Register to the site Shopping Bazaar Find Practitioner Wallpapers ... Magazine RUBAIYAT RE-VISITED: A SPIRITUAL INTERPRETATION BACK TO HOME
By Paramahansa Yogananda
Poetry can be misread to mean the exact opposite of the poet's intentions. This is what Paramahansa Yogananda, founder of Self Realization Fellowship and Yogoda Satsanga Society of India, well-known for his Autobiography of a Yogi , proves in his Wine of the Mystic , a new interpretation of Omar Khayyam's The Rubaiyat
Omar Khayyam, the Persian poet whose works were made world famous by the English translations of Edward FitzGerald, has been known as the poet of wine, music and sensuality. However, historical research indicates that Khayyam was much more than a hedonist. In The Nectar of Grace: Omar Khayyam's Life and Works , Swami Govinda Tirtha has given one of the most comprehensive details about Khayyam's life. The book reveals that Khayyam's actual name was Ghiyath ud Din Abu'l Fatah Omar bin Ibrahim al Khayyam. Born in the 11th century, Khayyam was a physician, an astronomer and author of treatises on mathematics and physics. In his later years he pursued spiritual disciplines of the Sufis while he was writing The Rubaiyat

Awake! for Morning in the Bowl of Night

85. Omar Khayam - Persian And Iranian Poetry At Best Iran Travel.com
Omar Khayam was born in Nishapur in province of Khorasan in Iran inthe latter part of 11th century. He was considered The King
http://www.bestirantravel.com/culture/poetry/khayam.html
Culture - Poetry
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Omar Khayam was born in Nishapur in province of Khorasan in Iran in the latter part of 11th century. He was considered "The King of Wisdom"; he died in 1123 AD. He is one of the most well known poets in the west and his poems are translated into many languages.
It is common for Iranian poets to take their name from their occupation. For example, Attar, "the druggist," Assar, "the oil presser," and Khayam means "tent maker". He was Omar the son of Abraham the tent maker. He worked in that trade at one time but he was favored by the king (Sultan), Malik Shah. Omar Khayam rejected the court life in favor of scientific studies and literary pursuits.
Khayam was famous for his rubai (quatrain) poems, also known as a mathematician, historian, and astronomer. He was an astroronomer royal who was appointed by Malik Shah to reform the muslim calendar which is compared to Pope Gregory XII's revision of Julian Calendar. Although there are debates about the life and poems of Omar Khayam, it is certain that he was a great mystic and was considered a sage in his time.
The Rubaiyat
of Omar Khayam was translated by Edward FitzGerald, an English poet and translator who lived 1809-1883. Although The Robaiyat of Omar Khayam gained popularity slowly in the west, it became the most loved poems in English language.

86. AMCTV.com SHOW - Omar Khayyam
Omar Khayyam (1957). Arabian Nightsstyle costume epic follows the adventures of the11th-century Persian poet and philosopher credited with the invention of a
http://www.amctv.com/show/detail?CID=9928-1-EST

87. Omar Khayyam - Encyclopedia Article About Omar Khayyam. Free Access, No Registra
The present Iranian calendar s leap day system was devised in the 11th centuryby a panel of scientists including Omar Khayyam, who was one of the foremost
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Omar Khayyam
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Omar Khayyam
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition The man known in English as the poet Omar Khayyám Persian Persian Farsi Parsi , or Dari , is a language spoken in Iran, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Georgia, part of India and part of Pakistan. It has over 46 million native speakers. It belongs to the Indo-European language family. It is of the Subject Object Verb type.
History
Persian is a member of the Indo-European family of languages, and within that family, it belongs to the Indo-Iranian (Aryan) branch, within which, the Iranian sub-branch consists of the following chronological linguistic path: Old Persian (Avestan and Achaemenids Persian)
> Middle Persian (Pahlavi Parthian and Sassanids Persian)
> Modern Persian (Modern Persian starts approximately around 900 CE to present).
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88. FitzGerald, Edward
Although actually a paraphrase rather than a translation of a poem by the 11thcenturyPersian poet Omar Khayyam, it retains the spirit of the original in its
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    FitzGerald, Edward FitzGerald, Edward, , English man of letters. A dilettante and scholar, FitzGerald spent most of his life living in seclusion in Suffolk. His masterpiece, a translation of The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, appeared anonymously in 1859 and passed unnoticed until Dante Gabriel Rossetti made it famous. Revised editions followed in 1868, 1872, and 1879. FitzGerald's Rubaiyat has long been one of the most popular English poems. Although actually a paraphrase rather than a translation of a poem by the 11th-century Persian poet Omar Khayyam , it retains the spirit of the original in its poignant expression of a philosophy counseling man to live life to the fullest while he can. Among FitzGerald's other works are Euphranor (1851), a Platonic dialogue, and

89. Muslim Scientists 2
His most famous and popular work is the Akhlaq Nasiri, resting upon the 11thcenturyTahdhib al-akhlaq of Ibn Miskawayh, which he drafted while a Omar Khayyam.
http://www.amualumni.8m.com/Scientist2.htm
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Alumni of Aligarh Muslim University (India) Muslims Scientist during Muslims Rule over World Page 2 of 5 Page western Europe, for much of the science and philosophy taught in universities in the Middle Ages was derived from these Arabic translations, rendered into Latin in Spain in the 12th century
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Nasir Al-Din Al-Tusi
Astronomy, Geometry Abu Ar-Rayhan Mohammad ibn Ahmad Al-Biruni Astronomy, Mathematics. (Determined Earth's Circumference) Omar Khayyam Mathematics, Poetry. Abu Al-Qasim Khalaf ibn Abbas Az-Zahrawi (Albucasis) Surgery, Medicine. (Father of Modern Surgery) Ibn al-'Awwam Agriculturist Nasir Ad-Din Tusi Top Tusi Nasir
ad-Din (b. Feb. 18, 1201, Tus, Khorasand. June 26, 1274, Baghdad), outstanding Persian philosopher, scientist, and mathematician.
Tusi became astrologer to the governor Nasir ad-Din 'Abd ar-Rahim. He made significant contributions to mathematics and astronomy; his Zij-i Ilkhani is a splendidly accurate table of planetary movements. His most famous and popular work is the Akhlaq Nasiri, resting upon the 11th-century Tahdhib al-akhlaq of Ibn Miskawayh, which he drafted while a prisoner of the Assassins and later revised for his Mongol master. This work has been translated into English. He made important contributions to many branches of Islamic learning and wrote in excellent philosophical prose.

90. RUBAIYAT
search for Hakim Instrumental Works Naj Hakim. view image, RUBAIYAT OmarKhayyam Writing in the 11th century, Khayyam was one of the most accomplished
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Rubaiyat, The by Omar Khayyam

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Writing in the 11th century, Khayyam was one of the most accomplished masters of the new and increasingly popular 'Ruba'i', or two-line stanza. Here.
StudentBookWorld search for: RUBAIYAT - Omar Khayyam RUBAIYAT - Omar Khayyam
Originally published in 1926 by Harrap's, a colour illustrated new edition of a collection of Persian poetry which has been translated into English. The poetry is in the form of epigrammatic four line stanzas.
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91. FOXNews.com - Top Stories - Iran Train Death Toll Rises To 309
with several important colleges. Omar Khayyam (search), the 11th centuryPersian poet, was born in Neyshabur, and is buried there.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,111845,00.html
OAS_AD('Top'); Iran Train Death Toll Rises to 309 Thursday, February 19, 2004 OAS_AD('Middle'); Neyshabur search ). Emergency workers collected human remains torn by Wednesday's blast, which was so powerful it devastated five villages, collapsing mud homes. Burning freight cars from the derailment were put out shortly before dawn Thursday, with firefighters persisting through the night despite freezing temperatures and fumes. The explosion left a crater about 50 feet deep. Mojtaba Farahmand-Nekou search ), who was among several city officials, including the fire chief, killed when the train cars exploded hours after the derailment. More than 20,000 mourners, all wearing black, looked on as the body, wrapped in the red, white and green Iranian flag was driven through the city. Shops and offices closed for three days of mourning. Survivors looked through lists of the dead posted outside hospitals and clinics. Mashhad search "His family said he was on his way, and he should have reached here by now. I don't know where he is, and I hope to God he is not among the dead," said Babaie, who was in his 70s. Khorasan search The explosion occurred hours after runaway train cars carrying fuel, industrial chemicals and cotton derailed, overturned and caught fire in northeastern Iran. The blast was so large that windows in homes as far as six miles away were shattered.

92. Salon Travel | Rendezvous Of The Sun And The Moon
Set in 11th century Persia, the book recounts the times of the great poetphilosopherOmar Khayyam, whose most tumultuous years began and ended in Isfahan.
http://www.salon.com/travel/feature/1999/08/11/eclipse/index2.html

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By Jeff Greenwald Vagabonding Searching for Binh Hoa Hoping to find an obscure Vietnam War killing field, our correspondent discovers that some lessons of history teach themselves. By Rolf Potts China good? China bad? Nothing is simple in Tibet. By Hank Hyena Wanderlust Seduced in Bologna Like the Bolognese towers in the background, we inclined toward each other for two and a half blissful days. By Tom Di Egidio Expatriate, with olives In a Spanish grove, I found an ancient grace. By Lucy McCauley Complete archives for Travel Travel by e-mail Sign up here to receive our weekly e-mail newsletter listing recent and upcoming articles and events in Travel. Unsubscribe ISFAHAN, Iran Aug. 10: During my travels in Iran I've been reading a book called "Samarkand," n historical novel by Lebanese journalist Amin Maalouf. Set in 11th century Persia, the book recounts the times of the great poet-philosopher Omar Khayyam, whose most tumultuous years began and ended in Isfahan. Aside from drinking about half the wine available in the city, Omar of Nishipur who, despite his near heretical views, enjoyed royal patronage realized his dream of building an astronomical observatory; he was accomplished in the arts of astronomy as well as astrology. One of his goals was to measure accurately the length of the solar year. Not only did he succeed, but the system he developed came into use during his own lifetime on March 21, 1079. "This officially carried the name of the Sultan," writes Maalouf, "but in the street, and even in certain documents, it was enough to mention 'such and such a year in the era of Omar Khayyam.'" A modification of his calendar remains in use today.

93. A Short Tour To Omar Khayyam's Mausoleum In Iran's City Of Neishabour
mathematician, astronomer and poet of the 11th12th centuries, Abolfath Omar ibn-Ibrahim Amonument, which was erected on Khayyam s tomb at an unknown
http://www.payvand.com/news/03/jul/1067.html
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Events Add Events Search Events Shopping Bazar Books Music Film Payvand's Iran News ... A short tour to Omar Khayyam's mausoleum in Iran's city of Neishabour An official from Neishabour Cultural Heritage Department, Mohammad-Ismail Etemadi, said on Wednesday that over 300,000 tourists, including 400 foreigners, visited the mausoleum of the prominent Iranian scholar Omar Khayyam during the last Iranian year (ended March 20), IRNA reported from Neishabour, Khorassan province. He added that in the first quarter of the current Iranian year, some 300 foreign tourists visited the site and the number of visitors have increased twelve times compared to the figure for the same period last year. The ancient city of Neishabour, a hub of Iranian culture and civilization throughout history, is located on the southern foothills of Binaloud mountain range and is known for its inlaid pen holders. The city has been inhabited by unique men of science and literature in the past, while today it is home to the mausoleums of prominent scholars, each of whom have added a few golden pages to the voluminous book of Iran's long history.

94. Encyclopedia: 1048
Centuries 10th century 11th century - 12th century Decades 990s May 31 - OmarKhayyam, Persian poet, astronomer, mathematician and philosopher (+ 1131
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  • 95. WWW-VL History Index
    Asian Identity Under Russian Rule, by HB Paksoy; Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam of Naishapur 16thCentury The Reign of Babur, 15261530; The Memoirs of Babur for Oct
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    96. Iran, The Cradle Of Sience
    Kouhi, Ahmad Ibn Abdul Jalil Qomi, Bu Nasr Iraqi, Abu Reyhan Birooni (10th and 11thcentury AD.), the great Iranian poet Hakim Omar Khayyam Neishaburi, Qatan
    http://home.btconnect.com/CAIS/Science/iran_sience.htm
    University of London Russell Square, London WC1H 0XG United Kingdom © 1998-2002 CAIS at SOAS, all rights reserved.
    For any further information please contact: Shapour Suren-Pahlav cais@soas.ac.uk You are visitor No: "The future belongs to the nation who appreciate her past." Support Encyclopaedia Iranica Support BIPS The British Institute of Persian Studies IRAN THE CRADLE OF SCIENCE
    There is not much information about the evolution of science in Iran in ancient times. It is however, established that science and knowledge was a progress during the Sassanid period (226-652 AD.) when great attention was given to mathematics and astronomy. The existence of astronomical tables such as the Shahryar Tables and the observatories which were later imitated by the astrologers and astronomers of the Islamic period prove the importance of astronomy in Iran during the Sassanid dynasty. Sa'ad Andolsosi in his book "Classes of People" highly praised the knowledge of Iranians of that period in mathematics and astronomy. In some books wrote in the Pahlavi languages one encounter many references to scientific subjects such as the divinity, natural science, mathematics and other relevant subjects.

    97. The Buy Australian Book Store,
    Winner of the Prix de Maisons de la Presse, this novel tells the history of OmarKhayyam s Rubaiyaat from its creation by the poet in the 11thcentury to its
    http://books.buyaustralian.com/PopCat.asp?storeurl=buyaustralian&PageNo=523&catm

    98. Search Results For Verve - Encyclopædia Britannica
    from about the mid11th century until the resounded in the 19th century, when connoisseurs OmarKhayyam Persian mathematician, astronomer, and poet, renowned
    http://www.britannica.com/search?query=verve&fuzzy=N&ct=eb&start=8&show=10

    99. Baba Tahir Oryan - 11th Centuary Persian Poet - Persian Poets
    Oryan, born in Hamadan, Iran, in the early eleventh century, was consideredby his contemporaries as one of the most eminent, erudite mystics and
    http://www.farsinet.com/poetry/babatahir1.html
    Persian Poetry and Poetic Art Baba Tahir Oryan of Hamadan Baba Tahir Oryan's mysticism, philosophy, and sentiments are captured in quatrains of simple and uniform metre. Oryan , born in Hamadan, Iran, in the early eleventh century, was considered by his contemporaries as one of the most eminent, erudite mystics and sentimentalists of his time, a reputation he has held in the affection of his countrymen to the present day. Little is known of the circumstances of Oryan's birth and death, and only his verses allowed his contemporaries and today's readers to appreciate this thoughts and sentiments. Beneath the tyranny of eyes and heart I cry,
    For, all that the eyes see, the heart stores up,
    I'll fashion me a pointed sword of steel,
    put out mine eyes, and so set free my heart. From The Quatrains of Baba Tahir Oryan of Hamadan (Persian Mystic): I am that ocean now in foam and tide;
    I am that sun, but now in rays abide.
    I move and burn, and then reverse my course;
    I shine and glow and then grow low and hide.
    I am that sea now gathered in a tear.

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