HUNAYN IBN ISHAQ hunayn ibn ishaq ALIBADI ( 200) Abu Zayd hunayn ibn ishaq al-Ibadi, the celebrated physician, was the most eminent man of his time in the art of medicine. http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/ip/bio-hi.htm
Extractions: Almagest (it is true) (ratl) *[ If we read it as ritle it might mean four cups of wine, which is more probable-Ed.] of old wine; if he felt a desire for fruit freshly gathered, he took Syrian apples and quinces. This was his habit till the end of his life. He died on Tuesday, 7th Safar, A.H. 260 (December, A.D. 873). In the life of his son, the meaning of the word has been already given. The Yunanites were physicians who lived before the time of Islamism; they were sons of Yunan, [Yonan is most probably an altered form of Ionia.] the son of Yafith (Jephet), the son of Nuh (Noah). Islamic Philosophy home Dictionary of Islamic Philosophy Site Translator's Site E-mail
Islamic Medical Manuscripts: Bio-Bibliographies 2347. Hubaysh ibn al-Hasan al-Asam al-Dimashqi (d. end of 9thcentury) Hubaysh was the nephew and pupil of hunayn ibn ishaq. http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/arabic/bioH.html
Extractions: A B C D ... G H I J K M ... Z Hadikhan See Muhammad Husayn ibn Muhammad Hadi d. For sources regarding his life, see Richter-Bernburg, "UCLA" , p. 32; and Storey PL II,2 , pp. 220-3 no. 380. see Hakim Muhammad Hadikhan see Muhammad Husayn ibn Muhammad Hadi Hakim Muhammad Sharif Khan d. 1805/1220 or 1816/1231) Mughal For his life and writings, see Storey PL II,2 , pp. 283-5 no. 494; GAL-S , vol. 2, p. 864 no. 56a Harawi, Muhammad ibn Yusuf fl. 1492-1518/898-924 H) In 1518/924 Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Harawi composed in Arabic an alphabetical medical dictionary and encyclopedia. It covered anatomical and pathological terms and concepts, medicinal substances, and prominent physicians, with all the entries arranged alphabetically. NLM has one copy of this comprehensive medical dictionary ( MS A 6, item 1 Al-Harawi also wrote a lexicon titled Jawahir al-lughah , in three chapters: the first explaining terminology for parts of the body (in alphabetical order), the second on the names of simple and compound drugs (also in alphabetical order), and the third on names of diseases, presented in order from head to toe according to their locations. An autograph copy of Jawahir al-lughah exists in which the author states that he completed the correction of the treatise in 898/1492 (London, Wellcome Library for the History and Understanding of Medicine, MS Arab. 143). The
Hunayn Ibn Ishaq -- Encyclopædia Britannica MLA style " hunayn ibn ishaq." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2004 APA style hunayn ibn ishaq. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved May 2, 2004, from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=42449
Loq-Man Translations Zayd hunayn ibn ishaq alIbadi (808 - 873) hunayn ibn ishaq is most famous as a translator His son Ishaq ibn Hunayn, strongly influenced by his father, is famed http://www.loqmantranslations.com/ArabicFacts/ArabTranslators.html
Extractions: Consulting Translators Contact Us Abu Zayd Hunayn ibn Ishaq al-Ibadi (808 - 873) Hunayn ibn Ishaq is most famous as a translator. He was not a mathematician but trained in medicine and made his original contributions to the subject. However, as the leading translator in the House of Wisdom at one of the most remarkable periods of mathematical revival, his influence on the mathematicians of the time is of sufficient importance to merit his inclusion in this archive. His son Ishaq ibn Hunayn, strongly influenced by his father, is famed for his Arabic translation of Euclid's Elements. Hunayn's father was Ishaq, a pharmacist from Hira. The family were from a group who had belonged to the Syrian Nestorian Christian Church before the rise of Islam, and Hunayn was brought up as a Christian. Hunayn became skilled in languages as a young man, in particular learning Arabic at Basra and also learning Syriac. To continue his education Hunayn went to Baghdad to study medicine under the leading teacher of the time. However, after falling out with this teacher, Hunayn left Baghdad and, probably during a period in Alexandria, became an expert in the Greek language. Hunayn returned to Baghdad and established contact with the teacher with whom he had fallen out. The two became firm friends and were close collaborators on medical topics for many years.
MOHAMMAD IBN ZAKARIYA AL-RAZI MOHAMMAD IBN ZAKARIYA ALRAZI. ( 864-930 A.D.) Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (864-930 A.D.) was born at Ray, Iran. astronomy, chemistry and philosophy from a student of hunayn ibn ishaq http://members.tripod.com/~wzzz/RAZI.html
Extractions: var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Check out the NEW Hotbot Tell me when this page is updated MOHAMMAD IBN ZAKARIYA AL-RAZI (864-930 A.D.) Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (864-930 A.D.) 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 A.D. 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.
Hunayn Abu Zayd hunayn ibn ishaq alIbadi. Born 808 in al-Hirah Hunayn ibnIshaq is most famous as a translator. He was not a mathematician http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Hunayn.html
Extractions: Hunayn ibn Ishaq is most famous as a translator. He was not a mathematician but trained in medicine and made his original contributions to the subject. However, as the leading translator in the House of Wisdom at one of the most remarkable periods of mathematical revival, his influence on the mathematicians of the time is of sufficient importance to merit his inclusion in this archive. His son Ishaq ibn Hunayn, strongly influenced by his father, is famed for his Arabic translation of Euclid 's Elements. Hunayn's father was Ishaq, a pharmacist from Hira. The family were from a group who had belonged to the Syrian Nestorian Christian Church before the rise of Islam, and Hunayn was brought up as a Christian. Hunayn became skilled in languages as a young man, in particular learning Arabic at Basra and also learning Syriac. To continue his education Hunayn went to Baghdad to study medicine under the leading teacher of the time. However, after falling out with this teacher, Hunayn left Baghdad and, probably during a period in Alexandria, became an expert in the Greek language. Hunayn returned to Baghdad and established contact with the teacher with whom he had fallen out. The two became firm friends and were close collaborators on medical topics for many years.
Hunayn Biography of hunayn ibn ishaq (808873) Abu Zayd hunayn ibn ishaq al-Ibadi Main index. hunayn ibn ishaq is most famous as a translator http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Hunayn.html
Extractions: Hunayn ibn Ishaq is most famous as a translator. He was not a mathematician but trained in medicine and made his original contributions to the subject. However, as the leading translator in the House of Wisdom at one of the most remarkable periods of mathematical revival, his influence on the mathematicians of the time is of sufficient importance to merit his inclusion in this archive. His son Ishaq ibn Hunayn, strongly influenced by his father, is famed for his Arabic translation of Euclid 's Elements. Hunayn's father was Ishaq, a pharmacist from Hira. The family were from a group who had belonged to the Syrian Nestorian Christian Church before the rise of Islam, and Hunayn was brought up as a Christian. Hunayn became skilled in languages as a young man, in particular learning Arabic at Basra and also learning Syriac. To continue his education Hunayn went to Baghdad to study medicine under the leading teacher of the time. However, after falling out with this teacher, Hunayn left Baghdad and, probably during a period in Alexandria, became an expert in the Greek language. Hunayn returned to Baghdad and established contact with the teacher with whom he had fallen out. The two became firm friends and were close collaborators on medical topics for many years.
References For Hunayn References for hunayn ibn ishaq. Biography in Dictionary of ScientificBiography (New York 19701990). Articles hunayn ibn ishaq. http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/References/Hunayn.html
Islamic Medical Manuscripts : Catalogue - Commentaries 2 Sharh Kitab alMasa il fi al-tibb lil-mutaallimin (MS A 66) (Commentary on TheQuestions on Medicine for Beginners ) by hunayn ibn ishaq by Ibn Abi Sadiq http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/arabic/C2.html
Extractions: by Ibn Abi Sadiq d. after 1068/460 H) The most productive translator of Greek medical and scientific treatises into Arabic was Hunayn ibn Ishaq, who died in 873 or 877 (260 or 264 H). Known to Europeans as Johannitius, Hunayn also composed a number of original medical writings, including the influential Questions on Medicine for Beginners ). A number of commentaries were written on Hunayn's popular introduction to medicine, one of the most important being that by Ibn Abi Sadiq, who died shortly after 1068/460 H. NLM has a copy of the commentary by Ibn Abi Sadiq on Hunayn's Questions on Medicine for Beginners . It is an important copy because of its apparent age (thirteenth-century). For other copies of the commentary by Ibn Abi Sadiq, see Dietrich, Medicinalia , p. 43-4 no. 15; Ullmann, Medizin , p. 160 note 4; GAL vol. 1 p. 484 (638) and GAL-S ijazah signed by him certifying that a pupil of his named Amin al-Dawlah Tadrus ibn Nasr ibn Malik studied and mastered its contents. The commentary by Ibn Abi Sadiq has not been published in a modern translation or edition. An English translation of the Hunayn's original treatise has been published in
Islamic Medical Manuscripts: Bio-Bibliographies Ibn Abi Sadiq, Abu alQasim Abd al-Rahman ibn Ali Hippocrates (Buqrat al-thani)". His commentary on the hunayn ibn ishaq's Questions on Medicine, however, may have been http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/arabic/bioI.html
Extractions: A B C D ... H I J K M N ... fl. before 1546/953) Nothing is known of this author except that he wrote a Persian treatise on magical medical procedures, extracts of which are preserved in a unique copy now at NLM ( MS P 29, marginal item 31 ). The treatise is written in the margins of another treatise. The volume bears an owner's stamp dated 1546 (953 H), thereby providing a date before which the otherwise unknown author must have worked. , Muhyi al-Din ( d. Sufis He composed many treatises (over 200 titles are recorded) on numerous topics. Amongst these is a tract on physiogonomy, recently translated into Spanish from the Arabic: , translated by M. J. Viguera (Madrid: Nacionel, 1977). He also composed material concerned with astrological and divinatory topics (though the popular treatise on the interpretation of dreams that circulated under his name is generally considered to be spurious). For his life and writings, see A. Ates, 'Ibn al-'Arabi' in EI (2nd ed.) , vol. 3, pp. 707-11; and Ullmann, Natur
Comparative Index To Islam : HUNAYN IBN ISHAQ hunayn ibn ishaq Lived AD 809873. Was a Nestorian Christian duringthe glory years of the Abbasid Caliphate in Iraq. He studied http://answering-islam.org.uk/Index/H/hunayn_ibn_ishaq.html
Extractions: HUNAYN IBN ISHAQ Lived AD 809-873. Was a Nestorian Christian during the glory years of the Abbasid Caliphate in Iraq. He studied Greek and became known among the Arabs as the "Sheikh of the translators." He translated the Septuagint, Hippocrates, some of Plato and Aristotle, and other Greek works into Arabic, and almost all of Galen's scientific output into Syriac and Arabic. He was also a great doctor and the Caliph al-Mutawakkil appointed him as his private physician. The Caliph once offered him a large reward to concoct a poison for an enemy, but Hunayn refused and so was thrown into prison for a year. When brought again before the Caliph and threatened with death his reply was, "I have skill only in what is beneficial, and naught else." The Caliph then claimed to be only testing his integrity, and then asked him what prevented him from preparing the deadly poison. Hunayn replied: Two things: my religion and my profession. My religion decrees that we should do good even to our enemies, how much more to our friends. And my profession is instituted for the benefit of humanity and limited to their relief and cure. Besides every physician is under oath never to give anyone a deadly medicine. A modern French historian has called him "the greatest figure of the ninth century."
Ibn Ishaq -- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia Online Article , hunayn ibn ishaq (alIbadi) Arab scholar whose translations of Plato, Aristotle,Galen, Hippocrates, and the Neoplatonists made accessible to Arab http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article?eu=393037&query=ezra, ibn&ct=
Personalities Noble Omar alKhayyam. Yaqub Ibn Ishaq al-Kindi. Abul Hasan Ali al-Masu'di Likewise he wrote a commentary on hunayn ibn ishaq's book. Another famous book embodying his original http://www.jamil.com/personalities
Extractions: Every Muslim who has even a brief acquaintance with Islamic History is aware that the Islamic Ideology and world-view provided, during the first few centuries Hijra, a most powerful source of inspiration, especially for the Muslim people's quest for knowledge. The Islamic spirit produced a radical transformation in the Arabian Peninsula, as well as among the countries where Islam took firm root in the immediately succeeding centuries. The rich contributions which Islam has made in the various branches of Science served as the basis for the development of modern science. Although many earlier western historians tended to ignore this fact, recent investigations have led to a wider recognition of the importance of the Muslim contributions, especially to the development of scientific thought and the scientific method.
Biografia De Hunayn Ibn Ishaq Translate this page hunayn ibn ishaq. (Al-Hira, 808-Bagdad, 873) Médico y traductor árabe.Conocido en la medicina medieval europea con el nombre de Johannitius. http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/biografia/h/hunayn.htm
Extractions: Enlaces Hunayn ibn Ishaq (Al-Hira, 808-Bagdad, 873) Médico y traductor árabe. Conocido en la medicina medieval europea con el nombre de Johannitius. Con sus traducciones de textos galénicos e hipocráticos colaboró de una manera decisiva en la transmisión del saber científico helénico al islam. Es autor también de los primeros tratados árabes de oftalmología. Inicio Buscador Recomendar sitio
Abbaye - Médecine - Culture Médicale - éléments De Biographie D'Hunayn Ben I Translate this page hunayn ibn ishaq, commence comme jeune élève auprès de Yahya (Youkhanna) IbnMassawayh Abu-Zakaria Yahia ibn Massawaih (777-857), chrétien jacobite de http://www.encyclopedie-universelle.com/abbaye-medecine-culture-medicale-johanni
Extractions: "Ma compétence consiste à apporter à autrui un bénéfice et n'ai rien étudié d'autre que cela". Appelé alors par le calife, qui prétendit qu'il avait voulu simplement évaluer l'intégrité de son médecin, le souverain lui demanda alors ce qui l'avait empêché de préparer le poison mortel. Hunayn répondit : "Deux choses : ma religion et ma profession. Ma religion décrète que nous devons faire du bien, même à nos ennemis, combien plus à nos amis. Ma profession, elle, est instituée pour le bénéfice de l'humanité et se borne à la fois d'alléger les souffrances et de guérir. Deplus, chaque médecin prononce le serment de ne jamais donner la mort par sa médecine." De constitutione artis medicae Kitab al-Masa'il al-Ttibbiyah Kitab al-Aghdiya , Livre sur la nutrition
HighBeam Research: Search Results: Article Joannitius, hunayn ibn ishaq al Ibadi (809873). The Hutchinson Dictionaryof World History; 1/1/1998. Read the Full Article, Get http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:28757347&num=5&ctrlInfo=Round
HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results 7. Joannitius, hunayn ibn ishaq al Ibadi (809873) The HutchinsonDictionary of World History; January 1, 1998 Joannitius, Hunayn http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_dictiona
Histoire Des Médecins Et Des Médecines Du Monde Translate this page Galien C. Guerin Guillotin Hahnemann Harvey W. Hasdaï ibn Shaprout Hippocrate Hubayshben-Hasan y Tábit ben Qurra hunayn ibn ishaq dit Johannitius Ibn Abi http://perso.club-internet.fr/jgourdol/Medecins/MedecinsTextes/aaccuemed.html
Extractions: Band XXII (2003) Spalten 589-593 Autor: Wilhelm Baum Werke: Hunain ibn Ishaq: Isagoge sive introductio Johannitii in artem parvam Galeni de medicina speculativa, Argentorati 1534; ; Hunayn ibn Ishaq: The Book of the Ten Treatises on the Eye Ascribed to Hunain ibn Ishaq (809-977 A.D.). The Earliest existing Systematic Textbook on Ophthalmology, trans. and ed. by Max Meyerhof, Cairo 1928Une correspondence islamo-chrétienne entre Ibn al Munaggim, Hunayn ibn Ishaq et Qusta ibn Luqa, ed. Khalil Samir, (= Patrologia Orientalis 40/4), Tournhout 1981. Lit.: Strohmaier G., in: EI 3, 1967, 578-581; - Encyclopaedia Brittanica 6, 15 th Wilhelm Baum Letzte Änderung: 20.09.2003