Merv: History, Science and Learning

Merv is the city which in medieval times dominated the province of Khurasan in today’s Turkmenistan. 

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Figure 2: Map showing Merv at the heart of trade routes of the Islamic east and central Asia

1. Learning and trade in Merv


Figure 3: Sultan Sanjar mausoleum in Merv, a World Heritage site (Source)

Merv is the city which in medieval times dominated the province of Khurasan in today’s Turkmenistan. Early Islamic geographers recorded a great economy based upon thriving farming and irrigation: a highly organized system of maintenance, a system of irrigation canals and a dam above the city with the supply of water regulated and measured by a metering device.[1]

Under the Abbasids, Merv continued to be the capital of the East. The great prosperity of Merv belongs to the period of 8th to the 13th century.[2] In the latter half of the 10th century, when the geographer Al-Muqaddasi knew Merv, a third part of the suburbs was already in ruins, and the citadel was in no better state; however, in the next century, the citadel gained in size and importance under the Seljuks.[3] By the 11th century, Merv was a great commercial centre of the Oriental type with a bazaar, traversed by two main streets, the centre of the market roofed by a dome, shops for artisans, money changers, goldsmiths, weavers, coppersmiths, and potters. It was an administrative and religious centre, containing mosques, madrasas, palaces, and other buildings.[4] The dome of the mausoleum of Sultan Sanjar, one such place, was of turquoise blue, and could be seen at a distance of a day’s journey away.[5]

One of Merv trademarks was its textile products, silk produced in abundance, and also a school for its study. The region was also famed for its fine cotton and exports, of raw products and manufactured, sent to different lands.[6] Merv was one of the great emporia of the caravan routes between western and eastern Asia, including to China. This meant that gradually trade and urban activities became the source of wealth rather than agriculture.[7]

Yaqut al-Hamawi, the famous geographer (d. 1229), spent two years studying in the many libraries of Merv which he admired.[8] According to him, there were ten wealthy libraries in the city around 1216-1218, two in the chief mosque and the remainder in the madrasas.[9] Yaqut was in Merv, collecting the materials for his great geographical dictionary, for before the Mongol invasion the libraries of Merv were celebrated.[10] “Verily but for the Mongols I would have stayed and lived and died there”, he writes, “and hardly could I tear myself away”.[11]Among others, he mentions the two libraries of the Friday mosque, namely the Aziziyah with 12,000 or so volumes, and the Kamaliyah.[12] There was also the library of Sharaf al-Mulk, in his madrasa, and that of the great Seljuk vizier, Nizam al-Mulk.[13] Among the older libraries were those founded by the Samanids, and one in the college of the Umaydiyah; also that in the Khatuniyah College and that which had belonged to Majd al-Muluk.[14]


Figure 4: Islamic silver Coins. The upper coin, minted in Merv (Turkmenistan) and found in Latvia, was used in a pendant. The lower pendant imitates the shape and inscriptions of an Islamic coin, and bears the Christian symbols of a cross and dove-like bird. (Photo by Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images)

2. Scholars of Merv


Figure 5: Exert from the beginning of the edition and translation of Kitab Mizan al-Hikma by Nicholai Khanikoff: “Analysis and Extracts of Kitab Mizan al-Hikma, an Arabic Work on the Water-balance, written by al-Khazini in the Twelfth Century. By the Chevalier N. Khanikoff, Russian Consul-general at Tabriz, Persia.” Journal of the American Oriental Society vol. 6 (1860): pp. 1-128.

Merv produced one of the earliest and greatest scientists of Islam, Ahmad ibn ‘Abdallah al-Marwazi (Marwazi means from Merv) best known as Habash al-Hasib (the calculator), who flourished in Bagdad and died between 864 and 874. He was an astronomer under the Caliphs al-Mamun and al-Muttasim.[15] Habash made observations from 825 to 835 and completed three astronomical tables, the best known being the mumtahin (tested) tables, which may be a collective work of al-Ma’mun’s astronomers, for there was a whole team involved in observation at the court at the time.[16] Apropos of the solar eclipse of 829, Habash gives us the first instance of a determination of time by an altitude (in this case, of the sun); a method which was generally adopted by Muslim astronomers. He seems to have introduced the notion of “shadow,” umbra (versa), equivalent to our tangent, and he compiled a table of such shadows which seems to be the earliest of its kind.[17] One of Habash’s son, called Djafar was also a distinguished astronomer and instrument maker.[18]

A lesser known scholar also from Merv is Al-Saghani, who was a mathematician and astronomer attached to the Buyid observatory in Baghdad.[19] In mathematics, he followed up the work of the Banu Musa, tackling the problem of trisecting the angle, which had preoccupied the ancient Greeks.[20] He was particularly versed in mechanics, and constructed, if he did not invent, the instruments he used for his astronomical observations.[21]

Also coming from Merv is Ibn Ahmad Al-Kharaqi. His name refers probably to the place Kharaq (or Kharak) near Merv and he too was called al-Marwazi. He died in Merv in 1138-1139. He was a mathematician, astronomer and geographer whose works included:

(1) Muntaha al-idrak fi taqsim al-aflak, the highest understanding on the division of spheres, (2) Kitab al-tabsira fi ‘ilm al-hay’a, a shorter astronomical treatise improving on some problems treated in Ibn al-Haytham’s astronomy;

(3) Al-risala al-shamila, the comprehensive treatise, concerning arithmetic; and

(4) Al-risala al- maghribiya (the Magribi treatise). The last two works have not survived.[22]

Al-Kharaqi’s most important work is the Muntaha (the first cited). It is divided into three discourses (maqalas) covering of

(1) the arrangement of spheres (tarkib al-aflak), their movements, etc.;

(2) the shape of the earth, and its subdivision into a part which is inhabited and another which is not, the differences in the ascendents (tali’) and ascensions (matali’) due to geographical positions;

(3) chronology or eras (tawarikh), conjunctions (qiranat), chiefly of Saturn and Jupiter, periods of revolution (adwar)—for example, dawr al-qiran or ‘awd al-qiran (return of the conjunction).[23]

The Tabsira is shorter and covers essentially the same ground; however, it does not contain the elaborate description of the five seas which forms the second chapter of the second part of the Muntaha.[24]

Al-Kharaqi developed the theory according to which the planets are not supported by imaginary circles, but by massive revolving spheres. That theory had been previously expounded by al-Khazin (not to be confounded with al-Khazini), and it found its way into Western Europe through Hebrew and Latin translations of Ibn al-Haytham’s treatise Fi hay’at al-‘alam.[25]

The part of the Muntaha describing the five seas was edited and translated into Latin.[26] There are also details in German by the excellent Wiedemann,[27] on the works of Al-Kharaqi

Another scholar to come from Merv was a historian, his name al-Tamimi al-Sam’ani (that is, of the tribe of Sam’an, a branch of the tribe of Tamim), Taj al-Islam. He was born in Merv in 1113, travelled extensively in Eastern Islam and died in Merv in 1166.[28] He continued the annals of Baghdad begun by al-Khatib (second half of the 11th century). In 1155, he undertook an extensive study of Arabic patronymics (nisba) in eight volumes, which is of great historical geographical interest. Apropos of the names of prominent persons he supplies biographical and topographical explanations, which had been collected by him in the course of his journeys, during which he had met for that very purpose a large number of learned men. His work called Kitab al-ansab is particularly valuable with regard to Persia, Transoxiana, and Central Asia, for which countries it is our principal and often only source of information.[29] The Kitab al-ansab is better known through an abridgment of it, the Lubab, compiled by the renowned historian Ibn al-Athir; or through a further abridgment, the Lubb al-lubab, by al-Suyuti.[30] There is no complete edition of the Ansab, unfortunately, and traces of the work had to be found in Ibn al-Athir and al-Suyuti (second half of the 15th century).[31] There are extracts and details in German on both author and his work by Wüstenfeld.[32]


Figure 6: Extract from Al-Khazini’s geographical table from D.A. King, World-Maps for Finding the Direction and Distance to Mecca (Source)

3. Al-Khazini, the Greatest of Merv’s scientists


Figure 7: Exert of the beginning ofKitab Mizan al-Hikma in the manuscript kept at the Russian National Library in St Petersburg, Khanikoff Collection, Codex 117, folio 1 verso

Possibly, the greatest of all scholars to come from Merv was al-Khazini. Abderahman al-Khazini flourished ca. 1115-ca 1130 at Merv.  Of his life very little is known. A slave (and later a freedman) of Byzantine origin, he was bought by a treasurer (khazin) of the Seljuk court at Merv, called Abu’l-Husayn (or Abu’l-Hasan) Ali ibn Muhammad al-Khazin al- Marwazi, who gave him a good scientific education. Al Khazini subsequently became a mathematical practitioner under the patronage of the Seljuk court. He was very much an ascetic, refusing rewards and handed back 1000 Dinars sent to him by the wife of an Emir. He lived on 3 dinars a year.[33]

His accomplishments in astronomy include his description of his construction of a 24-hour water clock designed for astronomical purposes and for his treatise Al-Zij al-Mu’tabar al-Sinjari (The esteemed Sinjaric tables), giving the positions of the stars for the year 1115/16 at the latitude of Merv. He is also credited with a careful determination of the obliquity of the ecliptic (the band of the zodiac through which the sun apparently moves in its yearly course), but, as Samso remarks, he adopts Al Battani’s value of 23°35′ and concludes (against al-Battani and most of the successive Islamic astronomical tradition) that this parameter is a constant.[34]

Al-Khazini is, however, better known for his book Kitab Mizan al-Hikma (The Book of the Balance of Wisdom),[35] completed in 1121. This encyclopaedic treatise has remained a centrepiece of Muslim physics. Kitab Mizan al-Hikma was written for Sultan Sanjar’s treasury by Al-Khazini, and has survived in four manuscripts, of which three are independent.[36] It studies the hydrostatic balance, its construction and uses and the theories of statics and hydrostatics that lie behind it and other topics. It was partly translated and edited by the Russian envoy Khanikoff in the mid-19th century.[37]

It is important to mention that the first of its eight chapters deal with the theories of centres of gravity, specific gravity and the steelyard theory of his predecessors’ including al-Biruni, Al-Razi, ‘Umar al-Khayam, Thabit ibn Qurra, al Isfizari, and the Greek authors Archimedes and Euclid. Al-Khazini most particularly draws attention to the Greeks’ failure to differentiate clearly between force, mass and weight, and shows awareness of the weight of the air, and of its decrease in density with altitude.[38] By looking at his predecessors’ scientific legacy, al-Khazini provides crucial records of their contributions that could have remained unknown or lost.[39]

A significant part of the book is devoted to hydrostatics, most particularly the determination of specific gravities. Al-Khazini goes to extreme length in describing the equipment necessary to obtain accurate results. His scrupulousness in the preparation of his equipment and materials and in carrying out varied applications of his balances make his book one of the best examples “of rigorous attention to scientific accuracy.”[40] His interest is devoted to the determination of the specific gravities of metals, precious stones and alloys with commercial purposes in mind, so as to determine the purity of various substances and to detect fraud. To determine the specific weight of a specimen, its weight has to be known in air and water, and the volume of air and water displaced by the specimen. Hence, most Muslim researchers used water balances in their experiments. Using the same instrument as al-Biruni, Al-Khazini made repeated trials with several metals and gemstones. He also measured the specific gravities of other substances such as salt, amber and clay, noting whether the substance sank or floated on water.

In all, he records the specific gravities of fifty substances that include precious stones, metals and liquids. The accuracy of such measures is impressive and is offered by Hill, together with modern values. Mieli sees the determination of specific weights by al-Biruni and al-Khazini as some of the most outstanding results obtained by the Muslims in experimental physics.[41]


Figure 8: Colourful diagram of Mizan al-Hikma (the balance of wisdom) designed by Al-Isfizari and Al-Khazini and described in detail by Al-Khazini inKitab Mizan al-Hikma (515 H). This image was displayed in 2001 by Sam Fogg (www.samfogg.com) as part of an original manuscript that was being exhibited among its holdings. Since then, this manuscript is referred to among the holdings of the University of Pennsylvania: Lawrence J. Schoenberg Database of Manuscripts,MS LJS 386

4. Al-Khazini’s analysis of concepts of physics


Figure 9: Diagram of the balance of wisdom drawn by H. Bauereiss in his dissertation under the direction of E. Wiedeman: Zur Geschichte des spezifischen Gewichtes im Altertum und Mittelalter. Erlangen, 1914, p. 31.

The strict definition for specific weight is given by al-Khazini:

The magnitude of weight of a small body of any substance is in the same ratio to its volume as the magnitude of weight of a larger body (of the same substance) to its volume.’’[42]

As a student of statics and hydrostatics, Al-Khazini borrowed immensely from al-Biruni and al-Isfizari.[43] Al-Khazini also devotes a large space to the description of various balances by his predecessors, but the focus is on what he calls ‘The Balance of Wisdom’. Al-Khazini’s own balance of wisdom is a unique instrument. Although this balance owes much to Muzaffar b. Ismail al-Isfizari, al-Khazini added refinements which made it into an instrument that could perform the most accurate measurements.[44] Such accuracy is due to the length of the beam, the special method of suspension, the fact that the centre of gravity and the axis of oscillation were very close to each other, and of course to the very precise construction of the whole. With this, al-Khazini stated that he obtained an accuracy of 1 in 60,000. His uses of this balance were for varied purposes, from ordinary weighing to taking specific gravities, examining the composition of alloys, changing dirhams to dinars and many other transactions.[45] In all his processes, he moved the scales about until he obtained equilibrium. Al-Khazini in his descriptions gives particular focus to determining the proportions of two constituents in an alloy. Hall states that Al-Khazini’s hydrostatic balance can leave no doubt that “as a maker of scientific instruments he is the greatest of any time.’’[46]

Al-Khazini also made many observations and propositions in his book which constitute some of the foundations of modern physics. Hence, he states:

For each heavy body of a known weight positioned at a certain distance from the centre of the universe, its gravity depends on the remoteness from the centre of the universe. For that reason, the gravities of bodies relate as their distances from the centre of the universe.’’[47]

Al-Khazini was, thus, the first to propose the hypothesis that the gravities of bodies vary depending on their distances from the centre of the earth; this phenomenon was only discovered in the 18th century (six centuries after al-Khazini) after a certain development in the theory of gravitation.[48]

Al-Khazini also found that there was greater density of water when nearer to the centre of the earth more than a century before Roger Bacon (1220-1294) propounded and proved the same hypothesis.[49]


Figure 10: Line drawing of the balance of wisdom or Al-Mizan al-Jami’ (the universal balance) of al-Khazini as it was drawn by the publishers of Kitab Mizan al-Hikma in Hyderabad in 1358H/1940, p. 130.

5. The Mongols and the End of Merv as a Centre of Learning and Trade


Figure 11: Page from the Persian translation of Kitab Mizan al-Hikma.

The Muslims who were already facing the Crusades (1095-1291), suffered further invasions form the east, which devastated their eastern empire. In 1219-1222, Genghis Khan and his hordes flattened the eastern parts of the Muslim land. In just one year the Mongols seized the most populous, the most beautiful, and the best cultivated part of the earth whose inhabitants excelled in character and urbanism;[50] and inflicted all ills on them. An army under Genghis’ son Jagtai, captured and sacked Otrar, whilst another under Genghis himself, burned Bukhara to the ground, raped thousands of women, and massacred 30,000 men.[51] Samarkand and Balkh surrendered but suffered pillage, and wholesale slaughter; so much so that a century later Ibn Battuta (14th century) described these cities as still largely in ruins.[52] Through Khurasan, the Mongols ravaged every town on their march, placing captives in their vanguard, giving them the choice between fighting their fellow men in front or being cut down from behind.[53] Amidst the toll of destruction was that of al-Jurjaniyah dam south of the Aral Sea, which diverted the River Oxus from its course and deprived the Aral Sea of water, causing it to nearly dry out centuries later.[54]

Merv was captured and was burned to the ground; its libraries were consumed in the conflagration. All the glories of the Merv libraries fell prey to the flames, which followed in the wake of the Mongol sack of this great city.[55] Ibn al-Athir, who lived through the events, says that the invaders set on fire the Tomb of Sultan Sanjar with most of the mosques and other public buildings.[56] The city’s inhabitants were allowed to march out through the gates with their treasures, only to be massacred. The total slaughter cost 1.3 million lives.[57] Ibn al-Athir wrote

For several years, I put off reporting this event (of the Mongol invasion). I found it terrifying and felt revulsion at recounting it and therefore hesitated again and again. Who would find it easy to describe the ruin of Islam and the Muslims? … O would that my mother had never borne me, that I had died before and that I were forgotten! Though so many friends urged me to chronicle these events, I still waited. Eventually I came to see that it was no use not complying. The report comprises the story of a… tremendous disaster such as had never happened before, and which struck all the world, though the Muslims above all. If any one were to say that at no time since the creation of man by the Great God had the world experienced anything like it, he would only be telling the truth. In fact nothing comparable is reported in past chronicles… Those they (the Mongols) massacred, for a single city whose inhabitants were murdered numbered more than all the Israelites together. It may well be that the world from now until its end… will not experience the like of it again, apart perhaps from Gog and Magog. Dadjal will at least spare those who adhere to him, and will only destroy his adversaries. These (the Mongols), however, spared none. They killed women, men and children, ripped open the bodies of the pregnant and slaughtered the unborn. Truly: we belong to God and shall return to Him; only with Him is strength and power.’[58]

When Merv was visited in the 14th century by Ibn Battuta, it was still in great ruin.[59] Mustawli also saw that it was still largely in ruins, and the sands had begun encroaching.[60]  Hafiz Abru adds that the Mongols had broken down all the great dams and dykes, which under the Seljuks had grown in number, and been carefully maintained, in order thus to regulate the irrigation of the oasis; now everything had lapsed into a desert swamp.[61]

However, some Western historians praise the Mongols. Thus, Saunders, tells us:

`The Mongol massacres, genocide, perhaps arose from mixed motives of military advantage and superstitious fears. By massacres they hastened the surrender of other places and speeded the conquest. However merciless their rage for destruction, after a decent interval, they commonly permitted the rebuilding of the cities they had burnt and ruined.’[62]

Rebuilding may have been permitted but many devastated places were still in ruins centuries later. Wiet et al. tell us that Genghis Khan’s

`means were still limited, but he had on his side the moderation and the deliberation of a great leader and, above all, a magnificent army, the exploits of whose horsemen, incomparable bowmen and seasoned warriors take their place in history and legend.’[63]

Wiet and his group also make the point that:

`What legend portrays so exultantly, however, the chronicles reveal as a grievous ordeal for the city-dwellers of Asia. The Mongols, lagging behind the other barbarians of Asia in their development, did not know what to do with the towns. On the principle that only terror is profitable, only the steppe livable and only the way to heaven valuable, they pillaged, destroyed and massacred. The list of their conquests is a litany of disaster: the marvellous cities of Bukhara, Samarkand, Nishapur, Baghdad and countless others were razed to the ground and their inhabitants slain.’[64]

They further argue that:

`The sword, however, fell only on those who offered resistance. Those who welcomed the Mongol as a liberator… escaped the terror.’[65]

First and foremost, their claim is a fallacy, for most places taken by the Mongols offered no resistance whatsoever (see D’Ohsson, for instance). Secondly it is a contradiction to say that only those who fought were slain and then to state that all the inhabitants, including women and children, were slaughtered.

 
Figure 12-13: Two views of the balance of wisdom as reconstructed by H. Bauereiss and F. Keller (1908-1911), rediscovered by M. Abattouy and Professor Jürgen Renn (director of the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin) in the Deutsches Museum in Munich in 2002 (item invent. Nr. 31116). © Max Planck Institut für Wissenschaftgeschichte, 2002. See Mohammed Abattouy,Muslim Heritage in Mechanics and Technology: Outline of a Program for Future Research.

WHAT DOES ISLAM SAYS ABOUT ABUSING A MUSLIM WITH THE WORD KAFIR,MUSHRIK,HYPOCRITE ETC?

BEWARE WHEN YOU CALL A MUSLIM: ABU LAHAB, KAFIR, MUSHRIK, SATAN, DAJJAL,GRAVE WORSHIPER,IBLEES, ETC:
What does Islam say about calling a Muslim “Kafir” (Disbeliever)?.

So many Muslims, so many filthy Shaykhs and scholars, they have no adab and akhlaq! no morals and no manners, being egoistic and ignorant after knowledge and authority were given, they address other Muslims as Mushrik, Kafir Abu Lahab grave worshiper etc!

Allah says about such egoistic Muslims, scholars shaykhs and leaders:
[Quran 25:43] Have you seen the one whose god is his own ego? Will you be his advocate?
[Quran 45:23] Have you noted the one whose god is his ego? Consequently, God sends him astray, despite his knowledge, seals his hearing and his mind, and places a veil on his eyes. Who then can guide him, after such a decision by God? Would you not take heed?

Being misguided after guided , being lost after saved, such is the consequences of calling another Muslim as Kafir/Mushrik/Abu Lahab/Satan/Grave worshiper etc!

Imam Nawawi (R.A) in his 40 Hadith record:
Abu Hurairah narrated that the messenger of Allah said :
“Let him who believes in Allah and the Last Day either speak good or keep silent, and let him who believes in Allah and the Last Day be generous to his neighbour, and let him who believes in Allah and the Last Day be generous to his guest.” related by Bukhari and Muslim

Sahih Muslim Book 32. Hadith Number 6219:
Abu Huraira reported Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying: Don’t nurse grudge and don’t bid him out for raising the price and don’t nurse aversion or enmity and don’t enter into a transaction when the others have entered into that transaction and be as fellow-brothers and servants of Allah. A Muslim is the brother of a Muslim. He neither oppresses him nor humiliates him nor looks down upon him. The piety is here, (and while saying so) he pointed towards his chest thrice. It is a serious evil for a Muslim that he should look down upon his brother Muslim. All things of a Muslim are inviolable for his brother in faith: his blood, his wealth and his honour.

Muslim Men regardless of their Knowledge and Position in Islam, abusing other
Muslims with the Words that are related to “Disbeliever (Kafir)”

For Example: Calling a Muslim names like Kafir, Mushrik, Abu Lahab, Dajjal,
Shaitan, you and your family will go to hell, grave worshiper etc
are synonyms words of “Kafir” (Disbeliever)

Prophet (s.a.w) saying that if the attacked is not a kafir, the kufr will be reverted to the attacker! So beware oh Muslims oh Shaykhs oh Scholars!

Holy Prophet(p.b.u.h) said: If a Muslim calls another kafir, 
then if he is a kafir let it be so; otherwise, he [the caller] is himself a kafir.”(Abu Dawud, Book of Sunna)

Abu Zarr reported that the Holy Prophet(p.b.u.h) said: No man accuses another man of being a sinner, or of being a kafir but it reflects back on him if the other is not as he called him.” 
-(Bukhari, Book of Ethics; Book 78, ch. 44)

Prophet (s.a.w) said: “Withhold [your tongues] from those who say
`There is no god but Allah’ — do not call them kafir. Whoever calls a reciter of `There is no god but Allah’ as a kafir, is nearer to being a kafir himself.”
(Tabarani, reported from Ibn Umar)

WHAT DOES ISLAM SAY ABOUT SEXUAL IMMORALITY

WHAT DOES ISLAM AND BIBLE SAY ABOUT ADULTERY?
ISLAM&BIBLE PROHIBITS FASHION SHOWS,NAKEDNESS & SEXUAL IMMORALITY:

In Quran: “The woman or man found guilty of sexual intercourse – lash each one of them with a hundred lashes, and do not be taken by pity for them in the religion of Allah, if you should believe in Allah and the Last Day. And let a group of the believers witness their punishment”. Quran 24:2 

And those who accuse chaste women and then do not produce four witnesses – lash them with eighty lashes and do not accept from them testimony ever after. And those are the defiantly disobedient”. Quran 24:4 

4:15 “Those who commit unlawful sexual intercourse of your women – bring against them four [witnesses] from among you. And if they testify, confine the guilty women to houses until death takes them or Allah ordains for them [another] way”. Quran 4:15

In Bible: women, both of them shall be put to death for their abominable deed; they have forfeited their lives. (Leviticus 20:13 NAB) 

If a man commits adultery with another man’s wife, both the man and the woman must be put to death. (Leviticus 20:10 NLT) 

A priest’s daughter who loses her honor by committing fornication and thereby dishonors her father also, shall be burned to death. (Leviticus 21:9 NAB)
Matthew 5:27-28 ESV “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’ But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in
his heart.

BIBLE REJECTS LAWLESSNESS: ACCORDING TO BIBLE, LAWLESS PEOPLE ARE UNBELIEVERS:

2 Corinthians 6:14 ESV Do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers.For what partnership has
righteousness with lawlessness? 
Or what fellowship has light with darkness?

Proverbs 11:22 ESV Like a gold ring in a pig’s snout is a beautiful woman without discretion.

Sahih Muslim Book 033, Hadith Number 6422.
Abu Huraira reported Allah’s Messenger (may peace be upon him) as saying. Allah fixed the very portion of adultery which a man will indulge in. There would be no escape from it. The adultery
of the eye is the lustful look and the adultery of theears is listening to voluptuous (song or talk) and the adultery of the tongue is licentious speech and the adultery of the hand is the lustful grip (embrace)
and the adultery of the feet is to walk (to the place) where he intends to commit adultery and the heart yearns and desires which he may or may not put into effect.

BENEFITS OF GIVING REWARD OF SALAWAT TO OTHERS

Durood

A woman came to Sayyidina Hassan Al-Basri (rahimahullah) and said,

My daughter passed away and now I wish to see her in my dream.

Sayyidina Hassan (rahimahullah) told her,

Offer four rakat Nafl after Isha and in each rakaat recite Surah At-Takasur (102). Then go to sleep while reciting Salawaat upon RasulAllah ﷺ until you fall asleep.

The woman did so and narrated the dream to Sayyidina Hassan (rahimahullah) the next day. She said,

I saw her in a bad state. She was wearing dirty robes. Her hands were tied and there were chains of fire around her feet.

Sayyidina Hassan (rahimahullah) asked her to give sadqa and hope that her daughter’s affliction gets lessened. The following night Sayyidina Hassan (rahimahullah) himself saw a dream wherein he was in Jannah and there was a beautiful young girl on a throne dressed in magnificent clothes. She told him that she was the daughter of the woman who had visited him. Sayyidina Hassan (rahimahullah) told her,

But your mother told me that she saw you in a bad state.

The girl said,

Indeed what she said was true. We were 70,000 souls who were afflicted with the torture of the grave until a pious person passed by us. He recited Salawat upon RasulAllah ﷺ dedicated it’s sawaab to us. And Allah accepted it in such a manner that we were freed from our tribulations and what you see now is due to barakah of that Durood Shareef.

– Al-Qawl Al-Badee : Imaam Shams Ad-Deen Sakhaawi, p.234-235 –

Historiography of Science and Medicine: Balancing Scholarship with Public Engagement

In recent years, here at Fez and all over the world, distinguished scholars have rediscovered the immense importance of Islamic medicine which preserved, systematized and developed the medical knowledge of classical Antiquity. From the seventh century onwards, and for over 1000 years, Islamic physicians remained the main authority throughout the whole of Europe.


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Note of the Editor

This article was presented in the International Congress on History of Medicine in Muslim Heritage, held on 24-28 October 2016 in Fez, Morocco. We are grateful to the editors and the general coordinator of the congress for permitting publishing the article on the Muslim Heritage website.

***

It is a great honour for me to be here today and I thank you most warmly for your invitation as I look forward to learning much in the days to come.

In recent years, here at Fez and all over the world, distinguished scholars have rediscovered the immense importance of Islamic medicine which preserved, systematized and developed the medical knowledge of classical Antiquity. From the seventh century onwards, and for over 1000 years, physicians [from Muslim Civilisation] remained the main authority throughout the whole of Europe.

It is now well known, at least in academic circles, that medicine has always been an important aspect of Islamic culture. In The Prophetic Medicine (Tibb-an-Nabawi), we find this passage narrated by Usamah ibn Sharik:

I came to the Prophet (peace_be_upon_him), and his Companions were sitting as if they had birds on their heads. I saluted and sat down. The desert Arabs then came from here and there. They asked: Apostle of Allah, should we make use of medical treatment? He replied: Make use of medical treatment, for Allah has not made a disease without appointing a remedy for it, with the exception of one disease, namely old age”
Prophetic Medicine (Tibb-an-Nabawi), Book 28, Number 3846)

You will forgive me for saying that the remedy for last disease was the one I was really hoping for!

Doctors [from Muslim Civilisation] became familiar with the Graeco-Roman and late Hellenistic medicine through direct contact with physicians who were practicing in the newly conquered regions. Muslim leaders were remarkably open-minded and displayed a tolerance of personal beliefs that would be commendable in our own age. One remarkable instance is that of the House of Wisdom (Bayt al-Hikma) that was established in the ninth century by the Abbasid Caliph Al-Ma’mun who sent envoys to the Byzantine Emperor Theophilos, asking him to provide whatever classical texts he had available. When these works, which included the writings of Galen and Hippocrates, reached the Caliph he appointed a physician from a Christian family, Hunayn Ibn Ishaq, to supervise their translation.

As the incumbent of the Galileo Chair in the History of Science at the University of Padua I had the opportunity of studying what was being taught to the students at the beginning of the 17th century, the dawn of what has become known as the Scientific Revolution. Galileo is best remembered for his achievements in physics and astronomy, but most of his students came from the Faculty of Medicine. A glance at their curriculum and their textbooks is more than revealing. Prominent among the works they had to study over their three-year course are those of Ibn Sina (whose name was Latinised as Avicenna) and Al-Razi (known in the West as Rhazes). More time was spent studying these great physicians [from Muslim Civilisation] than pouring over Vesalius’ celebrated De Humani Corporis Fabrica, the leading luminary of the Faculty.

A list of subjects offered at this time not only in Padua but also in other Italian universities provides the following information. Courses were given in the morning and in the afternoon. The lectures given in the morning were the most important and belonged to the “Ordinary” course. Those given in the afternoon were less prestigious and were called “Extraordinary”, an instance where words can conceal rather than reveal. The first lecture in the morning was considered basic. In the first of the three-year curriculum, the textbook consisted of Book I of Ibn Sina’s Canon of Medicine (Al-Qānūn fī al-ṭibb) commented by Giovanni Battista da Monte (known as Montano) and published in Venice in 1557. The Canon is a very large encyclopaedia in five books, which covers general principles of medicine, simple drugs, diseases of individual organs, general diseases of the whole body or occurring in various parts of the body, prescriptions for drugs and antidotes. It was just too large to be studied in detail in one year. In the second year, the Aphorisms of Hippocrates were commented, and in third year the Ars Medica or the Tegni of Galen.


Inside image of the Canon of Medicine book (Source)

After the main morning lecture, a second one was devoted to practical medicine. In the first year fevers were discussed in the light of Book IV of the Canon of Medicine. In the second and in the third year “specific diseases between the head and the heart” and “specific diseases below the heart” were taken into consideration, and students were made to study closely book IX of Al-Razi’s Liber ad Almansorem, as this great work was known in Latin translation. The importance attached to this treatise was brought home to the students by the fact that Vesalius himself had written the extended paraphrase that was placed in their hands. Al-Razi had studied Galen carefully, and he had found that Galen’s descriptions were at variance with his own clinical observations regarding the run of a fever. Al-Razi also offered an incisive criticism of the theory that the body possesses four separate humours or fluids whose balance were considered the key to health. When taken up, this line of criticism led to the destruction of Galen’s theory of humours including Aristotle’s theories of the four elements on which it was grounded. I should point out that if Al-Razi challenged the current fundamentals of medical theory, he invariably did so with courtesy, for instance, in the following passage:

I pray to God to direct and lead me to the truth in writing this book. I’m sorry to have to oppose and criticize Galen from whom I have received so much, for he is indeed the master and I am the disciple. But respect and admiration will not deter me from querying what is erroneous . . . I strongly believe that Galen has chosen me to undertake this task, and if he were alive, he would congratulate me on what I am doing. I say this because Galen’s aim was to seek the truth and bring light out of darkness. I wish indeed he were alive to read what I have published.

Galileo spoke in the same way. When his telescope had revealed that the heavens are not unchangeable as Aristotle had taught, Galileo insisted on saying:  “I contradict the doctrine of Aristotle much less than do those people who still want to keep the sky unchangeable, for I’m sure that Aristotle never said that the belief that there is no change in the heavens is as certain as the duty to assent to propositions that depend upon new observations.”

I am not claiming that Galileo was consciously imitating Al-Razi, but I do wish to suggest that the open-mindedness of Al-Razi and Ibn Sina may well have created a climate of genuine enquiry and intellectual daring among students of the Faculty of Medicine.


From Al-Razi’s book (Source)

After lunch (and no siesta as far as I can make out!) students were expected to attend two “extraordinary” courses. The first was on theoretical medicine, and the strange thing was that the professor took up the subject taught in the morning by the ordinary professor but in reverse order. The three-year sequence, instead of being Avicenna, Hippocrates and Galen, became Galen, Hippocrates and Avicenna! The second “extraordinary” course, which was on practical medicine, also proceeded in reverse order, and moved from Al-Razi to Ibn Sina. Why this should have been the case, I have yet to learn, but I do know one thing. Professors had to teach what the students needed to know, and they had to make your lectures interesting. If the number of students fell below six, their salary was reduced accordingly. And if no one showed up, the professor went broke! Student power was not invented yesterday! But I should add that the bylaws made it clear that, at the examinations, students would have to comment on texts from the works of Galen, Hippocrates or Ibn Sina.

But scholarship is not enough. We have the duty to document the Muslim Heritage, but it is also incumbent upon us to communicate the results of our research in a way that is accessible to a large audience. Knowing about the past is not enough by itself for, if undirected, it can issue only in the pursuit of an aimless omniscience. Our curiosity as historians has to be channelled into the task of answering questions that are relevant to our generation. A model for this kind of broad communication is 1001 Inventions. We should also, when possible, draw attention to more recent contributions of [Muslim Civilisation] to medicine and public health.


Similar manuscripts of work on anatomy contained illustrated chapters on five systems of the body: bones, nerves, muscles, veins and arteries. This page depicts the arteries, with the internal organs shown in watercolors (Source)

We are challenged with a shocking ignorance of Islam in several parts of the allegedly civilized world. How has this come to pass? And how are we to correct such a profound historical misunderstanding? I believe that we should, within each and every branch of knowledge with which we are familiar, stress the contributions that have been made in the light of the beliefs that everyone here this morning shares or cherishes.

Allow me to mention one recent development in which not only historians of medicine but all medical doctors should take pride. My example is a vivid one even if it is skin-deep. For years now we have been told by dermatologists that too much sun is bad for the skin. Pharmaceutical companies have made a fortune selling creams and ointments that claim to shut off sunrays. Now three years ago in Australia a designer from the Muslim community came up with a practical solution for women concerned about both their decency and their health. The brand name of the product is Burkini, and we might have expected dermatologists the world over to hail it as a major breakthrough. It has a number of practical advantages. For instance, there is no problem of security. The face is perfectly identifiable, and the hands are exposed, ready for fingerprinting should this be considered useful by some overzealous guard on the beach. I am told that non-Muslim women who purchase this swimwear are four times as numerous as Muslim ladies. It comes in a variety of colours and is said to both comfortable and flexible.

Since skin cancer affects males as well as females, some enterprising company should consider a masculine version of the Burkini. Why the Ministries of health in countries on the Mediterranean, and more specifically on the northern shore, should seriously consider making available to swimmers what is most emphatically not a military costume (as I have heard it said) but a medical invention. It is also a reminder that modesty is a virtue. 


Tibb Al-Nabawi of Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyyah. Dated 21 Shawwal 926 (4 October 1520). Probably Damascus, Syria. Ink, gold and opaque watercolour on paper. © Nour Foundation (Source)