Muslim Inventions in the Islamic Golden Age 750-1500 AD
By Aliya Anjum
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About this ebook
The age of globalization is posing serious challenges to the understanding of Islam. While no civilization can survive without understanding its own past, Muslims appear to be indifferent to it and therefore uncertain of the future. That is why I am grateful to Aliya Anjum for picking up the banner of scholarship and helping us to understand the Islamic past. I am particularly thrilled that she represents the younger generation of Pakistani female writers. Writing with a poet's heart and a historian's mind, she has given us detailed accounts of Muslim inventors and inventions. Among her extensive writing is a book about the wives of the Holy Prophet of Islam. Ms. Anjum's works should be compulsory reading for both Muslims and non-Muslims: for the former they will inspire Muslims to rediscover the virtues of knowledge and learning; for the latter, they will reassure non-Muslims that Muslim society has much to commend it as against the current stereotypes. I pray for continued success of Aliya Anjum's mission to educate us all.
---Professor Akbar Ahmed, Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies, American University, Washington, DC USA, called the world's leading authority on contemporary Islam by BBC.
Read eye opening facts about the Islamic civilization at its peak. This book would clear any misconceptions about Islam. It sheds light on how the Quran influenced the Islamic Empire into achieving scientific and artistic excellence.
The book takes the readers on a magnificent journey beginning from the ancients (mainly Greeks) who pioneered the sciences. It then relates the achievements of medieval Islamic world where the sciences and the arts scaled new heights. From pioneer surgeons, mathematicians, chemists to aviators and artists, the Muslim Empire circa 750-1500 AD was a civilization at its peak. It consisted of trail blazers who set the precedent for Europe to follow centuries later. The book then reconnects the reader with the modern western world and its scientific renaissance.
In an unfortunate turn of events, these facts have been lost to history. The book explains true scientific history by correcting erroneous beliefs held by even prestigious sources such as the Encyclopedia Britannica. Read to find out who invented robots in the 1200's, who presented the theory of relativity centuries earlier than Einstein and who created public hospitals with wards and nature therapy centuries before Europe.
Aliya Anjum
My pen is my passion and I write to educate, provoke thought, enthrall and amuse. I have been writing since the age of 17 when I got published in the largest selling daily of Pakistan. I have written over a wide range of topics including op-eds, book reviews, travelogues, socio-economic write-ups and economic policy critiques. I also teach part time in an MBA program which is my second favorite activity after writing. I hold a masters degree from US and I attended business school in Pakistan for my undergraduate degree. Before I discovered e-books I was an unpublished National Prize winning author of 3 books. I wrote them to find challenge in boring work. I am here as an author and as a reader. Peace be upon you!
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Muslim Inventions in the Islamic Golden Age 750-1500 AD - Aliya Anjum
THE BEGINNING OF THE GOLDEN AGE OF ISLAMIC SCIENCES
Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was born in 570 A.D in Mecca (Makkah) Saudi Arabia. He started to preach Islam to the Arabs around 610 A.D and continued to do so for almost 23 years till he met His Creator in 632 A.D
After Muhammad, under the influence of Islam, the Arabs underwent a radical transformation from desert dwelling tribesmen to a highly disciplined and sophisticated society. In the reign of Caliph Umar (634-644 AD) in an astonishingly short time span, Muslims conquered Roman (Byzantine) and Persian territories. The mighty empires of Rome and Persia fell at the hands of legendary warriors Khalid bin Walid and Amr bin Al-Aas in battles that changed the world. Over the next few centuries, Muslim Caliphs ruled over the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia, Turkey, and later even parts of Europe (Greece, Ukraine, Romania, Macedonia, Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria, Bosnia, Spain, Portugal as well as the Italian island of Sicily). [1]
The very first revelation of the Holy Quran was "Read in the name of thy Lord" (Quran 96:1), clearly indicating the importance of knowledge. Prophet Mohammad (saw) declared it the duty of every Muslim to seek knowledge. The newly established Muslim empire thus began to stress upon education and knowledge, in line with the teachings of Islam, beginning early in the eighth century AD.
The Umayyad Caliphate in Damascus, Syria around 712 A.D began the Muslim quest for science by procuring the scattered existing knowledge of all ancient cultures. Greek cities under Roman rule which the Muslims conquered, such as the cities of Alexandria in Egypt, Damascus in Syria and Antioch in present day Turkey, held state archives and private collections of Greek scientific and philosophical text. Treatises were also obtained from newly conquered cities in Persia. The Muslims procured scientific text from the ancient civilizations of India, China and Iraq (Babylon) as well. This massive collection of all available knowledge from various cultures was then translated into Arabic.
After the Umayyad dynasty, the Abbasid Caliph Al-Mansur greatly enhanced this tradition at his Baghdad based caliphate around 762 A.D. Abbasid Caliph Harun ul-Rashid who featured very often in the Arabian Nights, was crowned Caliph in 786 A.D. He set up a scientific academy (which also included an astronomical observatory later) known as Bayt al-Hikmah (House of Wisdom) in Baghdad, Iraq. It was here that Muslim Scholars rigorously translated the ancient works and created ground-breaking new sciences. The ancient works came from Babylonian (ancient Iraq), Egyptian, Greek, Chinese and Indian Scholars such as Aristotle, Plato, Archimedes, Hippocrates, Pythagoras and others. [2]
The Muslim world created new sciences such as Chemistry and Algebra, as well as greatly developed existing sciences.
Around 756 A.D, the Umayyad Prince Abd-al-Rehman established Muslim rule in Al-Andulus (Spain). Over the next three hundred years, Muslim Spain (Al-Andulus) became the greatest center of science in Europe, at a time when the rest of Europe was in its dark ages
(a period of 1,000 years from 400 to 1400 A.D). [3] This was a time when Al-Andulus boasted of clean beautiful streets, planned towns and free education for all. People in other European countries such as England, Germany and France lived in miserable conditions. Muslim rule in Spain (Al-Andulus) lasted over 700 years and ended in 1492.
The Fatimid dynasty in 909 A.D, started to rule Egypt. They established formal universities and schools, such as the world famous Al-Azhar University of Cairo set in 975 A.D. This dynasty also greatly encouraged learning.
The golden age of Muslim science and discovery took place in various parts of the Islamic World; Al-Andulus (Spain); Damascus (Syria); Baghdad (Iraq); Cairo (Egypt) Samarqand (Uzbekistan in Central Asia); Shiraz (Iran) and Istanbul (Turkey). This golden age lasted for more than 700 years. [4]
Europe’s version of modern scientific history begins with the Greeks (Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods) which existed between 800 BC to 27 BC. After this period, the Greco-Roman period began, with the establishment of Roman rule in Greece circa 27 BC, ending the Greek age. The Greeks golden age produced thinkers, physicians and philosophers such as Hippocrates, Galen, Aristotle, Euclid, Ptolemy and Archimedes. The Roman Empire officially ended in 476 AD, and thereafter Europe fell into scientific backwardness for the next 1,000 years (called the dark ages) till the European reawakening or the Renaissance
in the mid 1400’s. However, the European dark ages
are the Muslim golden age, when Muslims took over science and discovery, beginning circa 750 AD and ending around 1500 AD.
It was through the Muslims that Europe came out of its dark ages. The re-awakening of Europe (called the Renaissance) took place in the city of Florence, Italy under the influence of neighboring Muslim Spain or Al-Andulus. The modern European age of science and discovery, is owed mainly to the works of the Muslims. However, western history has largely ignored Muslim contributions. They have attributed Muslim works to European scientists who came centuries later, and who relied on Muslim works themselves. The Muslim scholars, are sometimes known to the western world by their Latinized names such as Avicenna for Ibn Sina and Geber for Jabir ibn