astro.wikisort.org - ResearcherSahl ibn Bishr al-Israili (c. 786–c. 845), also known as Rabban al-Tabari and Haya al-Yahudi ("the Jew"), was a Jewish[1]
Syriac Christian[2][3] astrologer,[4] astronomer and mathematician from Tabaristan. He was the father of Ali ibn Sahl the famous scientist and physician, who became a convert to Islam.[5]
Syriac astronomer and astrologer
He served as astrologer to the governor of Khuristan and then to the vizier of Baghdad. He wrote books on astronomy, astrology, and arithmetic, all in Arabic.[6]
His works
Sahl is believed to be the first who translated the Almagest of Ptolemy into Arabic.
Sahl ibn Bishr wrote in the Greek astrological tradition. Sahl's first five books were preserved in the translation of John of Seville (Johannes Hispanus) (c. 1090 – c. 1150). See the English translation by Holden. The sixth book deals with three thematic topics regarding the influences on the world and its inhabitants was translated by Herman of Carinthia. The work contains divinations based on the movements of the planets and comets.
- The Introduction to the Science of the Judgments of the Stars. Translated by James Herschel Holden (Tempe, Az.: A.F.A., Inc., 2008)ix, 213 pp.
There are some books by Sahl ibn Bishr in Arabic such as:
- Ahkam fi al-Nujum ("Laws of the Astrology")
- Kitab al-ikhtiyarat 'ala al-buyut al-ithnai 'ashar ("Book of elections according to the twelve houses").
- al-Masa'il al-Nujumiyah ("The astrological problems")
Notes
- Astronomy and the Jewish Community in Early Islam
January 2001, Aleph Historical Studies in Science and Judaism 1(1):17-57
Bernard R. Goldstein
- Prioreschi, Plinio (2001-01-01). A History of Medicine: Byzantine and Islamic medicine. Horatius Press. p. 223. ISBN 9781888456042. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
Ali ibn Sahl Rabban al-Tabari, the son of a Syriac Christian scholar living in Persia on the Caspian Sea...
- Meyerhof, Max (July 1931). "Alî at-Tabarî's "Paradise of Wisdom", one of the oldest Arabic Compendiums of Medicine". Isis. 16 (1): 7–8. doi:10.1086/346582. JSTOR 224348.
Ibn al-Qiftî (4) renders the title Rabban correctly but with a false explanation, taking it for the Jewish title of Rabbi. So 'Alî b. Rabban passed into all historical works, until quite recently, as a Muslim of Jewish origin, although 'Alî himself, in the preface to his work, explains this title Rabban as being the Syriac word for "our Master" or "our Teacher". The late Professor Horovitz told me and wrote to me several years ago, that this was a Christian title; A. Mingana gave the proof of this in print for the first time in I922. 'Alî says in his apologetic tract "The Book of Religion and Empire", which he wrote about 855 A.D., that he himself was a Christian before he was converted to Islam, and that his uncle Zakkâr was a prominent Christian scholar.
- "Astrology in Medieval Judaism - My Jewish Learning". Archived from the original on 29 December 2014. Retrieved 29 December 2014.
- Meyerhof (1931), p. 7.
- Roth, Norman, ed. (2003). Medieval Jewish Civilization: An Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge. p. 385. ISBN 978-0-415-93712-2.
Astronomy in the medieval Islamic world |
---|
Astronomers |
---|
| 8th | |
---|
9th | |
---|
10th | |
---|
11th | |
---|
12th | |
---|
13th | |
---|
14th | |
---|
15th | |
---|
16th | |
---|
17th | |
---|
|
|
Topics |
---|
Works |
- Arabic star names
- Islamic calendar
- Aja'ib al-Makhluqat
- Encyclopedia of the Brethren of Purity
- Tabula Rogeriana
- The Book of Healing
- The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries
| Zij | |
---|
|
---|
Instruments |
- Alidade
- Analog computer
- Aperture
- Armillary sphere
- Astrolabe
- Astronomical clock
- Celestial globe
- Compass
- Compass rose
- Dioptra
- Equatorial ring
- Equatorium
- Globe
- Graph paper
- Magnifying glass
- Mural instrument
- Navigational astrolabe
- Nebula
- Octant
- Planisphere
- Quadrant
- Sextant
- Shadow square
- Sundial
- Schema for horizontal sundials
- Triquetrum
|
---|
Concepts |
- Almucantar
- Apogee
- Astrology
- Astrophysics
- Axial tilt
- Azimuth
- Celestial mechanics
- Celestial spheres
- Circular orbit
- Deferent and epicycle
- Earth's rotation
- Eccentricity
- Ecliptic
- Elliptic orbit
- Equant
- Galaxy
- Geocentrism
- Gravitational energy
- Gravity
- Heliocentrism
- Inertia
- Islamic cosmology
- Moonlight
- Multiverse
- Muwaqqit
- Obliquity
- Parallax
- Precession
- Qibla
- Salah times
- Specific gravity
- Spherical Earth
- Sublunary sphere
- Sunlight
- Supernova
- Temporal finitism
- Trepidation
- Triangulation
- Tusi couple
- Universe
|
---|
Institutions |
- Al-Azhar University
- House of Knowledge
- House of Wisdom
- University of al-Qarawiyyin
- Observatories
|
---|
Influences |
- Babylonian astronomy
- Egyptian astronomy
- Hellenistic astronomy
- Indian astronomy
|
---|
Influenced |
- Byzantine science
- Chinese astronomy
- Medieval European science
- Indian astronomy
|
---|
|
|
Mathematics in the medieval Islamic world |
---|
Mathematicians | 9th century | |
---|
10th century | |
---|
11th century | |
---|
12th century | |
---|
13th century | |
---|
14th century | |
---|
15th century | |
---|
16th century | |
---|
| |
---|
Mathematical works |
- The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing
- De Gradibus
- Principles of Hindu Reckoning
- Book of Optics
- The Book of Healing
- Almanac
- Encyclopedia of the Brethren of Purity
- Toledan Tables
- Tabula Rogeriana
- Zij
|
---|
Concepts |
- Alhazen's problem
- Islamic geometric patterns
|
---|
Centers | |
---|
Influences |
- Babylonian mathematics
- Greek mathematics
- Indian mathematics
|
---|
Influenced |
- Byzantine mathematics
- European mathematics
- Indian mathematics
|
---|
Related |
- Hindu–Arabic numeral system
- Arabic numerals (Eastern Arabic numerals, Western Arabic numerals)
- Trigonometric functions
- History of trigonometry
- History of algebra
|
---|
Authority control  |
---|
General | |
---|
National libraries | |
---|
Biographical dictionaries | |
---|
На других языках
[de] Sahl ibn Bischr
Sahl ibn Bischr al-Tabari(stani), auch Sahl ibn Bishr (al-Israili),Sahl ben Bischr[1] (arabisch سهل بن بشر), Sahl al-Tabari oder Rabbi aus Tabaristan (Rabban al-Tabari)[2], Vorname auch Saul, auch als Za(c)hel oder Zael, Cheel sowie Thetel, Zethel und Techel[3] bekannt, (erste Hälfte des 9. Jahrhunderts; nachweisbar ab 823) war ein jüdischer Astrologe, Astronom, Arzt und Mathematiker persischer Herkunft aus Tabaristan, der in Bagdad wirkte. Er war der Vater des berühmten Wissenschaftlers und Arztes Ali ibn Sahl Rabban al-Tabari (Ali bin Radha al-Tabari), der zum Islam konvertierte. Er ist der Verfasser einiger für das Frühmittelalter wichtigen astrologischen Abhandlungen, die in der griechischen astrologischen Tradition (wie Dorotheos von Sidon) standen.
- [en] Sahl ibn Bishr
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии