Abu al-Salt

Abū al‐Ṣalt Umayya ibn ʿAbd al‐ʿAzīz ibn Abī al‐Ṣalt al‐Dānī al‐Andalusī (Arabic: أبو الصلت) (c.1068October 23, 1134), known in Latin as Albuzale, was an Andalusian-Arab [1][2] polymath who wrote about pharmacology, geometry, Aristotelian physics, and astronomy.[3] His works on astronomical instruments were read both in the Islamic world and Europe. He also occasionally traveled to Palermo and worked in the court of Roger I of Sicily as a visiting physician.[4] He became well known in Europe through translations of his works made in the Iberian Peninsula and in southern France.[4] He is also credited with introducing Andalusian music to Tunis, which later led to the development of the Tunisian ma'luf.[4]

Abū al‐Ṣalt
Bornc.1068
DiedOctober 23, 1134
Academic background
Academic work
EraIslamic Golden Age
Main interestsQuadrivium, Astronomy, Music
InfluencedSamuel of Marseilles, Profiat Duran

Life

Abu al-Salt was born in Dénia, al-Andalus. After the death of his father while he was a child, he became a student of al‐Waqqashi (10171095) of Toledo (a colleague of Abū Ishāq Ibrāhīm al-Zarqālī). Upon completing his mathematical education in Seville, and because of the continuing conflicts during the reconquista, he set out with his family to Alexandria and then Cairo in 1096.

In Cairo, he entered the service of the Fatimid ruler Abū Tamīm Ma'add al-Mustanṣir bi-llāh and the Vizier Al-Afdal Shahanshah. His service continued until 1108, when, according to Ibn Abī Uṣaybiʿa, his attempt to retrieve a very large Felucca laden with copper, that had capsized in the Nile, ended in failure. Abu al-Salt had built a mechanical tool to retrieve the Felucca, and was close to success when the machine's silk ropes fractured. The Vizier Al-Afdal ordered Abu al-Salt's arrest, and he was imprisoned for more than three years, only to be released in 1112.

Abu al-Salt then left Egypt for Kairouan in Tunisia, where he entered the service of the Zirids in Ifriqiya. He also occasionally traveled to Palermo and worked in the court of Roger I of Sicily as a visiting physician.[4] He also sent poems to the Palermitan poet Abū l-Ḍawʾ. He died in Béjaïa, Algeria.

Works

Abu al-Salt wrote an encyclopedic work of many treatises on the scientific disciplines known as quadrivium. This work was probably known in Arabic as Kitāb al‐kāfī fī al‐ʿulūm. His interests also included alchemy as well as the study of medicinal plants. He was keen to discover an elixir able to transmute copper into gold and tin into silver.

Astronomy

  • Risāla fī al-amal bi‐l‐astrulab ("On the construction and use of the astrolabe")
  • A description of the three instruments known as the Andalusian equatoria.
  • Ṣifat ʿamal ṣafīḥa jāmiʿa taqawwama bi‐hā jamīʿ al‐kawākib al‐sabʿa ("Description of the construction and Use of a Single Plate with which the totality of the motions of the seven planets"),[4] where the seven planets refer to Mercury, Venus, earth, Moon, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn.
  • Kitāb al‐wajīz fī ʿilm al‐hayʾa ("Brief treatise on cosmology")
  • Ajwiba ʿan masāʾil suʾila ʿan‐ha fa‐ajāba or Ajwiba ʿan masāʾil fī al‐kawn wa‐ʾl‐ḥabīʿa wa‐ʾl‐ḥisāb ("Solution to questions on cosmology, physics, and arithmetic").
  • An introduction to astronomy.
  • A Summary of Ptolemy's Almagest.

See also

Notes

  • Comes, Mercè (2007). "Abū al‐Ṣalt: Umayya ibn ʿAbd al‐ʿAzīz ibn Abī al‐Ṣalt al‐Dānī al‐Andalusī". In Thomas Hockey; et al. (eds.). The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers. New York: Springer. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-0-387-31022-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link) (PDF version)

References

  1. The Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 1967.
  2. Marcorini, Edgardo (1988). Prehistory. Facts On File, Incorporated. ISBN 9780871964755.
  3. Selin, Helaine (2008). Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non-Western Cultures. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 9.
  4. Comes 2007.
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