The Medieval Islamic Hospital Medicine Religion and Charity Review Fancy
1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare from Muslim Civilisation
1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare from Muslim Culture tells the fascinating story of how generations of physicians from different countries and creeds created a medical tradition admired by friend and foe...
About the book
Figure 1. Volume cover, 1001 Cures; Contributions in Medicine & Healthcare from Muslim Civilization
Medicine and allied sciences flourished in the medieval Islamic earth. 1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare from Muslim Culture tells the fascinating story of how generations of physicians from unlike countries and creeds created a medical tradition admired by friend and foe. Information technology influences the fates and fortunes of endless homo beings, both East and West.
Based on a translation movement of Greek medical tests, information technology drew on the legacy of surrounding cultures (Egyptian, Persian, Indian and Chinese). Chiefly, it innovated in surgery, gynaecology, paediatrics and pharmacology, to name only a few areas. Ultimately, this tradition served as the foundation for European university medicine in the medieval and early modern catamenia and has thus impacted on healthcare until today.
The choice of the championship 1001 cures like its predecessor publication 1001 Inventions, reminds us of the famous 1001 Nights or the Arabian Nights. These were allegedly stories to entertain the caliph of Baghdad Harun al-Rasheed who, like his son Al-Mamoon, was a patron of the arts and mathematics. During their catamenia the move of translation of philosophical, cultural and medical heritage of the antiquities to Arabic contributed to the start of new Renaissance of intellectual activities in the Middle East, Northward Africa and Central Asia in the loftier middle age. This is demonstrated in this superb volume. It is a substantial contribution to this important point of the history of Medicine and Healthcare. It comes at a time when the globe badly needs intercultural agreement and appreciation. Information technology is an unalloyed pleasance to commend information technology to you. " Professor Sir Magdi Yacoub ( Extract from book foreword)
Figure 2. Treatment of dislocated hip joint in Cerrâhiyetü'fifty Hâniye by Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu (Source)
Most the Authors
1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare from Muslim Civilisation is a multi-author book, where distinguished authors, physicians and historians of scientific discipline have key contributions. The volume, which is edited by Peter Eastward Pormann, falls in 19 chapters and features 13 authors.
Rabie E. Ebdel-Halim
Rabie East. Abdel-Halim (deceased) was a consultant urologist who researched and lectured on the discipline for more than 30 years and was last an emeritus professor of urology at King Saud University Medical Higher, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Professor Abdel-Halim developed an involvement in medical history for over twenty years and published widely in diverse international journals and conference proceedings, and became a visiting professor at Al-Faisal University, Riyadh, where he authored and taught courses on the History of Islamic Science and Islamic Medical Ethics. In 2005 he was awarded the Kuwait Foundation for Advancement of Sciences prize. He was also a poet with several Arabic verse publications. His website is world wide web.rabieabdelhalim.com.
Figure 8. Ibn Rushd in a dialogue with Porphyre in a medieval Latin manuscript Liber de herbis by Monfredo de Monte Imperiali (Source)
Peter Adamson
Peter Adamson is Professor of Late Ancient and Arabic Philosophy at the LMU in Munich; he moved to Munich from King's Higher London, where he is nonetheless affiliated. He has written two monographs on al-Kindī and his circle, and together with Peter E. Pormann produced a book of translations of al-Kindī's works. He has published numerous manufactures on aboriginal and medieval philosophy and edited a number of volumes, generally recently, once again together with Peter E. Pormann, Philosophy and Medicine in the Formative Menstruum of Islam (2017).
Natalia Bachour
Effigy iii.1001 Cures book on display
Natalia Bachour studied pharmacy at the Universities of Damascus and Kiel, translation at the Academy of Mainz, and history of medicine at the Academy of Heidelberg, where she obtained a doctorate with the thesis on early modern Paracelsian physicians and how their discussion was received in Arabic and Turkish; the thesis won the Prix Carmen Francés. Since 2010, she works at the Academy of Zurich, teaching Arabic and history of medicine. Her enquiry focuses on the man body as a remedy in cultural and medical history.
Hans Hinrich Biesterfeldt
Hans Hinrich Biesterfeldt read Standard arabic and Islamic Studies, Aboriginal Philosophy and Medieval History at Freiburg im Breisgau, Munich, Göttingen (PhD 1970), and Yale. Later a two-year fellowship at the Orient-Institut of the Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft in Beirut he taught Arabic and Islamic Intellectual History at the Universities of Heidelberg and Bochum. He published on the transmission of Greek medicine and philosophy to Arabic culture, on the early history of classifications and transmission of knowledge in Islam, and on classical Arabic prose literature.
Leigh Chipman
Leigh Chipman (PhD 2006, The Hebrew Academy of Jerusalem) is an independent scholar, editor and translator based in Jerusalem. She has held postal service-doctoral fellowships at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (Beersheba) and Tel Aviv Academy, and has been a research young man on projects on the reception of Galen in Arabic and Hebrew (Bar-Ilan University) and on Standard arabic epigraphy and on abundance in the Fatimid period (both at the Hebrew Academy of Jerusalem). Her own research focuses social and intellectual history of medicine and science in the Mamluk menstruum and the Cairo Genizah. With Peter E. Pormann and Miri Shefer-Mossensohn, she has recently editied the two-volume special issue of Intellectual History of the Islamicate World on 'Medical Traditions'.
Figure 4.Ibn Sina's celebrated work AI-Qanun fit-tibb or The Canon of Medicine(Source)
Aileen Das
Aileen Das is an Assistant Professor of Classical Studies at the Academy of Michigan. Her work draws attention to the human relationship between medicine and philosophy in the classical and medieval Islamicate worlds. She is broadly interested in the transfer of Greek philosophical knowledge into Arabic. Her research considers not just how the transmission of certain texts shaped the development of 'Arabic Platonism and Aristotelianism', simply as well how the translators of these texts, who were working in the Sinai, Palestine, and Baghdad, adapted the sources for their monotheistic readership.
Nahyan Fancy
Figure 7: Drug beater called "edviye-kûb", employed at the Süleymaniye Infirmary (Source)
Nahyan Fancy is an Associate Professor of Center East/ Comparative History at DePauw University. His research interests are in pre-1500 medicine and intellectual history. He published a monograph on Science and Faith in Mamluk Egypt (Routledge, 2013), examining the intersections of philosophy, theology and medical physiology in the works of Ibn al-Nafīs. His current research focuses on Standard arabic medical commentaries on Avicenna'southward Canon of Medicine, particularly the many developments that took identify in medical physiology between 1250–1520 across Islamic societies. He was a fellow member of the Institute for Avant-garde Written report, Princeton, in autumn 2015.
Peter E. Pormann
Peter East. Pormann in Professor of Classics and Graeco-Arabic Studies at the Academy of Manchester. Recent publications include two special double problems The Arabic Commentaries on the Hippocratic 'Aphorisms' (Oriens, co-edited with Kamran I. Karimullah; 2017), and Medical Traditions (Intellectual History of the Islamicate Earth, co-edited with Leigh Chipman, Miri Schefer-Mossensohn; 2017–18) and ii edited books: La structure de la médecine arabe médiévale (with Pauline Koetschet, 2016); and Philosophy and Medicine in the Formative Period of Islam (with Peter Adamson; 2017). His Cambridge Companion to Hippocrates is forthcoming in 2018.
Pauline Koetschet
Pauline Koetschet is a researcher at the Eye National de la Research Scientifique. She studied philosophy at the École normale supérieure (Rue d'Ulm) in Paris, and obtained a doctorate from the Unversities of Paris-Sorbonne and Warwick with a thesis on Abū Bakr al-Rāzī. She has published an album of Arabic philosophy (La Philosophie arabe, IVe-XIVe siècle, 2011) and edited, with Peter E. Pormann, La construction de la médecine arabe médiévale (2016). She is currently preparing a disquisitional edition and French translation of al-Rāzī'south Doubts about Galen (al-Shukūk ʿalā Jālīnūs).
Mahmoud Misry
Mahmoud Misry, Lecturer at Fatih Sultan Mehmet University, Istanbul. In 1990 he obtained a BSc degree in Paediatrics, and in 2002 he obtained a PhD on the History of Medicine from the Institute for the History of Arabic Science, Aleppo University. He is also the Director of the Wakfiyah Manuscript Library. He is the author of numerous books, papers and presentation on history of
medicine in Arabic. In 2005 his volume on the Benefits of Bodies and Souls (Maṣāliḥ al-abdān wa-l-anfus) past al-Balkhī was awarded a prize by the International Union for the History and Philosophy of Science. His book on the History of Paediatrics in Arabic and Islamic Heritage was awarded the 2005 Prize of State of kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences.
Figure iii. pages from the original manuscript of Al-Tasrif depicting surgical instruments (Source)
Ahmed Ragab
Ahmed Ragab is the Richard T. Watson Associate Professor of Science and Religion at Harvard Divinity School, affiliate associate professor at the section of the history of science, and director of the Science, Faith and Culture plan at Harvard Divinity School. He obtained an MD from Cairo Academy in 2005 and a PhD in History and Philosophy of Science from Fifty'École Pratique des Hautes Études in Paris (2010). His thesis, at present published as a book The Medieval Islamic Hospital: Medicine, Religion and Charity (2015), dealt with medieval hospital provisions in the Islamic world. Other interests include the history of prophetic medicine and modern Islam'southward relationship to science and medicine.
Emily Selove
Emily Selove is a lecturer at the University of Exeter, where she teaches and researches medieval Arabic literature. Her published monograph, Ḥikayat Abī al-Qāsim: A Literary Banquet, centres on the eleventh century story of a Baghdadi political party-crasher in Isfahan. She published a translation of Al-Khaṭīb al-Baghdādī'due south partycrashing book, Selections from the Art of Party-Crashing in Medieval Iraq (2012). Her current research involves a literary reading of medieval Arabic magical texts, and a translation and edition of Sirāj al-Dīn al-Sakkākī'southward thirteenth-century handbook of magic, Al-Kitāb al-Shāmil wa-l-baḥr al-kāmil (The Comprehensive Book and the Full Sea).
Justin Stearns
Justin Stearns is an Acquaintance Professor at New York University Abu Dhabi. His research interests focus on the intersection of constabulary, science, and theology in the pre-modern Muslim Middle Due east. His first volume was Infectious Ideas: Contagion in Pre-Modern Islamic and Christian Idea in the Western Mediterranean (2011) and he has published articles in Islamic Law and Society, Medieval Encounters, Al-Qantara, and History Compass. He is currently working on a book on the social status of the natural sciences in early on mod Kingdom of morocco entitled Revealed Science: The Natural Sciences in Islam in the Age of al-Ḥasan al-Yūsī (d. 1691) besides equally on an edition and translation of al-Yūsī'due south Muḥāḍarāt for the Library of Arabic Literature.
RS Book Launch
London: 14 March 2018; The Foundation of Scientific discipline, Engineering and Civilization (FSTC), the publishers of the title 1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare, in partnership with Healthcare Development Holding (HDH) organised a book launch event at the Royal Order in London in celebration of the British Science Week 2018.
The volume launch event included an enlightening panel discussion that presented the long medical traditions from the East including Muslim and Indian civilisations as well as along the Silk Road. The panel, which was moderated by Bettany Hughes, included Peter Frankopan, Peter Pormann and Aarathi Prasad. The distinguished speakers discussed the fascinating legacy of healthcare from the Eastern world, and how information technology drew on ancient cultures and influenced European idea.
After the panel speeches were made past: Mr Ian Fenn, representing publishers; Dr Wael Kaawch representing the sponsors; Prof Peter Porrman representing the authors; Dr Tarek Fadaak and Dr Ahmed Abo Khatwa representing the readers; Dr Sharif Kaf Al-Ghazal reading a tribute on belatedly Dr Rabie Abdel Halim sent by Prof Glen Cooper.
Where to find
To enquire about obtaining a copy of the 1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare in Muslim Civilisation, please contact us.
Effigy 8. At the centre, Prof Sir Venki Ramakrishnan, president of Royal Society, recieving 1001 Cures book in his office
Source: https://muslimheritage.com/1001-cures-book/
Post a Comment for "The Medieval Islamic Hospital Medicine Religion and Charity Review Fancy"