By Osman Bakar
EVERY
SCIENCE IN A MAJOR CULTURE HAS ITS GOLDEN age and my treatment of Andalusian
science will focus on this period. Once that science is situated in time and
space, it will help those of us living in a different time and very pluralistic
world to better appreciate its significance. The period between the eighth and
15th centuries – or the second and ninth centuries of the Islamic calendar –
tends to evoke for Westerners distant images of darkness, confìicts between men
of religion and men of science, intellectual barrenness, religious intolerance
and so on. The immediate reference is to medieval Europe, but it is assumed
that elsewhere in the world, the prevailing situation must have been the same.
As history tells us, however, Andalusia (as Muslimruled Spain was known) can
hardly be associated with such unfavorable images. On the contrary, Andalusia
has charmed students of its history, culture and civilizational achievements.
Many authors have lavished the region with praise in their writings, evoking images
of enlighttenment and tolerance. Philosoph}1, science, literature and the arts
flourished. Several of its natives, such as Ibn al-’Arabi from Murcia, became
among the greatest spiritual thinkers. Andalusia was perhaps the only place in
Europe where followers of the three Abrahamic faiths – Muslims, Christians and
Jews lived together in relative peace, produced a common culture and
civilization, and maintained this culture over a long period of time. No wonder
some Westerners today are nostalgic for Andalusia.
Andalusia
was rivaled in knowledge, wealth and power only by the Muslim East, but the
Spanish region itself was the Muslim West. Although its body was in Europe, in
mind and spirit, it was closer to the Arab-Muslim world. Intelectually
spiritually and culturali)1, Andalusia was part and parcel of the vast Muslim
world that extended from the Atlantic coast of the Iberian Peninsula in the
west to China in the east.
Andalusia’s contributions to Islam had been immense, though the same can be said of its contributions to the Latin West. Its intellectual contributions were largely in the field of mathematics, natural science and medicine. Arab-Muslim science in Andalusia flourished for several centuries. Its origin and rapid growth as a scholarly effort and as a statesupported institution could be traced to the 10th century patronization of scholarship initiated by Abdul Rahman III (d.961), founder of the Umayyad caliphate in Cordova. He sought to create a new learning culture in Andalusia on the basis of the cultural and scientific achievements of Baghdad. His son, Al-Hakam II (d.976), energetically continued this court tradition of learning and scholarship.
Andalusia’s contributions to Islam had been immense, though the same can be said of its contributions to the Latin West. Its intellectual contributions were largely in the field of mathematics, natural science and medicine. Arab-Muslim science in Andalusia flourished for several centuries. Its origin and rapid growth as a scholarly effort and as a statesupported institution could be traced to the 10th century patronization of scholarship initiated by Abdul Rahman III (d.961), founder of the Umayyad caliphate in Cordova. He sought to create a new learning culture in Andalusia on the basis of the cultural and scientific achievements of Baghdad. His son, Al-Hakam II (d.976), energetically continued this court tradition of learning and scholarship.
The
golden age of Andalusian science ought to be identified with the 1 1 th and 1
2th centuries, when all the big names lived. The period was the most productive
in terms of scientific creativity and literary output, but the brilliance was
not unique to Andalusia. Although the region might have been the most advanced
center of scientific activities in Europe, on the larger international stage,
it shared the limelight with other places such as the Middle East and Central
Asia. It was not just the golden age of Andalusian science, but also the golden
age of Islamic science as a whole. This fact provides evidence that Andalusian
science was part of a larger scientific enterprise within the cultural unity
fostered by Islam. To the Muslim world, Andalusia was its westernmost wing,
which, together with the rest of the Maghreb, constituted a single cultural
unit.
It
was remarkable at that time to see a lot of exchange of scientific information
between Andalusia and the rest of the Muslim world. Quite a number of men of
science from Andalusia were known to have traveled to the Muslim East and just
as many from the East traveled to Andalusia for various reasons. Historical
records point to many scholars making frequent long distance travels within the
Muslim world and beyond. Such travels were a significant factor in the
internationalization and globalization of Islamic science.
ANDALUSIAN
SCIENTISTS: NAMESTO REMEMBER
I
use the word “scientist” to include mathematicians, natural scientists, medical
doctors and geographers. The word “scientist” is of course a modern invention.
Scientists as specialists in the modern sense were practically nonexistent in
medieval Islam as was the case among other civilizations of the period. The
medieval scientist was a person who had encyclopedic interest in all the known
sciences of the day and Andalusian scientists belonged to the same intellectual
species. In contrast to the modern specialist who knows more about less, the
medieval scientist knew something about everything. Although these medie\ral
scientists might appear to be “generalists,” they created new knowledge in the
different sciences, thereby contributing to the advancement of those
disciplines in factual content, technical methods and even in the creation of
new independent scientific disciplines. Algebra, trigonometry, optics and
engineering were the most well known of the new disciplines created by Muslim
scientists.
It
is important to note that medieval sciences were classified and organized on
the basis of epistemic principles different from the ones used in modern
science. For example, when scientists mentioned mathematics, they were not
referring to the domain of study we today classify by the same name. Their idea
of mathematics included the subjects of astronomy and music in addition to
arithmetic and geometry.
Only
the most accomplished names in Andalusian science are mentioned here. There
were many other lesser known figures who contributed to the field. All names
mentioned were Muslims, but the scientific enterprise in Andalusia was the
result of collaborative efforts by Muslim, Jewish and Christian scholars and
scientists. Muslims led and dominated the field of science and technology and
were credited with most of Andalusia’s scientific discoveries and innovations.
The period of growth and expansion in Andalusian science, however, also
witnessed the collaborative efforts of Muslim, Christian and Jewish scholars,
researchers and translators in the production of new knowledge and in its
cross-cultural diffusion. We may mention the role of Jewish and Christian
translators in advancing the ongoing Muslim synthesis, philosophical and
scientific, and in the dissemination of Islamic science in their religious
communities.
The
nature and role of translation activities as a factor of scientific growth
needs to be noted. Scholars of the three faiths participated in these activities
for linguistic and scientific reasons, and succeeded in translating Arabic
works into Hebrew Latin and Castilian, and revising existing Arabic
translations of Greek works. Translations were carried out either by
individuals or “schools.” Important from the point of view of intercultural
relations in Andalusia were the schools of translators. Worth mentioning is the
10th century group of translators in Cordova associated with the Jewish
physician, Hasday ibn Shaprut, and the 13th century translation school in
Christian-ruled Toledo, patronized by Alfonso the Wise (Alfonso X el Sabio)
(1221-1284). Ibn Shaprut was instrumental in organizing the Cordova community
of Jewish scholars and supporting Hebrew translations of Arabic works. Alfonso
the Wise, on the other hand, was noted for his great interest in the
translations of Arabic works into Latin. Both the Cordova and Toledo groups of
translators included Muslims, Jews and Christians, some of whom were trilingual
or scientists in their own right.
HIGHLIGHTS OF ACHIEVEMENTS IN AND ALUSIAN SCIENCE
HIGHLIGHTS OF ACHIEVEMENTS IN AND ALUSIAN SCIENCE
Andalusia
had excelled primarily in botany and agriculture, astronomy and medicine. The
leading botanists were Abu ‘Ubaid al-Bakri and Ibn Hajjaj in the 10th century,
al-Ghafiqi (d. 1 165) and Ibn al-Awwam in the 1 1 th century, Abu’l-’Abbas
al-Nabati and Abu Marwan Ibn Zuhr (d. about 1 161) in the 1 2th century, and
Ibn al-Baytar in the 13th century. They are among the greatest medieval
botanists for their production of the period’s most excellent writings on
botany and agriculture. The Book of Agriculture (Kitab alfalahah) by Ibn
alAwwam is considered the most important medieval work on the subject. It
contained 34 chapters dealing with agriculture and animal husbandry. More than
580 plants came up for treatment in the book not to mention the discussion of
50 fruit trees for cultivation. The book was also noted for its treatment of
plant diseases and their remedies, and its pioneering attempt to discover a new
soil science.
Al-Ghafiqi
was a renowned collector of plants in Spain and Africa. On the basis of this
collection, he wrote about drugs and plants, which turned out to be the most
accurate work in the history of Islam. In the words of writer George Sarton,
AlGhafiqi was “the greatest expert of his time on simples. His description of
plants was the most precise ever made in Islam; he gave the names of each in
Arabic, Latin and Berber.”
Ibn
al-Baytar was perhaps the greatest pharmacist of medieval times. He was
considered to have written the best work on the subject of simple drugs, with
his description of more than 1,400 medical drugs as an outstanding encyclopedic
work unsurpassed during the period. Al-Nabati or Abu’l'Abbas the botanist was
known for his writings on plants found along the African coast from Spain to Arabia.
It
is quite clear that Andalusian botanists were interested in plants for their
theoretical considerations and practical applications. The pursuit of botany
was closely linked to the application of this knowledge to agriculture and
medicine. Not surprising!)’, Andalusia came to be noted for its advanced
agriculture, unique botanical gardens and outstanding achieve ments in
pharmacology. The Arabs introduced an ingenious irrigation system in Andalusia,
thus allowing its agriculture to become the most advanced of the medieval
period. Such elaborate irrigation systems supplied water to fields and gardens
and, along with the advanced practice of agriculture and horticulture,
Andalusia was able to modify the Persian garden “into a new form, which has survived
to this day as the Spanish garden.”
Andalusia
also excelled in medicine. It produced notable figures in Islamic medicine,
each of whom authored the most advanced medical treatises of the time, thus
helping to chart a new course for medical theory and practice. Interestingly,
Andalusia’s most famous philosophers were also physicians. Among them were Ibn
Tufail, Ibn Rushd and the Jewish philosopher, Maimonides. Ibn Rushd, better
known as a commentator on Aristotle, was credited with several medical works including
an encyclopedia entitled The Book of Generalities on Medicine, and his
commentaries on Ibn Sina’s medical works. Maimonides wrote 10 medical works,
all in Arabic.
Andalusia’s
fame in medicine was gained through the work of al-Zahrawi, the greatest Muslim
figure in surgery. Concession Kitab al-tasrif), the work that earned him the
title “father of surgery,” was translated into Hebrew, Latin and Castilian. The
treatise on surgery is only one of 30 volumes of a medical encyclopedia
treating all aspects of medicine and contained much that was original. It has
been widely recognized in the Muslim world and the West as the “first
independent surgical treatise ever written in detail.” The work also included
an unprecedented 200 pictures of surgical instruments, many of which had been
invented by al-Zahrawi himself. Included in the treatise are detailed
descriptions of all known surgical operations and the instruments used in each
of them. Of all medical works produced by Muslims, alZahrawi’s book was, until
modern times, second only to Ibn Sina’s Canon of Medicine in popularity among
medical circles in the West.
Abu Marwan Ibn Zuhr, the most famous member of the Avenzoar family (known for its two generations of distinguished medical doctors) is also worth mentioning. He wrote several medical works, the most important of which is the Book of Diets. Historians of medicine generally consider him the greatest clinical physician produced by Andalusia. Taking the medieval period as a whole, he is ranked second only to Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (d. 925), or Rhazes. In the field of pharmacology, which is closely related to botany and medicine, the works of al-Ghafiqi and al-Baytar were of general significance.
Abu Marwan Ibn Zuhr, the most famous member of the Avenzoar family (known for its two generations of distinguished medical doctors) is also worth mentioning. He wrote several medical works, the most important of which is the Book of Diets. Historians of medicine generally consider him the greatest clinical physician produced by Andalusia. Taking the medieval period as a whole, he is ranked second only to Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (d. 925), or Rhazes. In the field of pharmacology, which is closely related to botany and medicine, the works of al-Ghafiqi and al-Baytar were of general significance.
Related
to medicine is the institution of hospitals and public health. Andalusia was
famous for its chain of hospitals, which was con- sidered the most advanced in
medieval times. It has been said that Cordova alone had 50 hospitals and 900
public baths. As in other major cities in medieval Islam, hospitals in
Andalusia also played an educational role not unlike that of our modern
teaching hospitals.
As
for Andalusian achievements in mathematics and astronomy, leading astronomers
were Abu’l-Qasim al-Majriti, who lived in the 10th and nth centuries,
al-Zarqali in the nth century and Jabir ibn Aflah in the 12th century. Although
alMajriti was an astronomer and alchemist, he was more famous for his
Hermetical and occult writings. Nonetheless, he was an accomplished astronomer
with several works on the subject to his credit. His writings include several
commentaries on the astronomical tables of the famed mathematician from the
East, Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarazmi. He also commented on the Planisphaenum of
Ptolemy and wrote a treatise on the astrolabe.
But
the person who should be regarded as the most outstanding astronomer from
Andalusia is al-Zarqali. He was an inventor who became famous for the sahifah,
a flat kind of astrolabe, which gained the attention of Western astronomers
after detailed descriptions of it were published in Latin, Hebrew and several
other European languages. As an observational astronomer, his most important
contribution is the editing of the Toledan Zij (“The Toledo Tables”). This
astronomical table, based on observations carried out in Toledo, was really the
product of collaborative work al-Zarqali had carried out with several Muslim
and Jewish scientists. Like his sakifah, the Toledo Tables attracted wide
attention among astronomers in the Muslim and Latin worlds and were used by
them for centuries. Copernicus, in his famous book De Revolutionibus Orbium
Clestium (On the Revolutions of the Celestial Spheres), acknowledged
al-Zarqali’s contributions to astronomy. In the theoretical domain, al-Zarqali
wrote the explicit proof of the motion of the apogee of the sun with respect to
the fixed stars. He measured its rate of motion as 12.04 seconds per year,
which is remarkably close to the modern calculation of 1 1 .8 seconds.
An important development in Andalusian astronomy in the 1 2th century was the growing criticism that had been directed against the Ptolemaic planetary system. The first to express dissatisfaction with the system was Jabir ibn Aflah, followed by strong criticisms from philosophers such as Ibn Bajjah and Ibn Tufail, who were motivated by the intellectual need to defend the Aristotelian cosmological scheme. These criticisms did result in one or two new theories. Ibn Bajjah proposed a system based on eccentric circles, whereas Ibn Tufail presented his theory of spiral motion, which presented the system as one of homocentric spheres. Although these new theories did not find any practical applications, the Andalusian critiques of Ptolemaic astronomy left an impact on the minds of Renaissance astronomers.
An important development in Andalusian astronomy in the 1 2th century was the growing criticism that had been directed against the Ptolemaic planetary system. The first to express dissatisfaction with the system was Jabir ibn Aflah, followed by strong criticisms from philosophers such as Ibn Bajjah and Ibn Tufail, who were motivated by the intellectual need to defend the Aristotelian cosmological scheme. These criticisms did result in one or two new theories. Ibn Bajjah proposed a system based on eccentric circles, whereas Ibn Tufail presented his theory of spiral motion, which presented the system as one of homocentric spheres. Although these new theories did not find any practical applications, the Andalusian critiques of Ptolemaic astronomy left an impact on the minds of Renaissance astronomers.
SIGNIFICANCEOFANDALUSIANSCIENCE
Andalusian
science is significant for our times: it shows that members of the three
Abrahamic faiths can work together to produce a common culture and
civilization. It helped expand medieval science to new frontiers and influenced
the development of science in the West during the Renaissance, which
subsequently lead to the rise of modern science. For the contemporary Muslim
world, Andalusia shows the way Islam can again be a source of inspiration for
progress in science within the context of a pluralistic world.