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Topic: Rhazes



  
 [No title]
Rhazes (860 A.D.- 923 or 932 A.D.; Iran)
Rhazes, also known as Ibn-Zakariya, al-Razi or Razi, was born in Rayy, Persia (now Iran) and was well known for his contributions to Islamic medicine.
Rhazes was a Persian physician, philosopher and religious critic.
http://www.upei.ca/~xliu/multi-culture/rhazes.htm?index=259   (298 words)

  
 Rhazes: The Thinking Western Physician
Rhazes was a staunch foe of fanaticism and authoritarianism, as manifested by his outright opposition to all forms of mystical revelation and “insight”.
Rhazes lived circa 854 to 935, a time period when Persian thinkers had only begun to rediscover and incorporate into their practices the accomplishments and techniques of Ancient Greek thinkers.
The Medieval Europeans had managed to obtain a hold on its text and translate it only in 1279, and subsequently it served as a standard medical textbook in the Western world until the 1700s.
http://usabig.com/autonomist/articles6/rhazes.html   (1686 words)

  
 Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariya Ar-Razi (Rhazes)
Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariya Ar-Razi (Rhazes) (864-930)
Den aller største muhamedanske legen i middelalderen var Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariya Ar-Razi, som i Vest-Europa gjerne blir kalt Rhazes.
http://folk.uio.no/klaush/rhazes.htm   (792 words)

  
 Rhazes
Born in northeastern Persia, Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi (ca.
Contents of the Ninth Book Rhazes and Pharmacy
Focused on pathology, the Ninth Book was most influential in the West, where it was often translated and became the standard source for teaching therapeutics until long after the Renaissance.
http://www.uab.edu/reynolds/rhazes.html   (296 words)

  
 Biography: Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakareya Al Razi (Rhazes) أبو بكر محمد بن زكريا الرازي The ...
Biography: Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakareya Al Razi (Rhazes) أبو بكر محمد بن زكريا الرازي
Biography: Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakareya Al Razi (Rhazes) أبو بكر محمد بن زكريا الرازي
Amazingly, his treatise on measles and smallpox was published in Arabic and Latin in London 1766, as "Ar-Razi, Muhammad Ibn-Zakariya: Rhazes De Variolis Et Morbilis / cura et impensis Iohannis Channing.
http://baheyeldin.com/history/rhazes.html   (207 words)

  
 Chapter 8
The author was one of the outstanding physicians of the period, Abu Baler Muhammad ibn-Zakariyya al-Razi, known as Rhazes.
In the tenth century A.D., as medieval Arabic civilization was rising toward its zenith, the most authoritative early account of smallpox was written.
One explanation might lie in the fact that smallpox exists in three distinct forms.
http://stevenlehrer.com/explorers/chapter_8.htm   (6330 words)

  
 09 - Rhazes.jpg
Rhazes (circa 865-925 A.D.), Persian-born physician who wrote extensively in Arabic, is pictured at the bedside of a young patient afflicted with measles.
Rhazes contributed the first known book on children’s diseases, and a book on “cure within the hour” which must have been immensely popular.
Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakuriyya, or al-Razi, known to the West as Rhazes, was born in the Persian city of Rai, about 865 A.D. Up until his thirtieth year; he seems to have been primarily concerned with music, physics, and alchemy.
http://dodd.cmcvellore.ac.in/hom/09%20-%20Rhazes.html   (1672 words)

  
 Rhazes Abu Bakr Muhammed ibn Zakariya al Razi
Rhazes Abu Bakr Muhammed ibn Zakariya al Razi
http://www.sobiografias.hpg.ig.com.br/Rhazes00.html   (304 words)

  
 Al Razi Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariyya, detoo Rhazes
Al Razi Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariyya, detoo Rhazes
http://www.bncf.firenze.sbn.it/progetti/palatino/2245B.HTM/w000113.htm   (18 words)

  
 The influence of Ibn Sina and Razi
So great was their popularity and so long did it endure that we find Montagna, Gentile da Fabriano and other artists decorating the edge of the Madonna's robe with Arabic lettering and two Arab doctors, Cosmas and Damian, raised to the altars of the Church.
The interest of the university being speculative rather than practical, Avicenna was preferred to Rhazes.
Two universities of Europe specialized in Arab letters and became identified in their medical schools with the propagation of the teaching of Rhazes and Avicenna.
http://www.iranian.com/Feb97/History/Avicenna/Avicenna.shtml   (1477 words)

  
 Timeline: Rhazes (Abu Bakr Muhammad Bin Zakariya Ar-Razi), c. 860–932 CE - MedHunters
Rhazes, a Persian, born near modern-day Tehran, Iran, made contributions not only to the field of medicine but also to philosophy and chemistry/alchemy.
Timeline: Rhazes (Abu Bakr Muhammad Bin Zakariya Ar-Razi), c.
However, he soon returned to Baghdad, taking up a similar position at Muqtadari Hospital.
http://www.medhunters.com/articles/timelineRhazes.html   (445 words)

  
 RhRi
RHAZES, Abu Bakr Muhammad see RAZI, Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariya ar-
http://www.philately.com/philately/biorhri.htm   (3067 words)

  
 Rhazes, [Abu Bakr Mohammed ibn Zakarijja al-Razi], Persian physician August 28 in History
Rhazes, [Abu Bakr Mohammed ibn Zakarijja al-Razi], Persian physician August 28 in History
Rhazes, [Abu Bakr Mohammed ibn Zakarijja al-Razi], Persian physician
http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/865/august_28_865_30708.html   (55 words)

  
 Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi : Rhazes
He was also well versed in the musical theory, as were many other Islamic scientists of the time, although his approach in chemistry was naturalistic.
It uses material from the wikipedia article Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi : Rhazes.
Rhazes is known to be the most free-thinking of Islamic philosophers, since he was well-trained in the Greek sciences.
http://www.eurofreehost.com/rh/Rhazes_8.html   (1243 words)

  
 Saudi Aramco World : Golden Age Of Muslim Medicine
Popular because of his pleasing bedside manner, Rhazes was a busy practitioner, hospital head and consultant.
Not content to use only native "materia medica," they scoured the globe for other medicinals.
The unorthodox, argumentative physician wrote a comprehensive "Canon of Medicine" that was the medical Bible for six centuries.
http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/196205/golden.age.of.muslim.medicine.htm   (493 words)

  
 Darkk World - Character Profiles
It is believed that one of Rhazes Darkk's most hideous creations, the supermonster Gozza is planning a takeover of Japan -and then the world!
Killkrow is one of the original ten SUPERMONSTERS created by Rhazes Darkk.
Rhazes Darkk's goal was to reshape the earth into Darkk Earth -- an altered regeneration of life as we know it.
http://www.fortunecity.com/roswell/divination/80/profileten.htm   (1186 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: History of Medicine
The latter's "Canon", written in clear language and covering the entire field of medicine became the gospel of physicians.
Here lived Gerard of Cremona (1114-87, properly Carmona, near Seville), the translator of Rhazes and Avicenna.
In the Middle Ages his "Ketaab altib Almansuri" (Liber medicinalis Almansoris) was well known and had many commentators.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10122a.htm   (17358 words)

  
 Al-Razi
Al-Razi (Rhazes or Ar-Razi, Abu Bakr or al-Rasi)
Al-Razi / Rhazes / Ar-Razi, Abu Bakr / Al-Rasi
Creations of Fire: Chemistry’s Lively History from Alchemy to the Atomic Age [540.9 C63]
http://www.punahou.edu/libraries/cooke/alrazi.html   (142 words)

  
 Rhazes Bio: The Online Library of Liberty
Rhazes was well known in Europe, and Chaucer referred to him as one of the fifteen great sources of knowledge.
The Goodrich Archive contains Rhazes' most acclaimed work on human psychology and spirituality, The Spiritual Physic.
Rhazes' influence stemmed chiefly from his medical works, which were important source books for Western physicians until the rise of modern medicine in the nineteenth century.
http://oll.libertyfund.org/Intros/Authors/Medieval/Rhazes.html   (218 words)

  
 The UCLA Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library History and Special Collections Division presents: Smallpox, vaccination, ...
The first physician to differentiate between smallpox and measles, which may seem similar at the outset, was Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (?850-923) or Rhazes, as he was called in the Latin West.
The first step in prevention and treatment is understanding the nature of the disease.
http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/biomed/smallpox/descrip.html   (98 words)

  
 [No title]
The manuscript was, and is, housed in the Reynolds Historical Library at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, two blocks over from the Arts and Humanities building where I teach Chaucer.
The fifteenth-century Hebrew translation of a Latin text on disease written by a Persian physician of the tenth century is a wealth of history and knowledge--of early medicine, certainly, but also, unexpectedly, of Chaucer.
Dante apparently places Rhazes in Hell 's first circle, as "him who made the Great Commentary " (presumably the Continens).
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~tgarbaty/braswell.htm   (2355 words)

  
 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, page 647 (v. 3)
Beer Mohammed Ibn Zacariyd Ar-Razi, who was born (as his name implies) at Rai, a town in the north of 'Irak 'Ajemi, near Chorasan, probably about the middle of the ninth century after Christ ; and died either a.
RHAZES ('Pafrfr), the author of a Greek me­dical treatise IlepI AoiUi/c^s, which was published at the end of Alexander Trallianus, 1548, fol.
On this page: Rhathines – Rhazes – Rhea
http://ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/2981.html   (980 words)

  
 Avicenna
It was mainly accident which determined that from the 12th to the 17th century Avicenna should be the guide of medical study in European universities, and eclipse the names of Rhazes, Ali ibn al-Abbas and Avenzoar.
His work is not essentially different from that of his predecessors Rhazes and Au; all present the doctrine of Galen, and through Galen the doctrine of Hippocrates, modified by the system of Aristotle.
Later in his life he moved to Ray, located near modern Tehran (capital of Iran), the home town of Rhazes.
http://www.free-download-soft.com/info/animation-tools.html   (2849 words)

  
 Rhazes
Described as being “the greatest physician of Islam and the Middle Ages”, Rhazes, until the 17th century, was the undisputable authority of medicine.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) paid tribute to him in the 1970’s for his writings on smallpox, and measles.
It is arguably the most extensive medical book ever written.
http://algana.co.uk/FamousNames/A/ar-razi.htm   (146 words)

  
 Ar-Razi (Rhazes), 864-930 C.E.
Ar-Razi (Rhazes), 864-930 C.E. ABU BAKR MUHAMMAD BIN ZAKARIYA AR-RAZI (Rhazes)
Throughout his life Ar-Razi must have collected extracts from all the books available to him on medicine.
The greatest medical work of Ar-Razi (Rhazes), and perhaps the most extensive ever written by a medical man, is al-Hawi, i.e., the "Comprehensive Book," which includes indeed Greek, Syrian, and early Arabic medical knowledge in their entirety.
http://www.unhas.ac.id/~rhiza/saintis/razi.html   (1294 words)

  
 ISLAMIC MEDICINE
The most famous and notable physican of this time and perhaps of the entire early Islamic era is no doubt Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi(born 251 AH/865 AD; died 312 AH/925 AD) called Rhazes by his Latinized name.
Born in Rayy in northern Persia not much is known about his early life or his medical educartion.
http://www.iiim.org/islamed3.html   (6705 words)

  
 Inexpensive Web Hosting Services in India - Rhazes Technologies
Let us know if you are unsure of the approval of your site before placing an order.
This is an agreement between you and Rhazes Technologies.
Rhazes Technologies.'s failure to enforce any provision of this Agreement shall not be construed as a waiver of any provision or right.
http://www.rhazestech.com/terms.htm   (3458 words)

  
 Al-RAZI (Rhazes)
A.J. Arberry (tr.), The Spiritual Physick of Rhazes, London 1950
And the loss it brought about will be overcome.
Azeez Pasha, Biographies of Unani[Greek] physicians found inAl-Hawi of
http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/ei/razi.htm   (3221 words)

  
 Al-Tabari, 838-870 C.E.
Ali Ibn Rabban Al-Tabari was born in 838 C.E. He was also known as Abu al-Hasan.
The Oxford University library has the latter manuscript.
Al-Tabari was the teacher of the distinguished physician Zakariya al-Razi (Rhazes).
http://www.unhas.ac.id/~rhiza/saintis/tabari.html   (428 words)

  
 meOme-Webkatalog - Language: Englisch - Society - Philosophy - Philosophers - A - al-Razi, Abu Bakr
Columbia Encyclopedia: Rhazes - Concise entry from the 2001 edition.
Medicine Through Time: Rhazes - Concise profile and portrait.
Rhazes - Short article on his life and legacy.
http://webkatalog.meome.de/meome_page_918b21897a45f5b7c8695a6d09bb0688.html   (348 words)

  
 Find in a Library: The spiritual physick of Rhazes
Find in a Library: The spiritual physick of Rhazes
WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.
To find a library, type in a postal code, state, province, or country.
http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/17ebd75bdea1511ea19afeb4da09e526.html   (38 words)

  
 LookSmart - Directory - Al-Razi or Rhazes
Describes and furnishes photographs of a 15th century copy in Hebrew of Rhazes' ninth book of his "Al-Mansuri."
Join the Zeal community and help build the "Al-Razi or Rhazes" Directory Category.
Al-Razi or Rhazes - Find biographies of the renowned Muslim philosopher named Al-Razi, or Rhazes in Latin.
http://lsxml.looksmart.com/p/browse/us1/us317836/us317911/us53880/us62764/us922776/us922781   (178 words)

  
 Islamset - Historical Glimpse: ARABIAN OR ISLAMIC? ..OR WHAT, THE BODY OF ISLAMIC MEDICINE, FEATURES OF ISLAMIC ...
ISLAMIC MEDICAIL FIGURES: AL/RAZI (Rhazes), ALl IBN AL-ABBAS Al Majusi (Hali Abbas), IBN SINA (Avicenna 980-1037), IBN SINA (Avicenna 980-1037), Al Qanun, Ibn Al Haitham, AL ZAHRAWI, IBN AL-NAFIS and his books.
Reviewing western works on the history of Islamic Medicine, the Muslim scholar cant help feeling that it has not been rendered proper service.
It ranks high in importance in the history of epidemiology as the earliest monogram on small pox, and shows us Rhazes as a conscientious practitioner, almost free from dogmatic prejudices, following in the footsteps of Hippocrates."
http://www.islamset.com/ethics/topics/glimpse.html   (5264 words)

  
 [No title]
Even if he is from a state that we despise.' Pshaw, I say.
God help us all when the first eye-tearing, Bible-thumping, lip-biting madman tries his hand at the Presidency...you'll see the conviction in his eyes and follow him to suicide.
Oh, and see if you can reduce those immigration requirements for your brothers and sisters in America....just in case.
http://justagirlintheworld.com/wp-stats.php?author=rhazes   (637 words)

  
 Extraordinary Popular Delusions And The Madness Of Crowds -- Chapter 35
For four years he worked in his laboratory, with the book of Rhazes continually before him.
He studied him assiduously for two years; and, being young, rich, and credulous, was beset by all the chymists of the town, who kindly assisted him in spending his money.
At the age of fourteen he first became enamoured of the science of alchymy, and read the Arabian authors in their own language.
http://www.litrix.com/madraven/madne035.htm   (2019 words)

  
 History of Sciences in the Islamic World - Light of Islam
His influence on thought and philosophy and general science was profound, and his medical works (based on the works of Galen which he had found in the Samarqand library in Arabic translation) had a sensational outrech.
Surgery made similar progress in the hands of Islamic practitioners, who even used anaesthetics, though theses are assumed to be of modern origin.
Its use continued throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, so that it became the most widely known of all medical treatises.
http://home.swipnet.se/islam/articles/HistoryofSciences.htm   (5735 words)

  
 Parke Davis Ad 1960 Rhazes
Illustrated by Robert Thom shows a depiction of a Middle Ages physcian from Persia called Rhazes and his work in Arabic medicine.
http://www.kaleden.com/detail,parke-davis-1960,224467.html   (115 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Rhazes (Medicine, Biography) - Encyclopedia
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Medicine, Biographies > Rhazes
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/R/Rhazes.html   (169 words)

  
 Multicultural Resource Center: Coffee
Coffee is first mentioned in the tenth century A.D., by the Arabian doctor Rhazes.
The earliest coffee was grown in Ethiopia, spreading from there to Yemen in southern Arabia, where the custom of roasting beans began around 1200 A.D. The drink became popular with the whirling dervishes, who drank it to fuel their lengthy dances.
http://www.inventions.org/culture/ancient/coffee.html   (185 words)

  
 Islamic Medical Manuscripts: Bio-Bibliographies
He was born in the year 865/251 in the Persian city of Rayy, near present-day Tehran, and died in the same town about 925/313.
Over 1000 of his case histories are also preserved today, and they provide an important insight into the working life of the greatest medieval clinician.
Abū Bakr Mu ammad ibn Zakarīyā’ al-Rāzī, known to Europeans as Rhazes, was one of the most important and influential of all medieval Islamic physicians.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/arabic/bioR.html   (442 words)

  
 International Institute of Islamic Medicine(IIIM)
I & II by Ibn-al-Quf Masihi (Urdu translation), Uyoon-al-Amba fi Tabaqat-il-Atibba by Ibn-e-Abi Usaiba (Urdu translation) and Kitabal Mansuri by Zakaria Razi (Rhazes) (Urdu translation).
The Council has published some very rare books of Unani Medicine such as Kitab-al-Kulliyat by Ibn Rushd (Averoes) (Arabic text and Urdu translation in separate volumes), Kitab-al Abdal by Zakaria Razi (Rhazes) (Arabic text, Urdu translation and explanatory notes), Aina-e-Sarguzisht (biography of Avicenna), Kitab-al-Tailsir by Ibn Zohar (Avenzoar) (Urdu translation), Kitab-al-Umda fil Jarahat vol.
After a number of other Greek scholars had enriched the system considerably, Galen (131-210 AD) stands out as one who stabilized its foundation.
http://www.iiim.org/iiimim.html   (3764 words)

  
 Frogmore Community College Arab Medicine
He wrote over 150 books in his life.
Rhazes was a traveller; he travelled to India, North Africa and Egypt to gather information on medicine.
In addition to his writings in the medical field, Rhazes has also been credited with being the first to use animal gut for sutures and plaster of Paris for casts.
http://www.frogmorecollege.hants.sch.uk/folders/medic/arab/page_1.htm   (1164 words)

  
 Recovery From Carbimazole-Induced Aplastic Anemia
Rhazes’ renown rests primarily on the voluminous and comprehensive Kitab al-Hawi fi al-tibb (The Comprehensive Book on Medicine) that has become known in Latin under the title “Continens Medicinae”.3 In it, he included extracts from earlier authors regarding diseases and therapy and also documented his own clinical cases.
Some appreciation of the book’s influence may be derived from the realization that a Latin translation was one of the nine works comprising the library of the Faculty of Medicine of Paris in 1395, and the ninth book dealing with pharmacology was studied in Europe until long after the Renaissance.4
In the ninth chapter of the treatise on nutrition, he gave the basis of nutrition in medicine and the beneficial and harmful effects of foods on health.
http://www.ijem.org/1/8.html   (1114 words)

  
 [No title]
Razi (Rhazes: 841-926 A.D.) advised the medical students while they were seeing a patient to bear in mind the classic symptoms of a disease as given in text books and compare them with what they found (6).
The advice given by Ali ibnul-Abbas (Haly Abbas: -994 -A.D.) to medical students is as timely today as it was then'.
http://www.islam-usa.com/im4.html   (4646 words)

  
 Ibn Sina (Avicenna), 981-1037 C.E.
Due to its systematic approach, formal perfection as well as its intrinsic value, the Qanun superceded Razi's (Rhazes') Hawi, Ali ibn Abbas's Maliki, and even the works of Galen, and remained supreme for six centuries.
Ibn Sina not only synthesized the available knowledge, but he also made many original contributions.
http://www.unhas.ac.id/~rhiza/saintis/sina.html   (1128 words)

  
 MSN Encarta - Al-Razi
Al-Razi (Latin Rhazes) (854?-925?), Muslim physician and writer, whose medical writings greatly influenced the Islamic world as well as Western Europe...
http://ca.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761579448/Al-Razi.html   (79 words)

  
 Arab Civilization
The first great physician of the Arab world was Muhammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (860-940 A.D.), known as Razi by the Arabs and Rhazes by medieval Europe.
History records a few alchemists in the interval after Jabir's death, but it is only with the appearance of the chemist and physician, Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (known to the West as Rhazes) that Jabir's great example was successfully followed.
To insure that such prescriptions were followed, a special office, created early in the ninth century to deal with overcharging, profiteering, extortion and fraud in business, also watched over medical practice and administered a special oath to doctors.
http://www.alhewar.org/ArabCivilization.htm   (13493 words)

  
 Muslims Contributions to Medical History تاريخ الطب ...
The valuable contributions of Al-Razi (Rhazes) in the history of pharmacy during the middle ages.
http://www.islamicmedicine.org/history.htm   (994 words)

  
 Arab Medical Schools
Max Mayerhof notes that "The greatest medical work of Rhazes, and perhaps the most extensive ever written by a medical man, is his al-Hawi, i.e.
No doubt we have some good knowledge about the contribution of the Arab Muslim physicians who took part in the process of developing medicine
, such as al-Razi (Rhazes 850-923), Ibn Sina (Avicenna 980-1037), al-Zahrawi (Abulcasis 1013) and Ibn an-Nafis.
http://www.levity.com/alchemy/islam06.html   (10329 words)

  
 The German Feast at Winter Madness, February 3, AS 20
And one should eat no other food, if one eats the same, said Rhazes.
I choose to serve dried fruit first as Meister Eberhard says about figs, "...and they clean the kidneys and bladders and the path, where the food goes in.
Roasted flesh is a coarse food and makes one full and becomes scarcely moist and puts fat in the body, if it is lean."
http://cs-people.bu.edu/akatlas/Feasts/feast2_3_96_doc.html   (1371 words)

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