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Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al-Razi (864-930 A.D.) was born at Ray,
Iran. Initially, he was interested in music but later on he learnt medicine,
mathematics, astronomy, chemistry and philosophy from a student of Hunayn
Ibn Ishaq, who was well versed in the ancient Greek, Persian and Indian systems
of medicine and other subjects. He also studied under Ali Ibn Rabban. The practical
experience gained at the well-known Muqtadari Hospital helped him in his chosen
profession of medicine. At an early age he gained eminence as an expert in
medicine and alchemy, so that patients and students flocked to him from distant parts of Asia.
He was first placed in-charge of the first Royal Hospital at Ray, from where he soon
moved to a similar position in Baghdad where he remained the head of its famous Muqtadari
Hospital for along time. He moved from time to time to various cities, especially between
Ray and Baghdad, but finally returned to Ray, where he died around 930 A.D. His name is
commemorated in the Razi Institute near Tehran.
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Razi was a Hakim, an alchemist and a philosopher. In medicine, his contribution was so
significant that it can only be compared to that of Ibn Sina. Some of his works in medicine
e.g. Kitab al- Mansoori, Al-Hawi, Kitab al-Mulooki and Kitab al-Judari wa al- Hasabah earned
everlasting fame. Kitab al-Mansoori, which was translated into Latin in the 15th century
A.D., comprised ten volumes and dealt exhaustively with Greco-Arab medicine. Some of its
volumes were published separately in Europe. His al-Judari wal Hasabah was the first treatise
on smallpox and chicken-pox, and is largely based on Razi's original contribution: It was
translated into various European languages. Through this treatise he became the first to
draw clear comparisons between smallpox and chicken-pox. Al-Hawi was the largest medical
encyclopedia composed by then. It contained on each medical subject all important
information that was available from Greek and Arab sources, and this was concluded
by him by giving his own remarks based on his experience and views. A special feature
of his medical system was that he greatly fayoured cure through correct and regulated
food. This was combined with his emphasis on the influence of psychological factors on
health. He also tried proposed remedies first on animals in order to evaluate in their
effects and side effects. He was also an expert surgeon and was the first to use opium for anesthesia.
In addition to being a physician, he compounded medicines and, in his later years, gave
himself over to experimental and theoretical sciences. It seems possible that he developed
his chemistry independently of jabber Ibn Hayyan. He has portrayed in great detail several
chemical reactions and also given full descriptions of and designs for about twenty instruments
used in chemical investigations. His description of chemical knowledge is in plain and plausible
language. One of his books called Kitab-al-Asrar deals with the preparation of chemical materials
and their utilization. Another one was translated into Latin under the name Liber Experi- mentorum,
He went beyond his predecessors in dividing substances into plants, animals and minerals, thus in
a way opening the way for inorganic and organic chemistry. By and large, this classification of the
three kingdoms still holds. As a chemist, he was the first to produce sulfuric acid together with
some other acids, and he also prepared alcohol by fermenting sweet products.
His contribution as a philosopher is also well known. The basic elements in his philosophicall
system are the creator, spirit, matter, space and time. He discusses their characteristics in
detail and his concepts of space and time as constituting a continuum are outstanding.
His philosophical! views were, however, criticized by a number of other Muslim scholars of the era.
He was a prolific author, who has left monumental treatises on numerous subjects.
He has more than 200 outstanding scientific contributions to his credit,
out of which about half deal with medicine and 21 concern alchemy. He
also wrote on physics, mathematics, astronomy and optics, but these writings
could not be preserved. A number of his books, including Jami-fi-al-Tib,
Mansoori, al-Hawi, Kitab al-Jadari wa al-Hasabah, al-Malooki, Maqalah
fi al- Hasat fi Kuli wa al-Mathana, Kitab al-Qalb, Kitab al-Mafasil, Kitab-al-
'Ilaj al-Ghoraba, Bar al-Sa'ah, and al-Taqseem wa al-Takhsir, have been
published in various European languages. About 40 of his manuscripts are
still extant in the museums and libraries of Iran, Paris, Britain, Rampur,
and Bankipur. His contribution has greatly influenced the development
of science, in general, and medicine, in particular.
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