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Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi

ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī (Arabic: عبداللطيف البغدادي, 1162 Baghdad–1231 Baghdad), short for Muwaffaq al-Dīn Muḥammad ʿAbd al-Laṭīf ibn Yūsuf al-Baghdādī (Arabic: موفق الدين محمد عبد اللطيف بن يوسف البغدادي), was a physician, philosopher, historian, Arabic grammarian and traveller, and one of the most voluminous writers of his time.[1]

Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi
عبداللطيف البغدادي
Born
Muhammad ibn Yusuf

c. 1162
Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate
Died9 November 1231 (aged 69)
Other namesMuwaffaq al-Din Muhammad Abd al-Latif ibn Yusuf al-Baghdadi
EraIslamic golden age
(Later Abbasid era)
Known for
ParentYusuf al-Baghdadi

Biography Edit

Many details of ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī's life are known from his autobiography as presented in Ibn Abī Uṣaybiʿah's literary history of medicine. As a young man, he studied grammar, law, tradition, medicine, alchemy and philosophy. He focused his studies on ancient authors, in particular Aristotle, after first adopting Avicenna (Ibn Sīnā) as his philosophical mentor at the suggestion of a wandering scholar from the Maghreb. He travelled extensively and resided in Mosul (in 1189) where he studied the works of al-Suhrawardi before travelling on to Damascus (1190) and the camp of Saladin outside Acre (1191). It was at this last location that he met Baha al-Din ibn Shaddad and Imad al-Din al-Isfahani and acquired the Qadi al-Fadil's patronage. He went on to Cairo, where he met Abu'l-Qasim al-Shari'i, who introduced him to the works of al-Farabi, Alexander of Aphrodisias, and Themistius and (according to al-Latif) turned him away from Avicenna and alchemy.[2]

In 1192 he met Saladin in Jerusalem and enjoyed his patronage, then went to Damascus again before returning to Cairo. He journeyed to Jerusalem and to Damascus in 1207-8, and eventually made his way via Aleppo to Erzindjan, where he remained at the court of the Mengujekid Ala’-al-Din Da’ud (Dāwūd Shāh) until the city was conquered by the Rūm Seljuk ruler Kayqubād II (Kayqubād Ibn Kaykhusraw). ‘Abd al-Latif returned to Baghdad in 1229, travelling back via Erzerum, Kamakh, Divriği and Malatya. He died in Baghdad two years later.[2]

Account of Egypt Edit

ʿAbd al-Laṭīf was a man of great knowledge and of an inquisitive and penetrating mind. Of the numerous works (mostly on medicine) which Ibn Abī Uṣaybiʿah ascribes to him, one only, his graphic and detailed Account of Egypt (in two parts), appeared to be known in Europe.[3]

Archeology Edit

ʿAbd-al-Laṭīf was well aware of the value of ancient monuments. He praised some Muslim rulers for preserving and protecting pre-Islamic artefacts and monuments, but he also criticized others for failing to do so. He noted that the preservation of antiquities presented a number of benefits for Muslims:[4]

  • "monuments are useful historical evidence for chronologies";
  • "they furnish evidence for Holy Scriptures, since the Qur'an mentions them and their people";
  • "they are reminders of human endurance and fate";
  • "they show, to a degree, the politics and history of ancestors, the richness of their sciences, and the genius of their thought".

While discussing the profession of treasure hunting, he notes that poorer treasure hunters were often sponsored by rich businessmen to go on archeological expeditions. In some cases, an expedition could turn out to be fraudulent, with the treasure hunter disappearing with large amounts of money extracted from sponsors.[5]

Egyptology Edit

His manuscript was one of the earliest works on Egyptology. It contains a vivid description of a famine caused by the Nile failing to overflow its banks (which occurred during the author's residence in Egypt).[3] He also wrote detailed descriptions on ancient Egyptian monuments.[6]

Autopsy Edit

Al-Baghdādī wrote that during the famine in Egypt in 597 AH (1200 AD), he had the opportunity to observe and examine a large number of skeletons, through which he came to the view that Galen was incorrect regarding the formation of the bones of the lower jaw [mandible], coccyx and sacrum.[7]

Translation Edit

Al-Baghdādī's Arabic manuscript was discovered in 1665 by the English orientalist Edward Pococke and is preserved in the Bodleian Library.[3] Pococke published the Arabic manuscript in the 1680s. His son, Edward Pococke the Younger, translated the work into Latin, although he was only able to publish less than half of his work. Thomas Hunt attempted to publish Pococke's complete translation in 1746, although his attempt was unsuccessful.[8] Pococke's complete Latin translation was eventually published by Joseph White of Oxford in 1800.[9] The work was then translated into French, with valuable notes, by Silvestre de Sacy in 1810.[10][11]

Philosophy Edit

As far as philosophy is concerned, one may adduce that ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī regarded philosophers as paragons of real virtue and therefore he refused to accept as a true philosopher one lacking not only true insight, but also a truly moral personality as true philosophy was in the service of religion, verifying both belief and action. Apart from this he regarded the philosophers’ ambitions as vain (Endress, in Martini Bonadeo, Philosophical journey, xi). ʿAbd al-Laṭīf composed several philosophical works, among which is an important and original commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics (Kitāb fī ʿilm mā baʿd al-ṭabīʿa). This is a critical work in the process of the Arabic assimilation of Greek thought, demonstrating its author's acquaintance with the most important Greek metaphysical doctrines, as set out in the writings of al-Kindī (d. circa 185-252/801-66) and al-Fārābī (d. 339/950). The philosophical section of his Book of the Two Pieces of Advice (Kitāb al-Naṣīḥatayn) contains an interesting and challenging defence of philosophy and illustrates the vibrancy of philosophical debate in the Islamic colleges. It moreover emphasises the idea that Islamic philosophy did not decline after the twelfth century CE (Martini Bonadeo, Philosophical journey; Gutas). ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī may therefore well be an exponent of what Gutas calls the “golden age of Arabic philosophy” (Gutas, 20).

Alchemy Edit

ʿAbd al-Laṭīf also penned two passionate and somewhat grotesque pamphlets against the art of alchemy in all its facets. Although he engaged in alchemy for a short while, he later abandoned the art completely by rejecting not only its practice, but also its theory. In ʿAbd al-Laṭīf's view alchemy could not be placed in the system of the sciences, and its false presumptions and pretensions must be distinguished from true scientific knowledge, which can be given a rational basis (Joosse, Rebellious intellectual, 29–62; Joosse, Unmasking the craft, 301–17; Martini Bonadeo, Philosophical journey, 5-6 and 203–5; Stern, 66–7; Allemann).

Spiritualism Edit

During the years following the First World War, ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī's name reappeared within the spiritualistic movement in the United Kingdom. He was introduced to the public by the Irish medium Eileen J. Garrett, the author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the spiritualist R.H. Saunders and became known by the name Abduhl Latif, the great Arab physician. He is said to have acted as a control of mediums until the mid 1960s (Joosse, Geest, 221–9). The Bodleian Library (MS Pococke 230) and the interpretation of the Videans (Zand-Videan, 8–9) may also have prompted the whimsical short-story ‘Ghost Writer’, as told to Tim Mackintosh-Smith, in which ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī speaks in the first person.

References Edit

  1. ^ Chambers Biographical Dictionary, ISBN 0-550-18022-2, page 3
  2. ^ a b Leaman 2015, p. 44; Meri 2005, p. 2.
  3. ^ a b c   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Abdallatif". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 30–31.
  4. ^ El Daly 2004, p. 10.
  5. ^ El Daly 2004, p. 36.
  6. ^ El Daly 2004.
  7. ^ Savage-Smith 1996, p. 951.
  8. ^ Toomer 1996, p. 272-273.
  9. ^ al-Baghdādī, M.D.A.L.; Hyde, T.; Pococke, E.; White, J.; Oxford University Press (1800). Abdollatiphi Historiæ Ægypti compendium,: Arabice et Latine. Abdollatiphi Historiæ Ægypti compendium,: Arabice et Latine. Typis academicis, impensis editoris; prostat venalis apud J. Cooke, Hanwell et Parker, Oxonii; J. White, Fleet Street; D. Bremner, Strand; et R. Faulder, Bond Street, Londini.
  10. ^ Toomer 1996, p. 275.
  11. ^ al-Baghdd, M.D.A.L.; de Sacy, A.I.S. (1810). Relation de l'Égypte (in French). Imprimerie impériale, chez Dreuttel et Würtz.

Bibliography Edit

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  • El Daly, Okasha (2004). Egyptology: The Missing Millennium: Ancient Egypt in Medieval Arabic Writings. Routledge. ISBN 1-84472-063-2.
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  • Joosse, N. Peter, ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī as a philosopher and a physician. Myth or reality, topos or truth?, in Peter Adamson, In the age of Averroes. Arabic philosophy in the sixth/twelfth century (Nino Aragno Editore: London/Torino 2011), 27-43.
  • Joosse, N. Peter, ‘Pride and prejudice, praise and blame’. ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī’s views on good and bad medical practitioners, in Arnoud Vrolijk and Jan P. Hogendijk, O ye gentlemen. Arabic studies on science and literary culture in honour of Remke Kruk (Brill: Leiden/Boston 2007), 129–41.
  • Joosse, N. Peter, 'ʿUnmasking the Craftʾ. ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī's Views on Alchemy and Alchemists: in: Anna A. Akasoy and Wim Raven, Islamic Thought in the Middle Ages. Studies in Text, Transmission and Translation in Honour of Hans Daiber (Brill: Leiden/Boston, 2008), 301–17.
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  • Joosse, N. Peter and Peter E. Pormann, 'Decline and Decadence in Iraq and Syria after the Age of Avicenna?: ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī (1162-1231) between Myth and History, in: Bulletin of the History of Medicine 84 (2010), 1-29.
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  • Martini Bonadeo, Cecilia (2013). Abd al-Laṭif al-Baghdadi's Philosophical Journey: from Aristotle's "Metaphysics" to the "Metaphysical Science. Brill: Leiden/Boston.
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  • Stern, Samuel Miklos, A collection of treatises by ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī, Islamic Studies 1 (1962), 53–70. [Reprint, in Fritz W. Zimmermann (ed.), S.M. Stern, Medieval Arabic and Hebrew thought (London 1983), No. XVIII].
  • Thies, Hans-Jürgen, Der Diabetestraktat ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baġdādī's. Untersuchungen zur Geschichte des Krankheitbildes in der arabischen Medizin, Diss. Bonn, Selbstverlag Uni Bonn, 1971.
  • Toomer, Gerald James (1996). Eastern Wisedome and Learning: The Study of Arabic in Seventeenth-Century England. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820291-1.
  • Toorawa, Shawkat M., A portrait of ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baghdādī's education and instruction, in Joseph E. Lowry, Devin J. Stewart and Shawkat M. Toorawa, Law and education in medieval Islam. Studies in memory of professor George Makdisi (Oxford 2004), 91-109.
  • Ullmann, Manfred, Die Medizin im Islam (Brill: Leiden/Köln 1970), 170–2.
  • Ullmann, Manfred, review of Hans-Jürgen Thies, Der Diabetestraktat ʿAbd al-Laṭīf al-Baġdādī's. Untersuchungen zur Geschichte des Krankheitsbildes in der arabischen Medizin, (Selbstverlag Uni Bonn: Bonn 1971), Der Islam 48 (1972), 339–40.
  • Zand, K.H. and J.A. and I.E. Videan, Kitāb al-Ifāda wa l-iʿtibār fī l-umūr al-mushāhada wa l-ḥawādith al-muʿāyana bi-arḍ miṣr. Facsimile edition of the autograph manuscript at the Bodleian Library, Oxford and English translation by Kamal Hafuth Zand and John A. and Ivy E. Videan under the name The Eastern Key (London and Cairo 1204/1964).

External links Edit

  Media related to Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi at Wikimedia Commons

latif, baghdadi, 20th, century, egyptian, politician, abdel, latif, boghdadi, politician, ʿabd, laṭīf, baghdādī, arabic, عبداللطيف, البغدادي, 1162, baghdad, 1231, baghdad, short, muwaffaq, dīn, muḥammad, ʿabd, laṭīf, yūsuf, baghdādī, arabic, موفق, الدين, محمد,. For the 20th century Egyptian politician see Abdel Latif Boghdadi politician ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi Arabic عبداللطيف البغدادي 1162 Baghdad 1231 Baghdad short for Muwaffaq al Din Muḥammad ʿAbd al Laṭif ibn Yusuf al Baghdadi Arabic موفق الدين محمد عبد اللطيف بن يوسف البغدادي was a physician philosopher historian Arabic grammarian and traveller and one of the most voluminous writers of his time 1 Abd al Latif al Baghdadi عبداللطيف البغداديBornMuhammad ibn Yusufc 1162Baghdad Abbasid CaliphateDied9 November 1231 aged 69 Baghdad Abbasid CaliphateOther namesMuwaffaq al Din Muhammad Abd al Latif ibn Yusuf al BaghdadiEraIslamic golden age Later Abbasid era Known forPhysician Philosopher Historian Arabic grammarian Traveler Writer EgyptologistParentYusuf al Baghdadi Contents 1 Biography 2 Account of Egypt 2 1 Archeology 2 2 Egyptology 2 3 Autopsy 2 4 Translation 3 Philosophy 4 Alchemy 5 Spiritualism 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksBiography EditMany details of ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s life are known from his autobiography as presented in Ibn Abi Uṣaybiʿah s literary history of medicine As a young man he studied grammar law tradition medicine alchemy and philosophy He focused his studies on ancient authors in particular Aristotle after first adopting Avicenna Ibn Sina as his philosophical mentor at the suggestion of a wandering scholar from the Maghreb He travelled extensively and resided in Mosul in 1189 where he studied the works of al Suhrawardi before travelling on to Damascus 1190 and the camp of Saladin outside Acre 1191 It was at this last location that he met Baha al Din ibn Shaddad and Imad al Din al Isfahani and acquired the Qadi al Fadil s patronage He went on to Cairo where he met Abu l Qasim al Shari i who introduced him to the works of al Farabi Alexander of Aphrodisias and Themistius and according to al Latif turned him away from Avicenna and alchemy 2 In 1192 he met Saladin in Jerusalem and enjoyed his patronage then went to Damascus again before returning to Cairo He journeyed to Jerusalem and to Damascus in 1207 8 and eventually made his way via Aleppo to Erzindjan where he remained at the court of the Mengujekid Ala al Din Da ud Dawud Shah until the city was conquered by the Rum Seljuk ruler Kayqubad II Kayqubad Ibn Kaykhusraw Abd al Latif returned to Baghdad in 1229 travelling back via Erzerum Kamakh Divrigi and Malatya He died in Baghdad two years later 2 Account of Egypt EditʿAbd al Laṭif was a man of great knowledge and of an inquisitive and penetrating mind Of the numerous works mostly on medicine which Ibn Abi Uṣaybiʿah ascribes to him one only his graphic and detailed Account of Egypt in two parts appeared to be known in Europe 3 Archeology Edit ʿAbd al Laṭif was well aware of the value of ancient monuments He praised some Muslim rulers for preserving and protecting pre Islamic artefacts and monuments but he also criticized others for failing to do so He noted that the preservation of antiquities presented a number of benefits for Muslims 4 monuments are useful historical evidence for chronologies they furnish evidence for Holy Scriptures since the Qur an mentions them and their people they are reminders of human endurance and fate they show to a degree the politics and history of ancestors the richness of their sciences and the genius of their thought While discussing the profession of treasure hunting he notes that poorer treasure hunters were often sponsored by rich businessmen to go on archeological expeditions In some cases an expedition could turn out to be fraudulent with the treasure hunter disappearing with large amounts of money extracted from sponsors 5 Egyptology Edit His manuscript was one of the earliest works on Egyptology It contains a vivid description of a famine caused by the Nile failing to overflow its banks which occurred during the author s residence in Egypt 3 He also wrote detailed descriptions on ancient Egyptian monuments 6 Autopsy Edit Al Baghdadi wrote that during the famine in Egypt in 597 AH 1200 AD he had the opportunity to observe and examine a large number of skeletons through which he came to the view that Galen was incorrect regarding the formation of the bones of the lower jaw mandible coccyx and sacrum 7 Translation Edit Al Baghdadi s Arabic manuscript was discovered in 1665 by the English orientalist Edward Pococke and is preserved in the Bodleian Library 3 Pococke published the Arabic manuscript in the 1680s His son Edward Pococke the Younger translated the work into Latin although he was only able to publish less than half of his work Thomas Hunt attempted to publish Pococke s complete translation in 1746 although his attempt was unsuccessful 8 Pococke s complete Latin translation was eventually published by Joseph White of Oxford in 1800 9 The work was then translated into French with valuable notes by Silvestre de Sacy in 1810 10 11 Philosophy EditAs far as philosophy is concerned one may adduce that ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi regarded philosophers as paragons of real virtue and therefore he refused to accept as a true philosopher one lacking not only true insight but also a truly moral personality as true philosophy was in the service of religion verifying both belief and action Apart from this he regarded the philosophers ambitions as vain Endress in Martini Bonadeo Philosophical journey xi ʿAbd al Laṭif composed several philosophical works among which is an important and original commentary on Aristotle s Metaphysics Kitab fi ʿilm ma baʿd al ṭabiʿa This is a critical work in the process of the Arabic assimilation of Greek thought demonstrating its author s acquaintance with the most important Greek metaphysical doctrines as set out in the writings of al Kindi d circa 185 252 801 66 and al Farabi d 339 950 The philosophical section of his Book of the Two Pieces of Advice Kitab al Naṣiḥatayn contains an interesting and challenging defence of philosophy and illustrates the vibrancy of philosophical debate in the Islamic colleges It moreover emphasises the idea that Islamic philosophy did not decline after the twelfth century CE Martini Bonadeo Philosophical journey Gutas ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi may therefore well be an exponent of what Gutas calls the golden age of Arabic philosophy Gutas 20 Alchemy EditʿAbd al Laṭif also penned two passionate and somewhat grotesque pamphlets against the art of alchemy in all its facets Although he engaged in alchemy for a short while he later abandoned the art completely by rejecting not only its practice but also its theory In ʿAbd al Laṭif s view alchemy could not be placed in the system of the sciences and its false presumptions and pretensions must be distinguished from true scientific knowledge which can be given a rational basis Joosse Rebellious intellectual 29 62 Joosse Unmasking the craft 301 17 Martini Bonadeo Philosophical journey 5 6 and 203 5 Stern 66 7 Allemann Spiritualism EditDuring the years following the First World War ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s name reappeared within the spiritualistic movement in the United Kingdom He was introduced to the public by the Irish medium Eileen J Garrett the author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the spiritualist R H Saunders and became known by the name Abduhl Latif the great Arab physician He is said to have acted as a control of mediums until the mid 1960s Joosse Geest 221 9 The Bodleian Library MS Pococke 230 and the interpretation of the Videans Zand Videan 8 9 may also have prompted the whimsical short story Ghost Writer as told to Tim Mackintosh Smith in which ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi speaks in the first person References Edit Chambers Biographical Dictionary ISBN 0 550 18022 2 page 3 a b Leaman 2015 p 44 Meri 2005 p 2 a b c nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Abdallatif Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 30 31 El Daly 2004 p 10 El Daly 2004 p 36 El Daly 2004 Savage Smith 1996 p 951 Toomer 1996 p 272 273 al Baghdadi M D A L Hyde T Pococke E White J Oxford University Press 1800 Abdollatiphi Historiae AEgypti compendium Arabice et Latine Abdollatiphi Historiae AEgypti compendium Arabice et Latine Typis academicis impensis editoris prostat venalis apud J Cooke Hanwell et Parker Oxonii J White Fleet Street D Bremner Strand et R Faulder Bond Street Londini Toomer 1996 p 275 al Baghdd M D A L de Sacy A I S 1810 Relation de l Egypte in French Imprimerie imperiale chez Dreuttel et Wurtz Bibliography EditAllemann Franz ʿAbdallaṭif al Baġdadi Risalah fi Mudjadalat al ḥakimain al kimiyaʾi wan naẓari Das Streitgesprach zwischen dem Alchemisten und dem theoretischen Philosophen or The Argument Between the Alchemist and the Theoretical Philosopher Eine textkritische Bearbeitung der Handschrift Bursa Huseyin Celebi 823 fol 100 123 mit Ubersetzung und Kommentar PhD dissertation Bern 1988 El Daly Okasha 2004 Egyptology The Missing Millennium Ancient Egypt in Medieval Arabic Writings Routledge ISBN 1 84472 063 2 Degen Rainer Zum Diabetestraktat des ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baġdadi Annali Istituto Universitario Orientale di Napoli 37 N S 27 1977 455 62 Dietrich Albert Ein Arzneimittelverzeichnis des Abdallaṭif Ibn Yusuf al Baġdadi in Wilhelm Hoenerbach Der Orient in der Forschung Festschrift fur Otto Spies zum 5 April 1966 Wiesbaden 1967 42 60 Gannage Emma Medecine et philosophie a Damas a l aube du XIIIeme siecle un tournant post avicennien Oriens 39 2011 227 256 Gutas Dimitri Philosophy in the Twelfth Century One View from Bagdad or the Reputation of al Ghazali in Peter Adamson In the Age of Averroes Arabic Philosophy in the Sixth Twelfth Century London Torino Nino Aragno Editore 2011 9 26 Ibn Abi Uṣaybiʿa ʿUyun al anbaʾ fi ṭabaqat al atibbaʾ ed Imruʾulqais ibn aṭ Ṭaḥḥan August Muller 2 vols Cairo Konigsberg 1299 1882 2 201 13 Reprint by Fuat Sezgin et al Islamic Medicine 1 2 2 vols Frankfurt am Main 1995 The entry on ALB has been translated annotated and edited by N Peter Joosse and Geert Jan van Gelder in A Literary History of medicine The ʿUyun al anbaʾ fi ṭabaqat al aṭibbaʾ of Ibn Abi Uṣaybiʿah HdO 134 volume 3 1 ed 1295 1323 3 2 trl 1470 1506 Brill Leiden Boston 2019 Joosse N Peter art ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi in Encyclopaedia of Islam Three Joosse N Peter The Physician as a Rebellious Intellectual The Book of the Two Pieces of Advice or Kitab al Naṣiḥatayn by ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi 1162 1231 Introduction Edition and Translation of the Medical Section Frankfurt am Main and Bern Peter Lang Edition 2014 Beihefte zur Mediaevistik Band 18 Joosse N Peter ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi as a philosopher and a physician Myth or reality topos or truth in Peter Adamson In the age of Averroes Arabic philosophy in the sixth twelfth century Nino Aragno Editore London Torino 2011 27 43 Joosse N Peter Pride and prejudice praise and blame ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s views on good and bad medical practitioners in Arnoud Vrolijk and Jan P Hogendijk O ye gentlemen Arabic studies on science and literary culture in honour of Remke Kruk Brill Leiden Boston 2007 129 41 Joosse N Peter ʿUnmasking the Craftʾ ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s Views on Alchemy and Alchemists in Anna A Akasoy and Wim Raven Islamic Thought in the Middle Ages Studies in Text Transmission and Translation in Honour of Hans Daiber Brill Leiden Boston 2008 301 17 Joosse N Peter De geest is uit de fles De middeleeuwse Arabische arts ʿAbd al Laṭif ibn Yusuf al Baghdadi zijn medische werk en zijn bizarre affiliatie met het twintigste eeuwse spiritisme Gewina 30 4 2007 211 29 Joosse N Peter and Peter E Pormann Decline and Decadence in Iraq and Syria after the Age of Avicenna ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi 1162 1231 between Myth and History in Bulletin of the History of Medicine 84 2010 1 29 Joosse N Peter and Peter E Pormann ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baġdadi s commentary on Hippocrates Prognostic A preliminary exploration in Peter E Pormann ed gt Epidemics lt in context Greek commentaries on Hippocrates in the Arabic tradition De Gruyter Berlin and Boston 2012 251 83 Joosse N Peter and Peter E Pormann Archery mathematics and conceptualising inaccuracies in medicine in 13th century Iraq and Syria Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 101 2008 425 7 Leaman Oliver 2015 The Biographical Encyclopedia of Islamic Philosophy Bloomsbury Academic p 44 ISBN 978 1 4725 6944 8 Karimullah Kamran I Assessing Avicenna s d 428 1037 Medical Influence in Prolegomena to Post Classical 1100 1900 CE Medical Commentaries MIDEO 32 2017 93 134 especially section I on ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi Kruk Remke ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s Kitab al Ḥayawan A chimaera in Anna A Akasoy and Wim Raven Islamic thought in the middle ages Studies in text transmission and translation in honour of Hans Daiber Leiden and Boston 2008 345 62 Mackintosh Smith Tim Ghost Writer as told to Tim Mackintosh Smith Slightly foxed Ltd London 2005 Martini Bonadeo Cecilia art Abd al Latif al Baghdadi in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2015 Edition in Edward N Zalta ed URL lt http plato stanford edu archives fall2015 entries al baghdadi gt Martini Bonadeo Cecilia 2013 Abd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s Philosophical Journey from Aristotle s Metaphysics to the Metaphysical Science Brill Leiden Boston Meri Josef W 2005 Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Psychology Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 415 96690 0 Pormann Peter E and N Peter Joosse Commentaries on the Hippocratic Aphorisms in the Arabic tradition The example of melancholy in Peter E Pormann ed gt Epidemics lt in context Greek commentaries on Hippocrates in the Arabic tradition De Gruyter Berlin and Boston 2012 211 49 Pormann Peter E and Emilie Savage Smith Medieval Islamic medicine Edinburgh University Press Edinburgh 2007 60 73 4 de Sacy Silvestre 1810 Relation de l Egypt par Adb al Latif in French Paris Savage Smith Emilie 1996 Medicine In Rashed Roshdi ed Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science Vol 3 London Routledge pp 903 962 Stern Samuel Miklos A collection of treatises by ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi Islamic Studies 1 1962 53 70 Reprint in Fritz W Zimmermann ed S M Stern Medieval Arabic and Hebrew thought London 1983 No XVIII Thies Hans Jurgen Der Diabetestraktat ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baġdadi s Untersuchungen zur Geschichte des Krankheitbildes in der arabischen Medizin Diss Bonn Selbstverlag Uni Bonn 1971 Toomer Gerald James 1996 Eastern Wisedome and Learning The Study of Arabic in Seventeenth Century England Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820291 1 Toorawa Shawkat M A portrait of ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baghdadi s education and instruction in Joseph E Lowry Devin J Stewart and Shawkat M Toorawa Law and education in medieval Islam Studies in memory of professor George Makdisi Oxford 2004 91 109 Ullmann Manfred Die Medizin im Islam Brill Leiden Koln 1970 170 2 Ullmann Manfred review of Hans Jurgen Thies Der Diabetestraktat ʿAbd al Laṭif al Baġdadi s Untersuchungen zur Geschichte des Krankheitsbildes in der arabischen Medizin Selbstverlag Uni Bonn Bonn 1971 Der Islam 48 1972 339 40 Zand K H and J A and I E Videan Kitab al Ifada wa l iʿtibar fi l umur al mushahada wa l ḥawadith al muʿayana bi arḍ miṣr Facsimile edition of the autograph manuscript at the Bodleian Library Oxford and English translation by Kamal Hafuth Zand and John A and Ivy E Videan under the name The Eastern Key London and Cairo 1204 1964 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Abd al Latif al Baghdadi at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abd al Latif al Baghdadi amp oldid 1175500504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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