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Ibn Adlan

ʻAfīf al-Dīn ʻAlī ibn ʻAdlān al-Mawsilī (Arabic: عفيف لدين علي بن عدلان الموصلي; 1187–1268 CE), born in Mosul, was an Arab cryptologist, linguist and poet who is known for his early contributions to cryptanalysis, to which he dedicated at least two books. He was also involved in literature and poetry, and taught on the Arabic language at the Al-Salihiyya Mosque of Cairo.

ʻAfīf al-Dīn

ʻAlī ibn ʻAdlān

al-Mawsili al-Nahwi al-Mutarjim
Born1187
Died1268 (aged 80–81)
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsAl-Salihiyya Mosque, Cairo

He was in contact with various rulers of his time, and in this capacity he gained practical experience in cryptanalysis or the science of breaking encoded messages. He dedicated On Cryptanalysis, his only surviving work on the topic, to Al-Ashraf Musa (r. 1229–1237), the Ayyubid Emir of Damascus. He wrote three other books, including Al-Mu'lam (The Told [Book]), also on cryptanalysis, but it is now lost. On Cryptanalysis is a sort of guidebook for cryptanalysts, containing twenty sets of techniques he calls "rules". The methods contains more practical details than Al-Kindi's 8th century Treatise on Deciphering Cryptographic Messages—the earliest surviving work on cryptoanalysis—but lack its predecessor's theoretical background on cryptography. Among Ibn 'Adlan's original contributions were methods for breaking no-space monoalphabetic cryptograms, a type of ciphers which were developed to evade analysis techniques described earlier by Al-Kindi. In this treatise Ibn 'Adlan also includes a real-life example of a cryptogram that he deciphered and his full process in breaking it, which, in the words of the cryptographer James Massey, provides "the authentic experience of a highly skilled cryptanalyst."

Biography edit

 
Ibn 'Adlan worked as a teacher at the Al-Salihiyya Mosque complex (remaining parts pictured in 2015).

'Afif al-Din 'Ali ibn 'Adlan was born in Mosul in 583 AH (c. 1187 CE).[1] He was of an Arab origin[2] and received education in Baghdad, including lessons on syntax by the grammarian Abu al-Baqa al-Ukbari.[1] Subsequently, he lived in Damascus for a time,[3] before became a teacher of the Arabic language at the Al-Salihiyya Mosque of Cairo until his death in 666 AH (c. 1268 CE).[1] In addition to writing treatises on linguistics and cryptanalysis, he was considered an authority in literature and wrote poems himself.[1][4] He was in contact with various rulers, and in this capacity he gained practical experience in cryptanalysis, which he calls hall al-mutarjam. One of these rulers was Al-Ashraf Musa (r. 1229–1237), the Ayyubid Emir of Damascus, for whom he dedicated his treatise On Cryptanalysis.[5] He was also known by his multiple nisbas (descriptive epithets): al-Mawsili (of Mosul), al-Nahwi (the Grammarian) and al-Mutarjim (the Cryptoanalyst).[3]

Works edit

 
The cover (right) and the first page (left) of Ibn Adlan's On Cryptanalysis

Early Arabic bibliographies attributed three titles to him, including one on cryptanalysis, Fi hall al-mutarjam (On Cryptanalysis), also known as Al-mu'allaf lil-malik al-'Ashraf (The [Book] Written for King al-Ashraf). In addition, a reference in On Cryptanalysis points to another book, Al-Mu'lam (The Told [Book]), which is now lost, in which he describes algorithms for analysing cryptograms. His other two works were titled Al-Intihab li-kashf al-'abyat al-mushkilat al-i'rab and 'Uqlat al-mujtaz fi hall al-aljaz.[1]

Background edit

The practice and study of encrypting messages into ciphers, called cryptography, had existed since ancient times, practised by the Egyptian, Chinese, Indian, Mesopotamian, Greek, and Roman civilisations.[6] In contrast, cryptanalysis, the science of breaking ciphers—in other words, recovering the plain message from an encrypted one—was founded in the early Arab-Muslim civilisation.[7][8] The earliest surviving work found on the topic of cryptanalysis is the Risalah fi Istikhraj al-Mu'amma ("Treatise on Deciphering Cryptographic Messages") written by Al-Kindi (c. 801–873), an Arab scholar who also wrote on other topics including philosophy, astronomy, and medicine.[9][8][10] Reports are also found on other works before al-Kindi, among the earliest of which is al-Mu'amma ("The Book of Cryptographic Messages"), written by al-Khalil ibn Ahmad in the 8th century, but they are now lost.[2][8] Al-Kindi's book presents cryptanalysis techniques such as frequency analysis, which is to also be covered by Ibn 'Adlan's works.[9]

On Cryptanalysis edit

 
On Cryptanalysis is preserved in the library of the Süleymaniye Mosque of Istanbul (mosque pictured in 2011).

On Cryptanalysis was written in a style of a handbook or a manual, describing Ibn 'Adlan's twenty "rules" or techniques of cryptanalysis, grouped into nine themes.[4][3] Unlike the cryptological treatises of Al-Kindi before him and later Ibn al-Durayhim (c. 1312–1361), which provide theoretical background on cryptography including systematic explanations on types of ciphers, Ibn 'Adlan's On Cryptanalysis focuses on the practical matters and specific methods in breaking encrypted texts of his time, often in a more detailed manner than Al-Kindi.[4] The work's introduction section does include a brief description of the simple substitution encipherment method, and encourages its readers to read other sources to learn about other methods.[11]

One of Ibn 'Adlan's most original contribution in this treatise is the cryptanalysis of no-space monoalphabetic cryptograms (al-mudmaj)—encrypted texts that do not include a space to denote separation between words.[4][12] This type of cryptograms was not mentioned by al-Kindi: it was developed by subsequent cryptographers (code makers) in order to counteract the cryptographic attacks described in his works, part of a kind of arms race between the code makers and code breakers. In the west, this type of cryptanalysis was only attested in the sixteenth century in the works of the Italian Giambattista della Porta. According to ibn 'Adlan, the cryptographers of his time "allege that their ciphers can defy detection and analysis" by using the no-space method.[4] Ibn 'Adlan recommended the use of frequency analysis,[13] as well as the analysis of consecutive letters based on knowing how many times each letter can possibly occur consecutively in Arabic sentences and the specific ways they can do so.[14] He also wrote on the analysis of ciphers in which the space is represented by variable symbols.[15][4]

On Cryptanalysis also deals with frequency analysis: Ibn 'Adlan follows al-Kindi's data on the frequency of Arabic letters—although Al-Kindi does not receive any direct attribution, the numbers provided by the two authors are identical—[16]and divided the Arabic alphabet into seven common (frequently-occurring), eleven medium, and ten rare letters.[3] Ibn 'Adlan presents a table of the most common two or three letter words, and offers a minimum sample size, a lower limit of text length that can be cryptoanalysed using its frequency of letters: about 90 characters (approximately three times the length of the Arabic alphabet).[3][17] Below this limit, according to Ibn 'Adlan the occurrence of letters will not follow the provided frequency distribution.[15]

The treatise includes the cryptanalysis of common adjacent letters, the Arabic definite article ال (al-, 'the'), and letters frequently occurring at the beginning or the end of a word. Ibn 'Adlan also writes on the probable words in the opening and closing section of a text (such as the Arabic formula Bismillah, "In the name of God").[18] He adds special principles for analysing encrypted poetry, including the knowledge of prosody, rhymes and meters.[19] He then explains his cryptanalysis steps, moving from the ciphertext to possible solutions, then to the suspected, the probable, and eventually the confirmed solution.[20] In the closing section of the book, Ibn 'Adlan includes a real-life example of a cryptogram that he broke and his full process in deciphering it, including his false starts, thought process, and eventual solution. The cryptographer James Massey describes this section as "intriguing" and providing "the authentic experience of a highly skilled cryptanalyst."[4]

A copy of On Cryptanalysis is preserved in the library of the Süleymaniye Mosque of Istanbul (manuscript number 5359).[1] A modern edition was prepared by editors Muhammad Mrayati, Yahya Meer Alam and Hassan al-Tayyan and published by the Arab Academy of Damascus in 1987, including introductions and explanatory materials from the editors. It was translated into English in 2004.[10][21]

References edit

Bibliography edit

  • Al-Kadi, Ibrahim A. (1992). "Origins of Cryptology: The Arab Contributions". Cryptologia. 16 (2): 97–126. doi:10.1080/0161-119291866801.
  • Broemeling, Lyle D. (2011). "An Account of Early Statistical Inference in Arab Cryptology". The American Statistician. 65 (4): 255–257. doi:10.1198/tas.2011.10191. S2CID 123537702.
  • Massey, James L. (2008). "Review of Series on Arabic Origins of Cryptology". Cryptologia. 32 (3): 280–283. doi:10.1080/01611190802129104. S2CID 38777821.
  • Mrayati, Mohammad; Meer Alam, Yahya; at-Tayyan, Hassan (2004). ibn 'Adlān's Treatise al-mu'allaf lil-malik al-'Ašraf. Series on Arabic Origins of Cryptology. Vol. 2. Translated by Said M. al-Asaad. Revised by Mohammed I. Al-Suawiyel, Ibrahim A. Kadi, Marwan Al-Bawab. Riyadh: King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies (KFCRIS) & King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology (KACST). ISBN 9960-890-18-X. Translated and revised from:
    • Mrayati, Mohammad; Meer Alam, Yahya; al-Tayyan, Hassan (1987). Ilm at-Ta'miyah wa Istikhraj al-Mu'amma Ind al-Arab [Origins of Arab Cryptography and Cryptanalysis] (in Arabic). Vol. I. Damascus: Arab Academy of Damascus.

adlan, ʻafīf, dīn, ʻalī, ʻadlān, mawsilī, arabic, عفيف, لدين, علي, بن, عدلان, الموصلي, 1187, 1268, born, mosul, arab, cryptologist, linguist, poet, known, early, contributions, cryptanalysis, which, dedicated, least, books, also, involved, literature, poetry, . ʻAfif al Din ʻAli ibn ʻAdlan al Mawsili Arabic عفيف لدين علي بن عدلان الموصلي 1187 1268 CE born in Mosul was an Arab cryptologist linguist and poet who is known for his early contributions to cryptanalysis to which he dedicated at least two books He was also involved in literature and poetry and taught on the Arabic language at the Al Salihiyya Mosque of Cairo ʻAfif al DinʻAli ibn ʻAdlanal Mawsili al Nahwi al MutarjimBorn1187Mosul Ayyubid SultanateDied1268 aged 80 81 Cairo Mamluk SultanateScientific careerFieldsCryptologyLiteratureArabic languageInstitutionsAl Salihiyya Mosque CairoHe was in contact with various rulers of his time and in this capacity he gained practical experience in cryptanalysis or the science of breaking encoded messages He dedicated On Cryptanalysis his only surviving work on the topic to Al Ashraf Musa r 1229 1237 the Ayyubid Emir of Damascus He wrote three other books including Al Mu lam The Told Book also on cryptanalysis but it is now lost On Cryptanalysis is a sort of guidebook for cryptanalysts containing twenty sets of techniques he calls rules The methods contains more practical details than Al Kindi s 8th century Treatise on Deciphering Cryptographic Messages the earliest surviving work on cryptoanalysis but lack its predecessor s theoretical background on cryptography Among Ibn Adlan s original contributions were methods for breaking no space monoalphabetic cryptograms a type of ciphers which were developed to evade analysis techniques described earlier by Al Kindi In this treatise Ibn Adlan also includes a real life example of a cryptogram that he deciphered and his full process in breaking it which in the words of the cryptographer James Massey provides the authentic experience of a highly skilled cryptanalyst Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 2 1 Background 2 2 On Cryptanalysis 3 References 4 BibliographyBiography edit nbsp Ibn Adlan worked as a teacher at the Al Salihiyya Mosque complex remaining parts pictured in 2015 Afif al Din Ali ibn Adlan was born in Mosul in 583 AH c 1187 CE 1 He was of an Arab origin 2 and received education in Baghdad including lessons on syntax by the grammarian Abu al Baqa al Ukbari 1 Subsequently he lived in Damascus for a time 3 before became a teacher of the Arabic language at the Al Salihiyya Mosque of Cairo until his death in 666 AH c 1268 CE 1 In addition to writing treatises on linguistics and cryptanalysis he was considered an authority in literature and wrote poems himself 1 4 He was in contact with various rulers and in this capacity he gained practical experience in cryptanalysis which he calls hall al mutarjam One of these rulers was Al Ashraf Musa r 1229 1237 the Ayyubid Emir of Damascus for whom he dedicated his treatise On Cryptanalysis 5 He was also known by his multiple nisbas descriptive epithets al Mawsili of Mosul al Nahwi the Grammarian and al Mutarjim the Cryptoanalyst 3 Works edit nbsp The cover right and the first page left of Ibn Adlan s On CryptanalysisEarly Arabic bibliographies attributed three titles to him including one on cryptanalysis Fi hall al mutarjam On Cryptanalysis also known as Al mu allaf lil malik al Ashraf The Book Written for King al Ashraf In addition a reference in On Cryptanalysis points to another book Al Mu lam The Told Book which is now lost in which he describes algorithms for analysing cryptograms His other two works were titled Al Intihab li kashf al abyat al mushkilat al i rab and Uqlat al mujtaz fi hall al aljaz 1 Background edit The practice and study of encrypting messages into ciphers called cryptography had existed since ancient times practised by the Egyptian Chinese Indian Mesopotamian Greek and Roman civilisations 6 In contrast cryptanalysis the science of breaking ciphers in other words recovering the plain message from an encrypted one was founded in the early Arab Muslim civilisation 7 8 The earliest surviving work found on the topic of cryptanalysis is the Risalah fi Istikhraj al Mu amma Treatise on Deciphering Cryptographic Messages written by Al Kindi c 801 873 an Arab scholar who also wrote on other topics including philosophy astronomy and medicine 9 8 10 Reports are also found on other works before al Kindi among the earliest of which is al Mu amma The Book of Cryptographic Messages written by al Khalil ibn Ahmad in the 8th century but they are now lost 2 8 Al Kindi s book presents cryptanalysis techniques such as frequency analysis which is to also be covered by Ibn Adlan s works 9 On Cryptanalysis edit nbsp On Cryptanalysis is preserved in the library of the Suleymaniye Mosque of Istanbul mosque pictured in 2011 On Cryptanalysis was written in a style of a handbook or a manual describing Ibn Adlan s twenty rules or techniques of cryptanalysis grouped into nine themes 4 3 Unlike the cryptological treatises of Al Kindi before him and later Ibn al Durayhim c 1312 1361 which provide theoretical background on cryptography including systematic explanations on types of ciphers Ibn Adlan s On Cryptanalysis focuses on the practical matters and specific methods in breaking encrypted texts of his time often in a more detailed manner than Al Kindi 4 The work s introduction section does include a brief description of the simple substitution encipherment method and encourages its readers to read other sources to learn about other methods 11 One of Ibn Adlan s most original contribution in this treatise is the cryptanalysis of no space monoalphabetic cryptograms al mudmaj encrypted texts that do not include a space to denote separation between words 4 12 This type of cryptograms was not mentioned by al Kindi it was developed by subsequent cryptographers code makers in order to counteract the cryptographic attacks described in his works part of a kind of arms race between the code makers and code breakers In the west this type of cryptanalysis was only attested in the sixteenth century in the works of the Italian Giambattista della Porta According to ibn Adlan the cryptographers of his time allege that their ciphers can defy detection and analysis by using the no space method 4 Ibn Adlan recommended the use of frequency analysis 13 as well as the analysis of consecutive letters based on knowing how many times each letter can possibly occur consecutively in Arabic sentences and the specific ways they can do so 14 He also wrote on the analysis of ciphers in which the space is represented by variable symbols 15 4 On Cryptanalysis also deals with frequency analysis Ibn Adlan follows al Kindi s data on the frequency of Arabic letters although Al Kindi does not receive any direct attribution the numbers provided by the two authors are identical 16 and divided the Arabic alphabet into seven common frequently occurring eleven medium and ten rare letters 3 Ibn Adlan presents a table of the most common two or three letter words and offers a minimum sample size a lower limit of text length that can be cryptoanalysed using its frequency of letters about 90 characters approximately three times the length of the Arabic alphabet 3 17 Below this limit according to Ibn Adlan the occurrence of letters will not follow the provided frequency distribution 15 The treatise includes the cryptanalysis of common adjacent letters the Arabic definite article ال al the and letters frequently occurring at the beginning or the end of a word Ibn Adlan also writes on the probable words in the opening and closing section of a text such as the Arabic formula Bismillah In the name of God 18 He adds special principles for analysing encrypted poetry including the knowledge of prosody rhymes and meters 19 He then explains his cryptanalysis steps moving from the ciphertext to possible solutions then to the suspected the probable and eventually the confirmed solution 20 In the closing section of the book Ibn Adlan includes a real life example of a cryptogram that he broke and his full process in deciphering it including his false starts thought process and eventual solution The cryptographer James Massey describes this section as intriguing and providing the authentic experience of a highly skilled cryptanalyst 4 A copy of On Cryptanalysis is preserved in the library of the Suleymaniye Mosque of Istanbul manuscript number 5359 1 A modern edition was prepared by editors Muhammad Mrayati Yahya Meer Alam and Hassan al Tayyan and published by the Arab Academy of Damascus in 1987 including introductions and explanatory materials from the editors It was translated into English in 2004 10 21 References edit a b c d e f Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 p 13 a b Al Kadi 1992 p 98 a b c d e Al Kadi 1992 p 113 a b c d e f g Massey 2008 p 281 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 p 14 Al Kadi 1992 p 103 Al Kadi 1992 pp 103 104 a b c Broemeling 2011 p 255 a b Al Kadi 1992 p 106 a b Massey 2008 p 280 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 pp 16 17 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 p 24 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 pp 80 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 pp 21 22 a b Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 p 19 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 p 18 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 pp 18 19 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 pp 19 20 Mrayati Meer Alam amp at Tayyan 2004 p 22 Al Kadi 1992 pp 113 115 Al Kadi 1992 p 113 also p 125 no 12 Bibliography editAl Kadi Ibrahim A 1992 Origins of Cryptology The Arab Contributions Cryptologia 16 2 97 126 doi 10 1080 0161 119291866801 Broemeling Lyle D 2011 An Account of Early Statistical Inference in Arab Cryptology The American Statistician 65 4 255 257 doi 10 1198 tas 2011 10191 S2CID 123537702 Massey James L 2008 Review of Series on Arabic Origins of Cryptology Cryptologia 32 3 280 283 doi 10 1080 01611190802129104 S2CID 38777821 Mrayati Mohammad Meer Alam Yahya at Tayyan Hassan 2004 ibn Adlan s Treatise al mu allaf lil malik al Asraf Series on Arabic Origins of Cryptology Vol 2 Translated by Said M al Asaad Revised by Mohammed I Al Suawiyel Ibrahim A Kadi Marwan Al Bawab Riyadh King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies KFCRIS amp King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology KACST ISBN 9960 890 18 X Translated and revised from Mrayati Mohammad Meer Alam Yahya al Tayyan Hassan 1987 Ilm at Ta miyah wa Istikhraj al Mu amma Ind al Arab Origins of Arab Cryptography and Cryptanalysis in Arabic Vol I Damascus Arab Academy of Damascus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ibn Adlan amp oldid 1179852647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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