Abstract

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5915/40-1-5279 Abū Zayd Hunayn ibn Ishāq al-'Ibādī, a physician and Translator Par Excellence, lived in the early 9th century CE and 2nd century AH (after Hijra), during the Abbasid Caliphate. He was a product of the crucible of early civilization that fostered advancement of art, science, medicine, and philosophy like no other civilization before it. The practice of medicine that evolved during this period came to be termed Islamic medicine. Because of his genius, he was able to convert nearly all accessible and extant Greek medical, philosophical and scientific works into Syriac and Arabic. Since Syriac was later to die off as a language, his translations into Arabic were the ones that have been preserved over the centuries. These were responsible not only for influencing early medicine, but through later translations into Hebrew, Latin, and other European languages, they were to influence the art, science, and teaching of medicine in the East and West for centuries to come. In this paper we will endeavor to examine in some depth his life, his works, his achievements, and the impact that his contributions made to the practice of medicine during the civilization and far beyond.

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