BookThe Canon of Medicine
Main title
- The Canon of Medicine.
Published/Created
- [place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], [1700 to 1799]
More Information
LCCN Permalink
Description
- 1 online resource.
Variant title
- القانون في الطبّ
Related names
- Avicenna, 980-1037 Author.
Summary
- Abu ʻAli al-Husayn Ibn Sina was born in Bukhara (present-day Uzbekistan) in 980 and died in Hamadan (present-day Iran) in 1037. One of the intellectual luminaries of the medieval world, known in the Latin West as Avicenna, this Persian polymath was often referred to by Muslim authors as al-Shaykh al-Raʼīs (the preeminent scholar), acknowledgment of his status as one of the foremost savants of the Islamic world. A prolific author, Ibn Sina wrote on topics as varied as metaphysics, theology, medicine, psychology, earth sciences, physics, astronomy, astrology, and chemistry. Ibn Sina's fame in Europe rests principally on this work, al-Qānūn fī al-ṭibb (The canon of medicine), which was translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona in the 12th century and remained part of the standard curriculum for medical students until the late 17th century. It was due to the reputation of this work, as well as two of Ibn Sina's other works that were translated into Latin-al-Adwiya al-qalbīya (Cardiac medication) and al-Urjūza fī al-ṭibb (a versified manual on medicine)-that Ibn Sina was sometimes referred to in the Latin West as princeps medicorum (prince of physicians). The Canon of Medicine is organized into five books as follows: Book 1 is entitled al-Umūr al-kulliya fī 'ilm al-ṭibb (General medical principles) and covers the basic principles of medicine; Book 2 is entitled al-Adwiya al-mufrada (Materia medica) and lists approximately 800 individual drugs of vegetable and mineral origin; Book 3 is entitled al-Amrāḍ al-juz'iya (Special pathology) and discusses the diseases of individual organs; Book 4 is entitled al-Amrāḍ allatī lā takhtaṣṣ bi 'udw bi 'aynihi (Diseases involving more than one member) and discusses medical conditions that affect the entire body, such as fevers and poisons; Book 5 is entitled al-Adwiya al-murakkaba wa al-aqrābādhīn (Formulary) and lists some 650 medicinal compounds as well as their uses and effects. The present manuscript includes Book 1. The rubricated headings are missing for most of the manuscript. The first page is illuminated, however, and contains a sumptuous panel with the basmalah or bismillah (In the name of God) and invocations for the successful completion of the work. The manuscript is undated; the colophon states simply that the book was completed bi awn allāh (with the help of God). The scripts are naskh and taʻliq, and the text is written in black ink, with headings and dividers highlighted in red.
LC Subjects
Subject keywords
- 980 to 1037;
- Arabic manuscripts; Medicine; Medicine, Arab; Medicine, Medieval;
Notes
- Title devised, in English, by Library staff.
- Original resource extent: 194 folio ; 290 x 175 millimeters.
- Original resource at: Wellcome Library.
- Content in Arabic.
Collection
LCCN
- 2021667335
Language code
- ara
Other system no.
- (WDL)15436
Type of material
- Book
Source of description
- Description based on data extracted from World Digital Library, which may be extracted from partner institutions.
Item Availability
CALL NUMBER
- Electronic Resource
Request in
- Online