Author
Abu Al-Asha’ir Hibatullah bin Zain bin Hassan bin Ephraim bin Yaqoub bin Ismail bin Jamil Al-Isra’ili, 594 AH / 1198 AD; He was born in Fustat, Egypt.
Author Original
أبو العشائر هبة الله بن زين بن حسن بن افرائيم بن يعقوب بن إسماعيل ابن جميع الإسرائيلي، هـم؛ ولد بفسطاط مصر
Publication Date
Not available
Publication Place
Damascus - Syria -
Not identified
Subject
Medicine, pharmacy.
Type
kitap
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
Yes
Pages Count
145
Physical Dimensions
21،5cm × 14،5cm
Library
Al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation
Library Asset ID
الرقم القديم 3141 طب 16
Record ID
127301
Library Location
Syria (Damascus) - Dar Al-Kutob Al-Dhahiria Library - Syria (Damascus) - Dar Al-Kutob Al-Dhahiria Library
Date
Not available
Notes
The story contained in the opening of the book may have been somewhat exaggerated, but we know that both Ibn Zuhr and Ibn Rushd denounced the law and criticized its author. The author mentions the reason for which he wrote this book when he writes to his friend who requested this, saying, “You were informed of my care and diligence in fixing my copy (of the Book of the Law), and that I annotated many footnotes to it, and you asked me to write for you a book in which I record the annotations I had annotated in addition to what I have... He cut me off from your answer after the visit... until your letter arrived containing a repetition of your question about it, so I feared that he would think that I was suspicious of you with some information. So I wrote this book.” The book includes a brief commentary on the first and second books of the Law, and there are many linguistic errors in the writing. Ibn Juma divided his book into two sentences: 1- The entire book with corrections and footnotes. 2- The important comments on the law and what is appropriate to be deposited in writings include research on medicines and medical vocabulary arranged in alphabetical order. In this way, he responded to Sheikh Ibn Sina and to some Iraqi footnotes written by the Secretary of State, Ibn al-Talib, commenting on the law. This book was explained by Fakhr al-Din Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Ali bin Nasr al-Khajandi al-Mutabbab in a book he wrote around the year 702 AH entitled (Revision of the Hidden Books of Law). Ibn Abi Usaibah, Cairo edition, 2: 65, 112 - 115 mentioned that the son of all of the famous doctors was very diligent in the art of medicine and had good treatment. He was a student of Sheikh Abu Nasr Adnan bin Al-Ain Zarbi and stayed with him for a while. Then he served King Al-Nasir Saladin (1171 - 93) and was fortunate in his days. He installed the great antidote for him, Al-Faruq, and he had famous students, including Sheikh Al-Sadid bin Abi Al-Bayan, the author of (Al-Dustour Al-Bimaristani), which will be mentioned later. Ibn Jamil had an excellent knowledge of the Arabic language and had a shop near the Qandil Market in Fustat. Despite his fame for the quality of his treatment, Ibn al-Munajim al-Masry satirized him: They called Ibn Juma’ and his slander *** and his claim to perfume and engineering, but he is nothing but a patch of land that comes *** and if he arrives in a country, he will make him miserable. However, Yusuf bin Hibat Allah bin Muslim praises him in a long poem in which he talks about his ability to diagnose diseases and know their causes. And guide them with opinion while the matter is ambiguous *** and teach them about the unseen with the knowledge of understanding See also Brokelmann, Leiden, 1: 598 and 643, and Wustenfeld, p. 101 -102. Among them is a manuscript in Oxford, and I examined the manuscript in the library of Princeton University in New Jersey, and the son of all subsequent books on guidance.
Sample Text
Hibatullah bin Zain (Rabban) said: You, sir, when you negotiated with me regarding the letter of President Abu (Al-Hasan) (Ali) bin Abdullah bin Sina, nicknamed Al-Qanun, mentioned what you had heard from Abu Al-Alaa bin Zuhr, the Andalusian doctor, which is that a merchant man brought from Iraq a copy of this book that he had greatly improved, so he gave it to him as a keepsake in order to get closer to him, and this book had not happened to him before. When he contemplated it, he condemned it, threw it away, did not put it in his bookcase, and made it cut from the A paper in which copies of medicines are written Prescriptions for those who are cured of illness, and I mentioned what was said that it is a book that is not suitable for the beginner in the science of medicine because of the vague words and philosophical meanings it contains, and because its author sought to be extremely short in phrases... harmful to the beginner and not needed by the advanced.
Yazı hakkında notlar
واضح
Durum
المخطوط مبتور.
Satır sayısı
17
Kaynakça
عيون الأنباء في طبقات الأطباء، ج 2، ص 65، 112 ــ 115؛ تاريخ الأدب العربي، ج 1، ص 598 ــ 643؛ Introduction، ص 101 ــ 102.
Yazı türü
Naskh