Al-Jawhari' | |
---|---|
العباس بن سعيد الجوهري | |
Born |
c. 800 |
Died |
c. 860 possibly Baghdad |
Academic work | |
Era | Islamic Golden Age |
Main interests | Mathematics, astronomy, geometry |
Al-ʿAbbās ibn Saʿid al-Jawharī ( Arabic: العباس بن سعيد الجوهري; c. 800 – c. 860), known as Al-Jawhari, was a geometer who worked at the House of Wisdom in Baghdad and for in a short time in Damascus, where he made astronomical observations. Born (and probably dying) in Baghdad, he was probably of Iranian origin. [1][ page needed] His most important work was his commentary on Euclid's Elements, which contained nearly 50 additional propositions and an attempted mathematical proof of the parallel postulate.[ citation needed]
Described as having superb knowledge of Greek, which was unusual for a Muslim scholar), Al-Jawhari is credited with a translation into Arabic of the Indian polymath Shanaq al-Hindi's Book of Poisons. [2]
Al-Jawhari' | |
---|---|
العباس بن سعيد الجوهري | |
Born |
c. 800 |
Died |
c. 860 possibly Baghdad |
Academic work | |
Era | Islamic Golden Age |
Main interests | Mathematics, astronomy, geometry |
Al-ʿAbbās ibn Saʿid al-Jawharī ( Arabic: العباس بن سعيد الجوهري; c. 800 – c. 860), known as Al-Jawhari, was a geometer who worked at the House of Wisdom in Baghdad and for in a short time in Damascus, where he made astronomical observations. Born (and probably dying) in Baghdad, he was probably of Iranian origin. [1][ page needed] His most important work was his commentary on Euclid's Elements, which contained nearly 50 additional propositions and an attempted mathematical proof of the parallel postulate.[ citation needed]
Described as having superb knowledge of Greek, which was unusual for a Muslim scholar), Al-Jawhari is credited with a translation into Arabic of the Indian polymath Shanaq al-Hindi's Book of Poisons. [2]