Jump to content

Qumri

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Abu Mansur al-Hasan ibn Nuh al-Qumri (Persian: ابو منصور حسن بن نوح قمری) (also transliterated as “al-Qamari” and "al-Qumri") (fl. mid-10th century, died between 980 and 990) was a Persian court physician to the Samanid Prince al-Mansur, and was based in the city of Bukhara. Qumri is theorized to be Avicenna’s teacher.[1][2][3][4]

Abu Mansur al-Hasan ibn Nuh al-Qumri
ابو منصور حسن بن نوح قمری
Colophon from MS Arabe 2220, Bibliothèque nationale de France
BornUnknown
Diedc. 980–990
Notable work
  • Ghina Wa Muna ("Book of Wealth and Wishes")
  • al-Tanwir
EraIslamic golden age
Main interests
Medicine

Life

[edit]

Little is known about al-Qumri’s life, however the thirteenth century biographer Ibn Abi Usaibia writes in History of the Physicians:

Abū Mansūr al-Hasan ibn Nūh al-Qamarī was the leading personage of his generation, celebrated as a fine physician who had praiseworthy methods and a thorough and wide knowledge of medical theory. He had, may God bless him, a good hand in treatment and was held in great esteem by the kings of his times. The Shaikh and Imam Shams al-Dīn `Abd al-Hamīd ibn `Isā from Khusroshah told me that the Grand Master Ibn Sīna had met this physician when he was very old. He used to attend his council and lessons and benefited from his medical knowledge. Abū Mansūr al-Hasan ibn Nūh al-Qamarī wrote the following books:

1) Wealth and Fate, a fine compendium in which he summarized all the maladies and their treatments in the most perfect and concise way.

2) A collection of citations from the works of those who practiced medicine, especially al-Rāzī.

3) The Causes of Maladies.[4]

Usaibia’s brief biography suggests that Avicenna would have directly attended lectures from al-Qumri, but upon comparing birth and death dates of the two, it seems that Avicenna may have heavily consulted his works in Bukhara.

Works

[edit]

There are currently three known works attributed to Qumri,[4] and one is presumed to be missing. It is theorized that he may have written more, but if he did these works are lost.[1]

The Ghina Wa Muna, loosely translated as the “Book of Wealth and Wishes” is mentioned in Usaibia's biography. This work has approximately 220 folios and is divided in to three parts; “diseases from head to toe”, “external medicine”, and fevers/pharmacological recipes”.[1] Ghina Was Muna is arranged in a formulaic manner suggesting that this manual would be used as a reference tool while working in the field rather than a theoretical work.[1] Approximately 44 extant copies survive many of them are well preserved suggesting that many of them were library copies, with any working copies too far degraded to survive.[1][3]

Many of the Ghina Wa Muna manuscripts are either not digitized or accessible in online catalogue entries. The chart below is a selection of digitized or accessible manuscripts:

Location Shelfmark Imaging Noted by
National Library of Medicine MS A 11 Yes, partial photographs. Sezgin[3]
Wellcome Library WMS Arabic 238 Yes, full digital n/a
Bibliothèque Nationale Arabe 2220 Yes, scanned microfilm Karmi[1]

The al-Tanwir fi al-Istiliahat al-Tibbiyya (or al-Tanwir is translated as “Book of Illumination Regarding Medical Technical Terminology”) is a short book on medical terms and tools.[5] This book is presumably designed to be a working reference book and is much shorter than the Ghina Wa Muna. There are approximately 14 extant manuscripts,[1] and at least one critical edition.[5] Like the Ghina Wa Muna, the al-Tanwir’s manuscripts are difficult to access online, and unfortunately a similar chart could not be made.

The Causes of Maladies is presumed missing.[4]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g Karmi, Ghada (1978). ""Arabic Medicine in the 10th Century: a Study Based on the Book Ghina wa Mina by Abu Mansur al-Hasan ibn Nuh Al-Qumri"". Proceeding for the First International Symposium of Arabic Science, April 5–12, 1976. II: Papers in European Languages: 326–335. OCLC 7597554.
  2. ^ Hamaraneh, Sami (January 1972). "Development of Arabic Medical Therapy in the Tenth Century". Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences. 27 (1): 65–79. doi:10.1093/jhmas/XXVII.1.65. JSTOR 24622233. PMID 4561552.
  3. ^ a b c Sezgin, Fuat (1970). Geschichte des Arabischen Schrifttums. Vol. III. Leiden: Brill. p. 319.
  4. ^ a b c d Usaibia, Ibn Abi (1971). "History of the Physicians" [Kopf, L]. Retrieved 10 May 2018.
  5. ^ a b Dallal, Ahmad (November 1994). "Reviewed Works: Kitab al-Tanwir fi al-Istilahat al-Tibbiyya by Abu Mansur al- Hasan Nuh al- Qamari and Ghada Hasan al-Karmi". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 26 (4). Cambridge University Press: 701–2. doi:10.1017/s0020743800061237. JSTOR 163815. S2CID 163050618.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Manfred Ullmann, "Die Medizin im Islam", Handbuch der Orientalistik, Abteilung I, Ergänzungsband vi, Abschnitt 1 (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1970), pp. 147 and 236
  • Encyclopedia Islamica