Islam and the Arab World: Faith, People, CultureBernard Lewis In this book thirteen eminent authorities provide a long-overdue and highly rewarding survey of Islamic culture and history, from the days of the Prophet Muhammad to modern times. The names of the contributors and their academic affiliations appear on the back of this book jacket. Their specific subjects cover: the faith of Islam and the people who embraced it; Islamic art and architecture; the growth and culture of urban Islam; the mystic path of the Sufi tradition; Islamic literature; Islamic music--its philosophy theory, and practice; Islamic contributions to the development of science; strategy, tactics, and weapons in Islamic warfare; the golden age of Cordoba and Granada; the flowering of Iranian civilization; the rise and fall of Turkish domination; Muslim India; problems and prospects of the 19th and 20th centuries. The comprehensive text is supplemented with close to 500 illustrations, 160 of them in color. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 7
Page 187
... al- Hasib made observations of solar and lunar eclipses and of planetary position at Baghdad , Samarra and Damascus . Ibn ... Haytham , the mathe- matician from Iraq who lived in Cairo at the time of the Fatimid Caliph al - Hakim ( d . 412 ...
... al- Hasib made observations of solar and lunar eclipses and of planetary position at Baghdad , Samarra and Damascus . Ibn ... Haytham , the mathe- matician from Iraq who lived in Cairo at the time of the Fatimid Caliph al - Hakim ( d . 412 ...
Page 188
... Ibn al - Haytham insisted that Ptolemy's constructions must be declared false and that new constructions must be found . His criticisms , and those of at - Tūsi and his collaborators at Marāgha , are an indication of the pro- found ...
... Ibn al - Haytham insisted that Ptolemy's constructions must be declared false and that new constructions must be found . His criticisms , and those of at - Tūsi and his collaborators at Marāgha , are an indication of the pro- found ...
Page 189
... Ibn al - Haytham's Optics , written in Egypt in the first half of the V11th century , represented a theory of vision that went beyond Galen , Euclid and Ptolemy . This diagram of the two eyes seen from above , showing the principal ...
... Ibn al - Haytham's Optics , written in Egypt in the first half of the V11th century , represented a theory of vision that went beyond Galen , Euclid and Ptolemy . This diagram of the two eyes seen from above , showing the principal ...
Common terms and phrases
11/8th century Abbasid Abd ar-Rahman Abd ar-Rahman III Abū ad-Din administrative Akbar al-Andalus al-Ma'mun Anatolia Arabic army astronomers Baghdad became Byzantine Cairo caliphate Central Asia centre Christian conquest Constantinople Cordoba culture decoration Delhi dome dynasty early East Egypt élite Europe European Fatimid frontier Greek Ibn al-Haytham India Iran Iranian Isfahan Islamic world IV/10th century Janissaries king land language later literary literature Mamluk Mamlūks manuscript medieval Mehmed Mehmed II ment military Mongols mosque Mughul Muhammad Muslim Muslim world muwashshah mystical origin Ottoman empire palace period Persian poems poet poetry political Prophet prose Qur'an reign religion religious rule rulers Safavids Sāsānid Seljuq Shah shaykh Shi'i slaves Spain Sufi Sufism Sufiyya Sulayman Sultan Syria tion tomb tradition translation treatise Turkish Turks Umayyad VII/13th century vizier West Western x/16th century است الله ان او با باشد به دو على که لا ما