Fakhr al-Din al-Akhlati: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
added Category:13th-century Kurdish people using HotCat |
|||
Line 36: | Line 36: | ||
[[Category:Astronomers of the medieval Islamic world]] |
[[Category:Astronomers of the medieval Islamic world]] |
||
[[Category:10th-century people from the Abbasid Caliphate]] |
|||
[[Category:Kurdish astronomers]] |
[[Category:Kurdish astronomers]] |
||
[[Category:13th-century Kurdish people]] |
[[Category:13th-century Kurdish people]] |
Revision as of 16:21, 10 July 2023
Fakhr al-Din al-Akhlati | |
---|---|
فخر الدين الأخلاتي | |
Born | fl. c. 1260 |
Academic work | |
Era | Islamic Golden Age |
Main interests | Astronomy |
Fakhr al-Din al-Akhlati (Kurdish: Fexredînê Exlatî, Fakhr al-Din al-Kurdi al-Akhlati; Template:Lang-ar; flourished c. 1260), was a Kurdish and Islamic astronomer from Anatolia, who worked at the Maragha observatory.[1][2] He was one of the first elites that the Persian polymath Nasir al-Din al-Tusi recruited to work in there. Al-Akhlati's life was in a period contemporaneous with the fall of Baghdad at the hands of the Mongols in 1258.[3]
References
- ^ Micheau 1996, p. 1003.
- ^ Adak, Abdurrahman (2022-09-18). Destpêka Edebiyata Kurdî ya Klasîk (in Kurdish). Pak Ajans Yayincilik Turizm Ve Diş Ticaret Limited şirketi. ISBN 978-605-5053-04-8.
- ^ Astronomy and Astrology in the Islamic World, P72. PDF document
Sources
- Micheau, François (1996). "The Scientific Institutions in the Medieval Near East". In Rashed, Roshdi (ed.). Encyclopedia of the History of Arabic Science: Technology, Alchemy and Life Sciences. Vol. 3. Routledge. ISBN 978-04151-2-412-6.
Further reading
- Blake, Stephen P. (2016). Astronomy and Astrology in the Islamic World. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-07486-4-911-2.