| Themes > Science > Chemistry > About Chemistry Generalities > Alchemy in Islamic Times > Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi (866-925) |
After the death of Jabir, nearly a century elapsed before Islam produced a worthy successor. History records a few alchemists in the interval, but it is only with the Persian chemist and physician Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Zakariyya al-Razi (known to the West as Rhazes) that Jabir's great example is successfully followed. According to one of his biographers, Razi was born in A.D. 866 at Ray, an ancient town on the southern slopes of the Elburz Range that skirts the south of the Caspian Sea. In his early youth he devoted himself to the study of music, literature, philosophy, manichaeism, magic and alchemy. After his first visit to Baghdad, when he was at least 30 years of age, that he seriously took up the study of medicine under the well-known doctor Ali ibn Sahl (a Jewish convert to Islam, belonging to the famous medical school of Tabaristan or Hyrcania). Razi showed such skill in the subject that he quickly surpassed his master, and wrote no fewer than a hundred medical books. He also composed 33 treatises on natural science (exclusive of alchemy), on mathematics and astronomy, and more than 45 on philosophy, logic and theology. On alchemy, in addition to his Compendium of Tweltne Treatises and Book of Secrets, he wrote about a dozen other books, two of which were refutations of works by other authors in which the possibility of alchemy had been attacked. As to the man himself, one of the inhabitants of Ray who recollected Razi described him as a man with a large square head. He used to take his seat in the lecture room, with his own pupils next him, and the pupils of these men behind them, and, behind these again, other pupils. Whenever any one came with a question, he used first to ask the back row. If they could answer, he went away; but, if not, he used to pass on to the others, and they, in their turn, if they could give a correct answer, tried to satisfy him; otherwise Razi would speak on the subject himself. He was a liberal and generous man, and so compassionate to the poor and sick that he used to distribute alms to them freely and even nurse them himself. He was always reading or copying, and "I never visited him" (said the narrator) "without finding him at work on either a rough or a fair copy". His eyes were always watering 'on account of his excessive consumption of beans', and he became blind towards the end of his life. He died in his native town on 26 October, A.D, 925, at the age of 60 years and 2 months. Razi is of exceptional importance in the history of chemistry, since in his books we find for the first time a systematic classification of carefully observed and verified facts regarding chemical substances, reactions and apparatus, described in language almost entirely free from mysticism and ambiguity. Razi's scheme of classification of the substances used in chemistry shows such a sound, it is the first time that we find such a systematic classification. The list of these products as mentioned in Sirr al-asrar book is as follows: A. The earthly substances (al-'aqaqtr al-turabiyya) Mineral substances 1. The SPIRITS (al-arwah) 2. The BODIES (al-ajsad) 3. The STONES (al-ahjar) 4. The VITRIOLS (al-zajat) 5. BORAX (al-bawariq) 6. The SALTS (al-amlah) B. Vegetable substances C. Animal substances To these 'natural substances' we need to
add a certain number of artificially obtained substances; al-Razl mentions
litharge, lead oxide, verdigris, copper oxide, zinc oxide, cinnabar,
caustic soda, a solution of polysulphur of calcium and other alloys.
Blacksmith's hearth Bellows Crucible Descensory Ladle Tongs Shears Hammer or Pestle File Semi-cylindrical iron mouldThe second class included:
Crucible Flasks Alembic Phials Receiving flask Cars Aludel Cauldron Beakers Sand-bath Glass cups Water-bath Shallow iron pan Large oven Sieve Hair-cloth Heating-lamps Filter of linen Cylindrical stove Potter's Kiln Chafing-dish Mortar Flat stone mortar Stone roller Round mold Glass funnelIt will be observed that the list was comprehensive, but Razi completes the subject by giving details of making composite pieces of apparatus, and in general provides the same kind of information as is to be found nowadays in manuals of laboratory arts. Like Jabir, Razi was a firm believer in the possibility of transmutation, and Stapleton describes his scheme of procedure approximately as follows: The first stage: consisted in the
cleansing and purification of the substances employed, by means of
distillation, calcination, amalgamation, sublimation and other processes.
Having freed the crude materials from their impurities, Later Arab Alchemists No account of chemistry in Islam would be
even approximately complete which omitted to mention four of Arab
Alchemists: Abu'l-Qasim of Iraq, Aidamir al-Jildaki, Al-Tughra‘i and Al-Majriti. Aidamir al-Jildaki (?-1342) Who also lived for part of his life at Cairo, is of importance chiefly on account of his extensive and deep knowledge of Muslim chemical literature. He apparently spent the major portion of his existence in collecting and explaining all the books upon alchemy that he could discover, and labours are now beginning to receive their reward; for writings form an indispensable source of a great deal of our knowledge of chemistry and chemists in Islam. In a few instances it is possible to observe that he must have carried out experimental work himself, but for the most part his books are commentaries upon the works of earlier writers. Thus his great End of the Search is a commentary upon Abu'l-Qasim's book Knowledge acquired concerning the Cultivation of Gold, and although his explanations are not seldom more obscure than the passages they are designed to illuminate, he had the admirable habit of making innumerable and lengthy quotations from Khalid, Jabir, Razi and many other authors, and his books are thus a rich storehouse of information upon Muslim chemistry. It is therefore necessary to inquire into the question whether his quotations and historical facts are authentic, and whether his reliability is to be accepted or doubted. Fortunately, it often happens that a book from which he quotes is extant, and his quotations in such cases can of course be checked. A test conducted on these lines has shown that Jildaki was conscientious and although he does not always come through unscathed, his general trustworthiness can be safely assumed. He thus deserves the warmest thanks of all who are interested in the history of chemistry. Al-Tughra’i (1063-1120) This alchemist, who was a civil servant
under the Seljuks Malik-shah and Muhammad, has great importance as a poet
and a writer. His Lamiyyat al'ajam is very famous. He was executed
in 1121. Al-Majriti ( -1007) In Andalusia, under the Caliphat of al-Hakam
II (961-76) flourished scholars in all the domains, including alchemy. One
of these was Maslama b. Ahmad, from Cordoba, better known under the name
al-Majriti because he lived for a long time in Madrid. He assimilated
Muslim sciences in the Arab Orient where he seems to have had close
contacts with the originators of the famous Epistles of Ikhwan al-Safa'.
He brought to Spain a new edition of this encyclopaedia. He is known in
particular for his astronomical work: a revision of the Persian
astronomical tables in Arabic chronology, a commentary on the Planispherium
of Ptolemy and a treatise on the astrolabe. The last two were
translated quite early into Latin and were very successful . |
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