IBN AL-NAFIS
IBN AL-NAFIS
(1213-1288 C.E.)
Ala-al-Din Abu al-Hasan Ali Ibn Abi al-Hazm al-Qarshi al- Damashqi al-Misri
was born in 607 C.E. of Damascus. He was educated at the Medical
College-cum-Hospital founded by Nur al- Din Zangi. In medicine his teacher was
Muhaththab al-Din Abd al- Rahim. Apart from medicine, Ibn al-Nafis learnt
jurisprudence, literature and theology. He thus became a renowned expert on
Shafi'i School of Jurisprudence as well as a reputed physician.
After acquiring his expertise in medicine and jurisprudence, he moved to
Cairo where he was appointed as the Principal at the famous Nasri Hospital. Here
he imparted training to a large number of medical specialists, including Ibn
al-Quff al-Masihi, the famous surgeon. He also served at the Mansuriya School at
Cairo. When he died in 678 C.E. he donated his house, library and clinic to the
Mansuriya Hospital.
His major contribution lies in medicine. His approach comprised writing
detailed commentaries on early works, critically evaluating them and adding his
own original contribution. His major original contribution of great
significance was his discovery of the blood's circulatory system, which was
re-discovered by modern science after a lapse of three centuries. He was the
first to correctly describe the constitution of the lungs and gave a description
of the bronchi and the interaction between the human body's vessels for air and
blood. Also, he elaborated the function of the coronary arteries as feeding the
cardiac muscle.
The most voluminous of his books is Al-Shamil fi al-Tibb, which was
designed to be an encyclopedia comprising 300 volumes, but it could not be
completed due to his death. The manuscript is available at Damascus. His book on
ophthalmology is largely an original contribution and is also extant. However,
his book that became most famous was Mujaz al-Qanun and a number of
commentaries were written on this. His own commentaries include one on
Hippocrates' book. He wrote several volumes on Ibn Sina's Qanun,
that are still extant. Likewise he wrote a commentary on Hunayn Ibn Ishaq's
book. Another famous book embodying his original contribution was on the effects
of diet on health. entitled Kitab al-Mukhtar fi al-Aghdhiya.
Ibn Al-Nafis' works integrated the then existing medical knowledge and
enriched it, thus exerting great influence on the development of medical
science, both in the East and the West. However, only one of his books was
translated into Latin at early stages and, therefore, a part of his work
remained unknown to Europe for a long time.
|