Thursday, June 7, 2007

Medical History


The Book of Water (Kitab Al-Ma'a)
Kitab Al-Ma'a (The Book of Water) appears to be a strange title for the first known Encyclopedia of Medicine arranged according to the alphabet.
It was recently discovered in Algeria and published in Oman.
The author's apparent reason for naming the book as Kitab Al-Ma'a was because the word Al-Ma'a (the water) appears first in the book.
The author was Abu Mohammed Abdellah Ibn Mohammed Al-Azdi, known as Ibno Al-Thahabi, (died 1033 AD, 466 AH) in Valencia, Muslim Spain.
He was actually born in the city of Suhar, Oman. He moved into Basra then to Persia where he studied under Al-Biruni and Ibn Sina. Later he migrated to Bait Al-Maqdis (Jerusalem) and finally settled in Valencia.
The manuscript contains about nine hundred pages. Under each letter of the alphabet, there are names of an illness, a medicine, a physiological process or a treatment This is the first known alphabetical classification of medical terms. In this encyclopedia, Ibn Al-Thahabi not only lists the names but adds numerous original ideas about the function of the human organs. Indeed, he explains an original idea of how the vision takes place. He described how seeing is a process of an image which goes through the pupil of the eye and strikes the vision nerves. The brain, then, unifies the two images into one and stores it in its memory bank. Such explanation resembles the vision theory of Ibn Al-Haitham who died in 1040, just 33 years before the death of Ibn Al-Thahabi. However, it is not certain whether they met or were aware of each other's work.
The book contains treatment, usually herbal, of a vast number of ailments and diseases. It also contains a course for the treatment psychological symptoms. The main thesis of his medication is that cure must start from controlled food and exercise and if it persists then use specific individual medicines if it still persists then use medical compounds.
The manuscript has recently been edited by Dr. Hadi Hamoudi and published by the Ministry of National Heritage and Culture, Oman, 1996.
by: FSTC Limited, Fri 17 January, 2003

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