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Greatest Botanist
and Pharmacist of the Middle Ages:
IBN AL-BAITAR

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Ibn Al-Baitar full name (Abu
Muhammad Abdallah Ibn Ahmad Ibn al-Baitar Dhiya al-Din al-Malaqi) was one of the
greatest scientists of Muslim Spain and was the greatest botanist and pharmacist
of the Middle Ages. He was born in the Spanish city of Malaqa (Malaga) towards
the end of the 12th century. He learned botany from Abu al-Abbas al-Nabati, a
learned botanist, with whom he started collecting plants in and around Spain. In
1219 he left Spain on a plant-collecting expedition and travelled along the
northern coast of
Africa as far as Asia Minor.
The exact modes of his travel (whether by land or sea) are not known, but the
major stations he visited include Bugia, Qastantunia (Constantinople),
Tunis, Tripoli, Barqa and Adalia. After 1224 he entered the service of al-Kamil,
the Egyptian Governor, and was appointed chief herbalist. In 1227 al-Kamil
extended his domination to Damascus, and Ibn al-Baitar accompanied him there
which provided him an opportunity to collect plants in Syria His researches on
plants extended over a vast area: including Arabia
and Palestine,
which he either visited or managed to collect plants from stations located
there. He died in Damascus in 1248.
Ibn Baitar's major
contribution, Kitab al-Jami fi al-Adwiya al- Mufrada, is one of the
greatest botanical compilations dealing with medicinal plants in Arabic. It
enjoyed a high status among botanists up to the 16th century and is a systematic
work that embodies earlier works, with due criticism, and adds a great part of
original contribution. The encyclopedia comprises some 1,400 different items,
largely medicinal plants and vegetables, of which about 200 plants were not
known earlier. The book refers to the work of some 150 authors mostly Arabic,
and it also quotes about 20 early Greek scientists. It was translated into Latin
and published in 1758.
His second monumental
treatise Kitab al-Mlughni fi al-Adwiya al-Mufrada is an encyclopedia of
medicine. The drugs are listed in accordance with their therapeutical value.
Thus, its 20 different chapters deal with the plants bearing significance to
diseases of head, ear, eye, etc. On surgical issues he has frequently quoted the
famous Muslim surgeon,
Abul Qasim Zahrawi. Besides Arabic, Baitar has given Greek and Latin names
of the plants, thus facilitating transfer of knowledge.
Ibn Baitar's contributions
are characterized by observation, analysis and classification and have exerted a
profound influence on Eastern as well as Western botany and medicine. Though the
Jami was translated/published late in the western languages as mentioned
above, yet many scientists had earlier studied various parts of the book and
made several references to it.
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