Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-mp689 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T06:25:49.368Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Another fragment from the autograph of Ibn al-Tilmīdh's ‘Marginal commentary on Ibn Sīnā's Canon of medicine’1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 December 2009

Extract

The Christian physician Ibn al-Tilmīdh (d. 560/1165) was assisted by eminent doctors and philosophers of Baghdad in transcribing the five books of al-Qānūn fī 'l-ṭibb (Canon of medicine) by Ibn Sīnā, (d. 428/1037). Ibn al-Tilmīdh's own copy remained the definitive edition of this encyclopaedic work for centuries after his death.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1981

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

2 Ibn al-Tilmīdh, I.

3 Browne, , Catalogue, 168Google Scholar.

4 Ibn al-Tilmīdh, I, 216 (and pl. Iv).

5 That Ibn al-Tilmīdh had access to Ibn Sīnā's autograph of al-Qānūn fi 'l-ṭibb is also mentioned by Ibn Jumai' al-Isrā'īlī (d. 594/1198). See Ibn al-Tilmīdh, I, 180.

6 Browne MS P.5 (10), fols. 44b; 101a (on an attached folio).

7 ibid., fol. 75b.

8 ibid., fols. la, 67a.

9 ibid., fol. 95a.

10 ibid., fols. 21b, 41b, 78b, 100b.

11 ibid., fol. la.

12 ibid., fol. 67a.

13 Ibn al-Tilmīdh, I, 184, 187–9.

14 ibid., 192–3.

15 Browne MS P.5 (10), fol. 216b. See plate facing p. 253 here

16 Browne, , Catalogue, 168Google Scholar; Browne MS P.5 (10), fol. 216b.

17 Browne MS P.5 (10), fol. la, 11. 1–7; Rome ed., p. 281,11. 14–18; Būlāq ed., II, 2,1. 16—3, 1. 4; Avicenna, fol. 165r, 11. 32–44. The incomplete passage is omitted from the English translation.

18 For a sketch of the ‘tongue-depressor’ (kābis al-lisān), and accounts of the excision of the uvula and the tonsils, see Albucasis, pp. 300–11.

19 The word al-qālib (form, model or mould) is inappropriate in this context. The surgical instrument used in pulling the uvula and the tonsil downwards is the ‘hook’ (al-ṣinnāra). Ibn Sīnā. mentions al-ṣinnāra in connexion with the excision of the tonsil (see p. 258). Albucasis (pp. 303, 1. 2; 307, I. 10) mentions al-ṣinnāra in operations of the removal of the uvula and the tonsil.

20 Al-ḥiltīt is the resin of Ferula assa-foetida L., see Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 276 (no. 75); Dioscorides, English transl., 328 (no. 94); Hāwī, xx, 86 (no. 107); ibid., xx, 300 (no. 223); Maimonides, 12 (no. 18); Ibn al-Bayṭār, II, 27; Bedevian, 274 (no. 1609). The specific name ‘assa-foetida’ is also written as ‘asa-foetida’ (with options of two separate words, a hyphenated compound or a single word); ‘assa’ (or asa) is the Latinized version of the Persian āzā l;l (mastic), and ‘foetida’ relates to the alliaceous odour of this particular resin.

21 Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 422 (no. 88); Dioscorides, English transl., 642 (no. 123); Paulus Aegineta, III, 360; Ḥāwī, xxi/1, 117 (no. 501); Ibn al-Bayṭār, III, 53.

22 Al-qulqṭār is probably a kind of vitriol, see Diosoorides, Arabic ed., II, 418 (no. 81); Dioscorides, English transl., 639 (no. 115); Maimonides, 68 (no. 140); Ibn al-Bayār (II, 148), like Maimonides, mentions al-qulqaṭār under the general title zāj (vitriol).

23 Rubus fruticosus L., Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 322 (no. 31); Dioscorides, English transl., 432 (no. 37); Paulus Aegineta, III, 68; Ḥāwī, xxi/1, 192 (no. 559); Maimonides, 143 (no. 293); Ibn al-Bayṭār, III, 130; Bedevian, 515 (no. 3003).

24 Myrtus communis L., Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 109 (no. 120); Dioscorides, English transl., 81 (no. 155); Paulus Aegineta, III, 261; Ḥāwī, xx, 14 (no. 23); Maimonides, 9 (no. 10); Ibn al-Bayṭār, I, 27; Bedevian, 408 (no. 2374).

25 Vitis vinifera L., Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 373 (nos. 1, 2); Dioscorides, English transl., 601 (nos. 1, 2); Paulus Aegineta, III, 40; Ḥāwī, xxi/1, 318 (no. 690); Ibn al-Bayṭār, II, 22; ibid., iv, 56; Bedevian, 617 (no. 3614).

26 Rheum Ribes GRONOV., Dioscorides (Arabic ed., II, 238, no. 2; English transl., 233, no. 2) mentions ‘Rha’, ‘Ra’ and ‘Reon’, Rheum Rhaponticum L., but he does not mention ‘Ribes’ (rībās); Paulus Aegineta, III, 316; āwī, xx, 540 (no. 380); Maimonides, 175, no. 350 (Meyerhof mentions that the name rībās is also used among the Arabs for ‘currant’ and ‘currant bush’, Ribes rubrum L., but primarily it means Rheum Ribes GRONOV.); Ibn al-Bayṭār, II, 147; Bedevian, 508 (no. 2960).

27 Solatium nigrum L., Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 336 (no. 62); Dioscorides, English transl., 467 (no. 71); Ḥāwī, xxi/1, 195 (no. 562); Maimonides, 145 (no. 297); Ibn al-Bayṭār, III, 135; Bedevian, 556 (no. 3243).

28 Cydonia vulgaris Pers., Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 111 (no. 124); Dioscorides, English transl., 83 (no. 160); Ḥāwī, xxi/1, 10 (no. 428); Maimonides, 59 (no. 119); Bedevian, 219 (no. 1304).

29 The word al-kūhsārk, which could not be traced in standard reference books, baffled the Latin translator of Avicenna's Canon; he transliterated this word, supposed to be the name of a drug attributed to Diogenes, as ‘alcuezric’. See Avicenna, fol. 239r, 1. 16. For another nonsensical word in al-Qānūn fi 'l-ṭibb, discovered by Ibn al-Tilmīdh himself, and the comments of his successor Ibn Jumai' al-Isrā'īlī, see Ibn al-Tilmīdh, I, 185, 224.

30 Plantago major L., Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 196 (no. 126); Dioscorides, English transl., 165 (no. 153); Paulus Aegineta, in, 52; Ḥāwī, xxi/2, 393 (no. 745); Maimonides, 106 (no. 213); Ibn al-Bayṭār, Iv, 107; Bedevian, 469 (no. 2733).

31 The resin of Popirtus nigra L. is called al-kahrabā', see Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 84 (no. 89); Dioscorides, English transl., 60 (no. 113); Ibn al-Tilmīdh, I, 216 (note 178, and pl. iv); Ibn al-Bayṭār, II, 42; ibid., iv, 88.

32 Dioscorides, Arabic ed., II, 417 (no. 79); Dioscorides, English transl., 638 (no. 113); Paulus Aegineta, III, 83; Ḥāwī, xxi/1, 163 (no. 546); Maimonides, 84 (no. 172); Ibn al-Bayṭār, III, 106.

33 Browne MS P.5 (10), fols. 215b, 1. ll–216b, 1. 7; Rome ed., pp. 384, 1. 37–385, 1. 10; Būlāq ed., n pp. 207, 1. 19–208, 1. 18; Avicenna, fols. 238v, 1. 52–239r, 1. 16.