SCIENCE COULD NOT HAVE BEEN SO ESTABLISHED WITHOUT TREMENDOUS INVENTIONS AND DISCOVERIES BY EARLIER MUSLIM SCIENTISTS.
COMPILED BY: HAMZA MUHAMMAD SHETH
1. The story goes that an Arab named Khalid (some spells name as, Kaldi) was tending his goats in the Kaffa region of southern Ethiopia, when he noticed his animals became livelier after eating a certain berry. He boiled the berries to make the first coffee. Certainly the first record of the drink is of beans exported from Ethiopia to Yemen where Sufis drank it to stay awake all night to pray on special occasions. By the late 15th century it had arrived in Mecca and Turkey from where it made its way to Venice in 1645. It was brought to England in 1650 by a Turk named Pasqua Rosee who opened the first coffee house in Lombard Street in the City of London. The Arabic qahwa became the Turkish kahve then the Italian caffé and then English coffee.
2. The ancient Greeks thought our eyes emitted rays, like a laser, which enabled us to see. The first person to realise that light enters the eye, rather than leaving it, was the 10th-century Muslim mathematician, astronomer and physicist Ibn al-Haitham. He invented the first pin-hole camera after noticing the way light came through a hole in window shutters. The smaller the hole, the better the picture, he worked out, and set up the first Camera Obscura (from the Arab word qamara for a dark or private room). He is also credited with being the first man to shift physics from a philosophical activity to an experimental one.
3.
A form of chess was played
in ancient India but the game was developed into the form we know it today in
Persia. From there it spread westward to Europe - where it was introduced by
the Moors in Spain in the 10th century - and eastward as far as Japan. The word
rook comes from the Persian rukh, which means chariot.
4. Thousand years before the Wright
brothers a Muslim poet, astronomer, musician and engineer named Abbas ibn
Firnas made several attempts to construct a flying machine. In 852 he jumped
from the minaret of the Grand Mosque in Cordoba using a loose cloak stiffened
with wooden struts. He hoped to glide like a bird. He didn't. But the cloak
slowed his fall, creating what is thought to be the first parachute, and
leaving him with only minor injuries. In 875, aged 70, having perfected a
machine of silk and eagles' feathers he tried again, jumping from a mountain.
He flew to a significant height and stayed aloft for ten minutes but crashed on
landing - concluding, correctly, that it was because he had not given his
device a tail so it would stall on landing. Baghdad international airport and a
crater on the Moon are named after him.
5. Washing and bathing are
religious requirements for Muslims, which is perhaps why they perfected the
recipe for soap which we still use today. The ancient Egyptians had soap of a
kind, as did the Romans who used it more as a pomade. But it was the Arabs who
combined vegetable oils with sodium hydroxide and aromatics such as thyme oil.
One of the Crusaders' most striking characteristics, to Arab nostrils, was that
they did not wash. Shampoo was introduced to England by a Muslim who opened
Mahomed's Indian Vapour Baths on Brighton seafront in 1759 and was appointed
Shampooing Surgeon to Kings George IV and William IV.
6.
Distillation, the means of
separating liquids through differences in their boiling points, was invented
around the year 800 by Islam's foremost scientist, Jabir ibn Hayyan, who
transformed alchemy into chemistry, inventing many of the basic processes and
apparatus still in use today - liquefaction, crystallisation, distillation,
purification, oxidisation, evaporation and filtration. As well as discovering
sulphuric and nitric acid, he invented the alembic still, giving the world
intense rosewater and other perfumes and alcoholic spirits (although drinking
them is haram, or forbidden, in Islam). Ibn Hayyan emphasised systematic
experimentation and was the founder of modern chemistry.
7. The crank-shaft is a device
which translates rotary into linear motion and is central to much of the
machinery in the modern world, not least the internal combustion engine. One of
the most important mechanical inventions in the history of humankind, it was
created by an ingenious Muslim engineer called al-Jazari to raise water for
irrigation. His 1206 Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices shows he
also invented or refined the use of valves and pistons, devised some of the
first mechanical clocks driven by water and weights, and was the father of
robotics. Among his 50 other inventions was the combination lock.
8. Quilting is a method of
sewing or tying two layers of cloth with a layer of insulating material in
between. It is not clear whether it was invented in the Muslim world or whether
it was imported there from India or China. But it certainly came to the West
via the Crusaders. They saw it used by Saracen warriors, who wore straw-filled
quilted canvas shirts instead of armour. As well as a form of protection, it
proved an effective guard against the chafing of the Crusaders' metal armour
and was an effective form of insulation - so much so that it became a cottage
industry back home in colder climates such as Britain and Holland.
9. The pointed arch so
characteristic of Europe's Gothic cathedrals was an invention borrowed from
Islamic architecture. It was much stronger than the rounded arch used by the
Romans and Normans, thus allowing the building of bigger, higher, more complex
and grander buildings. Other borrowings from Muslim genius included ribbed
vaulting, rose windows and dome-building techniques. Europe's castles were also
adapted to copy the Islamic world's - with arrow slits, battlements, a barbican
and parapets. Square towers and keeps gave way to more easily defended round
ones. Henry V's castle architect was a Muslim.
10.
Many modern surgical
instruments are of exactly the same design as those devised in the 10th century
by a Muslim surgeon called al-Zahrawi. His scalpels, bone saws, forceps, fine
scissors for eye surgery and many of the 200 instruments he devised are recognisable
to a modern surgeon. It was he who discovered that catgut used for internal
stitches dissolves away naturally (a discovery he made when his monkey ate his
lute strings) and that it can be also used to make medicine capsules. In the
13th century, another Muslim medic named Ibn Nafis described the circulation of
the blood, 300 years before William Harvey discovered it. Muslims doctors also
invented anaesthetics of opium and alcohol mixes and developed hollow needles
to suck cataracts from eyes in a technique still used today.
11. The windmill was invented
in 634 for a Persian caliph and was used to grind corn and draw up water for
irrigation. In the vast deserts of Arabia, when the seasonal streams ran dry,
the only source of power was the wind which blew steadily from one direction
for months. Mills had six or 12 sails covered in fabric or palm leaves. It was
500 years before the first windmill was seen in Europe.
12.
The fountain pen was invented
for the Sultan of Egypt in 953 after he demanded a pen which would not stain
his hands or clothes. It held ink in a reservoir and, as with modern pens, fed
ink to the nib by a combination of gravity and capillary action.
13.
The system of numbering in
use all round the world is probably Indian in origin but the style of the
numerals is Arabic and first appears in print in the work of the Muslim
mathematicians al-Khwarizmi and al-Kindi around 825. Algebra was named after
al-Khwarizmi's book, Al-Jabr wa-al-Muqabilah, much of whose contents are still
in use. The work of Muslim maths scholars was imported into Europe 300 years
later by the Italian mathematician Fibonacci. Algorithms and much of the theory
of trigonometry came from the Muslim world. And Al-Kindi's discovery of
frequency analysis rendered all the codes of the ancient world soluble and
created the basis of modern cryptology.
14.
Ali ibn Nafi, known by his
nickname of Ziryab (Blackbird) came from Iraq to Cordoba in the 9th century and
brought with him the concept of the three-course meal - soup, followed by fish
or meat, then fruit and nuts. He also introduced crystal glasses (which had
been invented after experiments with rock crystal by Abbas ibn Firnas - see No
4).
15.
Carpets were regarded as
part of Paradise by medieval Muslims, thanks to their advanced weaving
techniques, new tinctures from Islamic chemistry and highly developed sense of
pattern and arabesque which were the basis of Islam's non-representational art.
In contrast, Europe's floors were distinctly earthly, not to say earthy, until
Arabian and Persian carpets were introduced. In England, as Erasmus recorded,
floors were "covered in rushes, occasionally renewed, but so imperfectly
that the bottom layer is left undisturbed, sometimes for 20 years, harbouring
expectoration, vomiting, the leakage of dogs and men, ale droppings, scraps of
fish, and other abominations not fit to be mentioned". Carpets,
unsurprisingly, caught on quickly.
16.
By the 9th century, many
Muslim scholars took it for granted that the Earth was a sphere. The proof,
said astronomer Ibn Hazm, "is that the Sun is always vertical to a
particular spot on Earth". It was 500 years before that realisation dawned
on Galileo. The calculations of Muslim astronomers were so accurate that in the
9th century they reckoned the Earth's circumference to be 40,253.4km - less
than 200km out. The scholar al-Idrisi took a globe depicting the world to the
court of King Roger of Sicily in 1139.
17.
Though the Chinese invented
saltpetre gunpowder, and used it in their fireworks, it was the Arabs who
worked out that it could be purified using potassium nitrate for military use.
Muslim incendiary devices terrified the Crusaders. By the 15th century they had
invented both a rocket, which they called a "self-moving and combusting
egg", and a torpedo - a self-propelled pear-shaped bomb with a spear at
the front which impaled itself in enemy ships and then blew up.