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  1. Use of organic substances in chemistry, sulfur-mercury theory of metals, science of the balance, science of artificial generation. Abū Mūsā Jābir ibn Ḥayyān (Arabic: أَبو موسى جابِر بِن حَيّان, variously called al-Ṣūfī, al-Azdī, al-Kūfī, or al-Ṭūsī), died c. 806−816, is the purported author of a large ...

    • Who Was Jabir Ibn Hayyan?
    • Major Accomplishments of Jabir Ibn Hayyan
    • Facts About Jabir Ibn Hayyan
    • Career in Alchemy and Pharmacy
    • The Jabirian Corpus
    • More Jabir Ibn Hayyan Facts

    In 721 CE, Jabir ibn Hayyan was born in Tus in the Khorasan region (in modern day eastern Iran), according to Baghdadi bibliographer Ibn al-Nadīm (c. 933–995). The region in which Jabir was born was part of the Umayyad Caliphate, the second Islamic caliphate. Most historiographers state that he was born in the Khorasan region before moving to Kufa ...

    The following are eight major accomplishments of Jabir ibn Hayyan: Many of Jabir’s works in chemistry highlighted the importance of having a systematic approach to carrying out experimentation. As a matter of fact, his works contains the oldest known systematic classification of chemical substances. Jabir had tremendous influence on alchemy, turnin...

    Born– Abu Musa Jabir ibn Hayyan Latinized name– Geber Date of birth– c. 721 Place of birth– Tus town, Khorasan region, Persia (modern day Iran) Died– c. 815, Kufah, Iraq Died at age– 94 Father– Hayyan Al Azdi Nationality– Iranian Tutor – Shi’ite Imam Ja ‘far al-Sadiq Most known for– the Jabirian corpus Fields of study– Alchemy, chemistry, astronomy...

    Jabir ibn Hayyan followed in his father’s footstep and started practicing pharmacy after completing his studies. He also received some amount of support from the Caliph’s ministers. Jabir ibn Hayyan is credited with writing “The Book of the Blossom” for Caliph Harun-al Rashid. The book, which was about alchemy, was well received by the Caliph, inst...

    It was estimated that a figure (or figures) with the name Jabir ibn Hayyan wrote a large number of Arabic works. The works came either in short treatises or larger collections in fields such as mathematics, astronomy, astrology, botany, zoology, medicine and a host of other disciplines. The most famous of those collections are The Great Book on Spe...

    According to the historian Paul Kraus, about 3,000 works were attributed to Jabir, making many to doubt the identity of Jabir. Some scholars have also doubted whether Jabir was the one who wrote all those works. The level of disparity found, in terms of the style and the content of those works, make it improbable that they belong to a single writer...

  2. Oct 16, 2007 · By the second part of that century Arabic knowledge of alchemy was already far enough advanced to produce the Corpus Jabirianum—an impressively large body of alchemical works attributed to Jabir ibn Hayyan.

  3. Abū Mūsā Jābir ibn Ḥayyān was a Muslim alchemist known as the father of Arabic chemistry. He systematized a “quantitative” analysis of substances and was the inspiration for Geber, a Latin alchemist who developed an important corpuscular theory of matter.

  4. Jabir ibn Hayyan was one of the candles of the Imam’s (as) school and from its noble figures, who was indeed considered to be one of the founders of the scientific movement in the Islamic world. There were a great number of his intelligent students who authored in different scientific fields.

  5. Jan 6, 2017 · Commonly referred to as the father of modern chemistry, Jabir ibn Hayyan emphasised systematic experimentation; he aimed to free alchemy from superstition and turn it into a science.

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  7. Jabir ibn Hayyan (c. eighth and early ninth centuries) was an Islamic thinker from the early medieval period to whom is ascribed authorship of a large number of alchemical, practical, and philosophical works.

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