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      • At around age 30, Razi suffered a chemical-induced eye injury, so he stopped his alchemy experiments and began to learn medicine, initially at a hospital in Baghdad. He was invited back to Ray by the local governor and soon became the chief physician of Ray’s hospital.
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  2. al-Rāzī (born c. 854, Rayy, Persia [now in Iran]—died 925/935, Rayy) was a celebrated alchemist and Muslim philosopher who is also considered to have been the greatest physician of the Islamic world. One tradition holds that al-Rāzī was already an alchemist before he gained his medical knowledge.

  3. Al-Razi was possibly the first Persian doctor to deliberately write a home medical manual directed at the general public. He dedicated it to the poor, the traveller, and the ordinary citizen who could consult it for treatment of common ailments when a doctor was not available.

  4. Al-Razi (Rhazes) Al-Razi was a doctor who helped to plan the building of a hospital in Baghdad, in modern-day Iraq. This was the first documented general hospital in the world and it opened...

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    Al-Razi was born in Rey, Tehran – the capital of Iran in 853 AD. He has quite a long name, ‘Abu Bakr Muhammad Ibn Zakarya Al-Razi’. After his basic studies, he moved to Baghdad to study medicine. He studied medicine at hospitals and translated the Greek books written on it. This enabled him to write books over two-hundred. With much of the practice...

    Al-Razi’s long services in medicine and optics led him to lay the groundwork for Muslim Scholars to expand these subjects. Avicenna (Ibn Sina) and Al-Biruni followed him and revised most of his works. Among many of his discoveries like chemical instruments to separate one chemical from others, creams for skin use, bottles, and flasks to use in labo...

    He was given the titles father of pediatrics, the doctor of doctors, and the founder of the study of eyes.
    The ruling caliph made him the chief physician and head of Rey hospitals.
    His book Al-Mansuri which was written on surgery became part of the curriculum of western universities.
  5. May 19, 2021 · Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn Zakariyyāʾ al-Rāzī made his fame mostly as a doctor. As his name “al-Rāzī” indicates, he hailed from the Persian city of Rayy, near modern-day Tehran. His biographers report that he ran a hospital there, and another in Baghdad.

  6. Oct 2, 2021 · Life as a Doctor. During the reign of Al-Muktafi, Abbasid caliph from 902 to 908 AD and son of the great military leader Al-Mutadid, Razi, was given the responsibility of building a new hospital. This hospital was to be the largest in the Abbasid Caliphate.

  7. Nov 4, 2021 · Al-Razi began his study of medicine at the age of 30 after his first visit to Baghdad, where he studied under the supervision of the well-known physician Ali Ibn Sahl Rabban al-Tabari. [31][32] However, he soon surpassed all his teachers and became the most respected medic in the world at the time.

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