- Abul-Hasan
Kūshyār ibn Labbān ibn
Bashahri Daylami (971–1029), also
known as
Kūshyār Daylami (Persian: کوشیار دیلمی), was an
Iranian mathematician, geographer...
- الهندي [kitāb fī isti'māl al-'adād al-hindī])
around 830.
Persian scientist Kushyar Gilani who
wrote Kitab fi usul
hisab al-hind (Principles of
Hindu Reckoning)...
-
mathematics book
written by the 10th- and 11th-century
Persian mathematician Kushyar ibn Labban. It is the second-oldest book
extant in
Arabic about Hindu arithmetic...
-
Malek Deylami, 16th
century scrivener and
calligrapher Kushyar Daylami, (971–1029; a.k.a.
Kūshyār Daylami),
Persian astronomer This
disambiguation page...
- Abu-Mahmud al-Khujandi (d. 1000) Al-Majriti (d. 1007) Ibn
Yunus (d. 1009)
Kushyar ibn
Labban (d. 1029) Abu Nasr
Mansur (d. 1036) Abu l-Hasan 'Ali (d. 1037)...
-
establishing sines") is known. Once
attributed to the
Iranian astronomer Kushyar Gilani by the
German orientalist Carl Brockelmann, it is a
fragment of al-Battānī's...
- (Algazel, 1058–1111),
philosopher Gilani,
Hakim (?–1609),
royal physician Kushyar Gilani (971–1029), mathematician, geographer,
astronomer Zayn al-Din Gorgani...
-
Kushyar ibn
Labban division,
identical to Sunzi...
-
Baghdad at the time and
others such as Abu Nasr Mansur, Abu-Mahmud Khojandi,
Kushyar Gilani and al-Biruni. In Baghdad, he
received patronage from
members of...
- date) Ibn al-Kattani,
Moorish astrologer, poet and
physician (b. 951)
Kushyar Gilani,
Persian mathematician and
geographer (b. 971) Lu Zongdao, Chinese...