- (Arabic: ابن أبي أصيبعة; 1203–1270),
commonly referred to as Ibn Abi
Usaibia (also Usaibi'ah, Usaybea, Usaibi`a, Usaybiʿah, etc.), was a
physician from...
- Avicenna's
Autobiography with a
concluding section. The
historian Ibn Abi
Usaibia refers Avicenna and his
close companion Abu
Ubayd lived together the residence...
- but in 1978 a
reference was
found in a 13th-century copy made by Ibn Abi
Usaibia of a work by Ibn Butlan, a
Nestorian Christian physician active in Baghdad...
-
about al-Qumri’s life,
however the
thirteenth century biographer Ibn Abi
Usaibia writes in
History of the Physicians: Abū Mansūr al-Hasan ibn Nūh al-Qamarī...
-
Presocratics to the
quantum physicists : an anthology, p.137 From Ibn Abi
Usaibia's catalog, as
cited in
Smith 2001 91(vol. 1), p. xv. Simon, G (2006), "The...
-
being of
either Persian or
Turkic origin.
Medieval Arab
historian Ibn Abi
Usaibia (died in 1270)—one of al-Farabi's
oldest biographer—mentions in his Uyun...
- Yuwānnīs upon his ordination. It is
claimed by al-Qifṭī and by Ibn Abī
Uṣaibiʿa that he also was a
student of Abū 'l-Ḥasan al-Ḥarrānī, a
Sabian physician...
-
Persian and
Indian sciences,
especially Aristotle. The
physician Ibn Abi
Usaibia (d. 1273),
mentions an-Nadim
thirteen times and
calls him a writer, or...
-
Damascene physician Ibn Abi
Usaibia and they both were
taught by the
founder of a
medical school in Damascus, Al-Dakhwar. Ibn Abi
Usaibia does not
mention Ibn...
- it (the animal)
totally recovered and
lived for a long time." Ibn Abi
Usaibia mentions these other works of Ibn Zuhr: Fi al-Zinah (On Beatification)...