This article deals with two specifically Iranian aspects of the works that were used by the Muslim astronomers who had been brought to Beijing by the Mongols in the last third of the 13th century. Two of these works, an astronomical handbook (zīj) compiled in China on the basis of new observations and the popular astrology by Kūshyār ibn Labbān (ca. 1000), were translated into Chinese in 1383. Transliterations of the titles of some other works and of various astronomical instruments were list..
Kushyar ibn Labban was an Iranian astronomer and mathematician who was active around 1000 A.D. His m...
This very detailed and extensively documented article probes the little-know contacts between China ...
As a part of the voluminous work of the universal history Jāmi‘ al-Tavārīḫ (“The Collection of Histo...
The author describes the exchange of astronomical knowledge between the Iranian part of the Islamic ...
During the early Yuan dynasty, in the last third of the 13th century, many Muslim scholars were brou...
During the early Yuan dynasty, in the last third of the 13th century, many Muslim scholars were brou...
The author discusses the Persian origin of the star names Alshain (β Aquilae) and Tarazed (γ Aquilae...
A substantial dissemination and influence of Islamic astronomy was first seen in China during the Mo...
This article presents an edition and translation of a useful chapter of the Jāmi‘ Zīj (ca. AD 1025),...
The author first summarizes the most important results of two earlier publications of his (in Journa...
This two-volume doctoral dissertation contains an edition and translation of the first and last book...
This article gives an update of some of the information in E. S. Kennedy’s “A Survey of Islamic Astr...
L’A. remet en cause l’opinion courante sur la fonction de l’observatoire de Maraghe (1259-60) selon ...
This is an extended version of the Russian bio-bibliographical work on Islamic scholars published in...
These two massive volumes constitute an extended version of what the author had announced and referr...
Kushyar ibn Labban was an Iranian astronomer and mathematician who was active around 1000 A.D. His m...
This very detailed and extensively documented article probes the little-know contacts between China ...
As a part of the voluminous work of the universal history Jāmi‘ al-Tavārīḫ (“The Collection of Histo...
The author describes the exchange of astronomical knowledge between the Iranian part of the Islamic ...
During the early Yuan dynasty, in the last third of the 13th century, many Muslim scholars were brou...
During the early Yuan dynasty, in the last third of the 13th century, many Muslim scholars were brou...
The author discusses the Persian origin of the star names Alshain (β Aquilae) and Tarazed (γ Aquilae...
A substantial dissemination and influence of Islamic astronomy was first seen in China during the Mo...
This article presents an edition and translation of a useful chapter of the Jāmi‘ Zīj (ca. AD 1025),...
The author first summarizes the most important results of two earlier publications of his (in Journa...
This two-volume doctoral dissertation contains an edition and translation of the first and last book...
This article gives an update of some of the information in E. S. Kennedy’s “A Survey of Islamic Astr...
L’A. remet en cause l’opinion courante sur la fonction de l’observatoire de Maraghe (1259-60) selon ...
This is an extended version of the Russian bio-bibliographical work on Islamic scholars published in...
These two massive volumes constitute an extended version of what the author had announced and referr...
Kushyar ibn Labban was an Iranian astronomer and mathematician who was active around 1000 A.D. His m...
This very detailed and extensively documented article probes the little-know contacts between China ...
As a part of the voluminous work of the universal history Jāmi‘ al-Tavārīḫ (“The Collection of Histo...