Archives Islamic History

Avicenna - Master Healer (part 2): Avicenna

30 min · Gisteren
aflevering Avicenna - Master Healer (part 2): Avicenna artwork

Beschrijving

Ibn Sina, known in the West as Avicenna, was the most important physician and one of the most important philosophers of the medieval world. This is the second part of his story, and it covers the years when a teenage prodigy in Bukhara became famous enough to be summoned to the bedside of a dying king, and then lived to watch the entire civilization that made him collapse around him. The episode opens in the sickroom of the Samanid ruler Nuh ibn Mansur, whose own court physicians have run out of answers. In desperation they send for a boy not yet twenty. Ibn Sina cures the king, and when he is offered any reward he wants, he does not ask for gold or a title. He asks for permission to read in the royal library of Bukhara, one of the richest collections of books on earth. What he finds inside, and what happens to it soon after, becomes the heart of the episode. From there the story turns. In the year 999 the Turkic Qarakhanids capture Bukhara and the century-old Samanid dynasty falls apart. Around the same time, Ibn Sina's father dies. Barely past twenty, he loses his kingdom, his security, and his family in the space of a year, and rides west into Khwarazm to begin a life of wandering that would never really end. This is the chapter that explains why one of history's greatest minds spent the rest of his life moving from city to city, and what he carried with him that no fire and no army could ever take. The episode draws on Ibn Sina's own autobiography, dictated late in his life to his student Abu Ubayd al-Juzjani, along with the classical biographers Ibn Abi Usaybi'a and al-Qifti, and modern Islamic history work including Lost Islamic History by Firas Alkhateeb. It is told in a calm, immersive, Dan Carlin style narrative built around the people, the places, and the words they left behind. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

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aflevering Avicenna - Master Healer (part 2): Avicenna artwork

Avicenna - Master Healer (part 2): Avicenna

Ibn Sina, known in the West as Avicenna, was the most important physician and one of the most important philosophers of the medieval world. This is the second part of his story, and it covers the years when a teenage prodigy in Bukhara became famous enough to be summoned to the bedside of a dying king, and then lived to watch the entire civilization that made him collapse around him. The episode opens in the sickroom of the Samanid ruler Nuh ibn Mansur, whose own court physicians have run out of answers. In desperation they send for a boy not yet twenty. Ibn Sina cures the king, and when he is offered any reward he wants, he does not ask for gold or a title. He asks for permission to read in the royal library of Bukhara, one of the richest collections of books on earth. What he finds inside, and what happens to it soon after, becomes the heart of the episode. From there the story turns. In the year 999 the Turkic Qarakhanids capture Bukhara and the century-old Samanid dynasty falls apart. Around the same time, Ibn Sina's father dies. Barely past twenty, he loses his kingdom, his security, and his family in the space of a year, and rides west into Khwarazm to begin a life of wandering that would never really end. This is the chapter that explains why one of history's greatest minds spent the rest of his life moving from city to city, and what he carried with him that no fire and no army could ever take. The episode draws on Ibn Sina's own autobiography, dictated late in his life to his student Abu Ubayd al-Juzjani, along with the classical biographers Ibn Abi Usaybi'a and al-Qifti, and modern Islamic history work including Lost Islamic History by Firas Alkhateeb. It is told in a calm, immersive, Dan Carlin style narrative built around the people, the places, and the words they left behind. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

Gisteren30 min
aflevering Avicenna - Master Healer (part 1): Avicenna artwork

Avicenna - Master Healer (part 1): Avicenna

Ibn Sina, known in the Latin West as Avicenna and in the Islamic East as al-Shaykh al-Ra'is, the Preeminent Master, was one of the greatest physicians and philosophers in human history. This first episode of our deep dive into his life follows the child before the legend: a boy born around 980 near Bukhara, the dazzling capital of the Samanid dynasty and one of the brightest cities of the Islamic Golden Age. We trace his astonishing youth as he tells it in his own autobiography, the one true window we have into these years, dictated late in life to his devoted student al-Juzjani. By ten he had memorized the entire Quran and much of Arabic literature. His father brought in a traveling scholar, al-Natili, to teach him logic, geometry, and astronomy, and within months the boy had outgrown his teacher and begun teaching himself. He turned to medicine at sixteen and found it so easy that established doctors came to study under him. And then he hit a wall. One book, Aristotle's Metaphysics, defeated the mind that nothing could stop. He read it forty times, memorized it, and still could not grasp what it meant, until a chance moment in the booksellers' quarter of Bukhara and a cheap secondhand commentary by the great philosopher al-Farabi, the man they called the Second Teacher, unlocked everything in a single night. What he did the next morning tells you as much about him as any of his genius. This is a story about the limits of raw talent, the quiet power of humility, and a whole civilization that decided knowledge was worth preserving. It is also the calm before the storm: even as this boy read by lamplight, the Samanid world that made him was beginning to fall apart. Sources include Ibn Sina's autobiography in the standard critical edition and translation by William E. Gohlman, the scholarship of Dimitri Gutas and Amos Bertolacci, the classical biographical tradition preserved by Ibn Abi Usaybia and al-Qifti, and modern surveys from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Encyclopaedia Iranica. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

21 jun 202630 min
aflevering The Great Mosque Builders (part 4): The Shah Mosque of Isfahan artwork

The Great Mosque Builders (part 4): The Shah Mosque of Isfahan

Shah Abbas the Great was the ruler who pulled the Safavid empire back from collapse, reorganized its armies, and around 1598 moved his capital to Isfahan, where he laid out Naqsh-e Jahan, the Image of the World, one of the largest public squares ever built. In 1611 he began the mosque meant to crown it. This is the story of how it was made, and of the price of building in a hurry. This is the seventh and final episode of The Great Mosque Builders, the relay that began with the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus in 705 and has crossed a thousand years and half the world. The episode follows the new art of haft-rangi, the seven-color painted tile that let a whole city bloom in turquoise and gold at ten times the old speed. It walks through the famous gentle turn at the entrance, where the architecture quietly redirects the worshipper from the marketplace toward Mecca. And it tells the human heart of the story: the architect who warned Shah Abbas that the foundations had not yet settled, the king who could feel his own clock running out and overruled him, and the way that decision was answered in stone decades later. What makes the Shah Mosque the right place to end is the question the whole series has been circling. The builder gets a few decades. The building is meant to last a thousand years. From the caliph of Damascus to the exile of Cordoba, from the soldier's son of Cairo to the doomed young sultan and the old master of Edirne, every one of these men is gone, and their mosques are still full every Friday. The episode closes by gathering all seven of them together one last time. Sources include the Safavid court chronicle of Iskandar Beg Munshi, the eyewitness accounts of European travelers who crossed continents to see Isfahan, among them Pietro della Valle, Jean Chardin, and Engelbert Kaempfer, and the modern scholarship of Stephen Blake (Half the World), Sussan Babaie (Isfahan and Its Palaces), Sheila Blair and Jonathan Bloom, and Robert Hillenbrand. The shrine of the prophet Yahya (peace be upon him), still honored inside the Umayyad Mosque of Damascus, returns as a thread tying the finale back to where the series began. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

20 jun 202629 min
aflevering The Great Mosque Builders (part 3): The Sultan Hassan Mosque artwork

The Great Mosque Builders (part 3): The Sultan Hassan Mosque

This is the third episode of The Great Mosque Builders, a series on seven monuments and seven builders across roughly a thousand years, each one an answer to the one before. This episode takes the two that sit at the heart of the story, and they make a strange matched pair: two men, two centuries and a continent apart, each trying to outbuild death. The first is Sultan Hasan of Cairo, a Mamluk ruler crowned as a boy, deposed, restored, and forever controlled by the hard men around him. In the years after the Black Death emptied Egypt, he poured the fortunes of the plague dead into the largest mosque the medieval Islamic world had ever seen, a complex so vast it folded four colleges for the four schools of Sunni law around a single courtyard. The chronicler al-Maqrizi recorded what it cost, what fell, and what the people of Cairo believed it meant. Hasan never lived to see it finished, and the golden-domed tomb he built for himself at its heart has stood empty for seven centuries. The second is Mimar Sinan, the chief architect of the Ottoman Empire, who began as a military engineer building bridges on campaign and ended as the greatest builder of his age. For a thousand years, the dome of Hagia Sophia had been the one no Muslim architect could surpass. Past the age of eighty, Sinan set out to answer it at Edirne, raising a vast dome on eight slender pillars over a single hall flooded with light, and then he wrote down, in the autobiography he dictated to Sa'i Mustafa Çelebi, exactly what he believed he had done. The episode draws on the Mamluk chroniclers al-Maqrizi and Ibn Taghribirdi, on Sinan's dictated memoirs, and on modern scholarship including Doris Behrens-Abouseif on Mamluk Cairo, Gulru Necipoglu on the age of Sinan, and Firas Alkhateeb's Lost Islamic History. It carries forward the threads of the earlier episodes: the Damascus of al-Walid, with the shrine of the Prophet Yahya, John the Baptist (peace be upon him), still standing inside it; the Cordoba of the exiled Abd al-Rahman; the brick mosque of Ibn Tulun; and the rival domes of Isfahan. Content Warning: this episode describes mass death during the Black Death and a building collapse that killed hundreds, many of them children. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

19 jun 202630 min
aflevering The Great Mosque Builders (part 2): Mosque of Ibn Tulun artwork

The Great Mosque Builders (part 2): Mosque of Ibn Tulun

In the year 868, a soldier's son named Ahmad ibn Tulun was sent to govern Egypt as a deputy and quietly turned himself into a king. This episode of The Great Mosque Builders follows the mosque he raised on a rocky hill in Cairo, the building tradition says he made from fired brick and carved stucco because he would not strip columns from the churches and temples of others. Its arches were pointed a full century before Europe's cathedrals discovered the idea, its outer courts wrap it in a deliberate silence, and its spiral minaret is a transplanted memory of Samarra, the city of his childhood. When his dynasty fell in 905 and his whole capital was leveled, only the mosque was spared. Eleven centuries later it is the oldest mosque in Cairo still standing in its original form. From Cairo the story travels to Persia, to the Friday Mosque of Isfahan, a building that no one ever finished because no one ever stopped building it. We trace the rivalry of two Seljuk viziers, Nizam al-Mulk and Taj al-Mulk, whose jealousy left the world two of the most studied domes ever raised, standing at opposite ends of one mosque. We follow the great fire of 1121 that burned the hall but spared the domes, and the four iwan courtyard born from the rebuilding that became the template for Persian mosques from Iraq to India. And we end with the most unlikely patrons of all, the Mongol descendants of the men who sacked Baghdad, whose sultan Oljaytu added a stucco prayer niche so finely carved it looks like lace turned to stone. Two buildings, two answers to the same question about what actually outlasts power. The palace and the dynasty pass away. The rival's ambition and the conqueror's sword pass away. What endures, in both Cairo and Isfahan, is the thing that was built not for one man but for God and given away to everyone who would ever walk in to pray. Sources include the classical historian al-Maqrizi and his great topographical history of Cairo, the chronicles of the Seljuk and Ilkhanid periods, Nizam al-Mulk's own Siyasatnama, and modern architectural scholarship on both monuments. Prophet Nuh (peace be upon him) is mentioned in the local legend of the hill on which the Ibn Tulun mosque stands. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

17 jun 202631 min