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Engineering Windmills

Introduction of Wind Power

During the reign of Caliph Ummar (634-44) began the use of wind as a source of power in Islam. A Persian came to the Caliph and said he could build a mill operated by wind, so the Caliph ordered him to have one built. Wind-power became widely used in Islam to run mill stones for grinding corn, and also to draw up water for irrigation. Descriptions and drawings of Islamic windmills exist in a large abundance.

`A millstone is attached to the end of a wooden cylinder, half a metre wide, and 3.5 to 4 metres high, standing vertically in a tower open on the north east side to catch the wind blowing from this direction. The cylinder has sails made of bundles of ush or palm leaves (which reminds of the modern European windmill), attached to the shaft of the axle. The wind, blowing into the tower, exerts strong pressure on the sails, so turning the shaft and millstone.'

The windmills were erected on substructures built for the purpose, or on the tower of castles or on hilltops. Early windmills for grinding corn were, indeed, two storey buildings; in the upper storey were placed the millstones, and in the lower one, a wheel driven by the sails-six or twelve in number and covered with fabric-which turned the upper millstone. The walls of the lower chamber were pierced by four vents with the narrower end towards the interior, like the loopholes of a fortress so as to direct the wind on to the sails, and increase its speed.

In Europe, the oldest text in relation to windmills is a French act of 1105 granting a religious community the right to establish one of these apparatuses, called molendinam ad ventum (moulin a vent in French: windmill in English).

by: FSTC Limited, Fri 10 January, 2003


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The following short survey presents a rapid overview on the life, work and achievements of Al-Jazari, the most famous mechanical engineer of his time, some 1000 years ago. Al-Jazari brought Islamic technology to a culminant point. The author provides also web links and data related to the work achieved by himself and FSTC on Islamic technology, in general, and on Al-Jazari's ground breaking work, in particular.

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Professor Mohamed Mansour

During the period of Islamic-Arabic extraordinary activity in Science and Technology (9th-13th century), there are some recorded contributions to the area of Automatic Control mainly in the development of water clocks using float valve regulators, different level controls using float valves or combination of syphons and the development of On-Off control. In this short survey, Professor Dr Mohamed Mansour, former Professor of Control Engineering At ETH Zürich surveys the subject by investigating the words of Banu Musa, Al-Muradi, Ridhwan al-Sa'ati and Al-Jazari.

References:
Selection from the Annals by: Al-Tabari
Al-Tabari: Selection from the Annals (edit. de Goeje, Leiden, 1902, p. 1, in R.J. Forbes: Studies in Ancient technology; op cit, p. 116.

History of mankind by: J. W. G. Wiet et al
J. W. G. Wiet et al: History of mankind; Vol III:The Great Medieval Civilisations. Part Two: section two; Part three; Translated from the French.; p.312.

The Great by: G. Wiet et al
Khanikoff cited in G. Wiet et al: The Great; op cit; p. 312.

Islamic Engineering by: D.R. Hill
D.R. Hill: Islamic, op cit, pp 114-6; Hill: Engineering, op cit, p 784.

A Short History of Technology by: T.K Derry and T.I Williams
T.K Derry and T.I Williams: A Short History of Technology; Oxford Clarendon Press, 1960. p. 254.

Islamic Science and Engineering by: D.R. Hill
D.R. Hill: Islamic Science and Engineering; Edimburgh University Press. 1993;pp 114-6.

Magasin Pittoresque by: Publication
Cited in Magasin Pittoresque, t. XX, 1852, p. 50. In Baron Carra de Vaux: Les penseurs de l’Islam; Geuthner; Paris; 1921. p. 190.


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