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Medicine Hospitals

The Al-Nuri Hospital

Nur al-Din al-Zangi was the first great leader to first defeat the crusaders, over half a century after they set foot on Islamic land. It was said of him that he was a just, pious and charitable monarch.

ln 1154 Nur-al-Din Zangi built a hospital in Damascus. It was called al-Nuri, or al-Zangi.

The revenues of the hospital according to al-Maqrizi owe to the fact that Nur-al-Din had made prisoner a European king, and had planned to have him executed. But the king paid as his ransom, four forts and 500,000 dinars, and he was put at liberty. Nur-al-Din decided to use this ransom to build the hospital in Damascus that was named after him. Ibn abi Usaybi'ah wrote:

"When Nur-al-Din built the Grand Bimaristan he appointed as the director Abul Majd al-Bahilli. This physician went regularly to the hospital to care for the patients, to examine them and to give the necessary orders to the attendants and servants who worked under his direction. After that this physician went to the citadel to examine the dignitaries and the noblemen that were ill. This task completed he returned to the hospital, sat in the liwan (vestibule hall) richly furnished, and commenced his lectures."

Nur-al-Din furnished and endowed this hospital with many books on medicine that were kept in two great cases in the center of the liwan. The physicians and practitioners assembled before him to discuss medical subjects and to listen to the lectures that Abul Majd gave his pupils. These discussions and lectures lasted three hours.

Khalil ibn-Shahine al-Zahiri told about his visit to Damascus :

"I was accompanied by a distinguished and affable Persian. When he visited the al-Nuri hospital and saw the diets, the utilities and the comforts to be found there, he decided to see for himself, what being a patient was like in that hospital. He pretended illness and was admitted to the hospital. There the medical chief visited him every day and took his pulse and prescribed his diet, consisting of a variety of meats, fat chickens, candies and drinks and fresh fruits. On the third day the doctor told him that such patients were not allowed to stay more than three days, and asked him to leave."

by: FSTC Limited, Fri 20 December, 2002


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Dr. Ibrahim Shaikh

Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi (936-1013 CE), also known in the West as Albucasis, was an Andalusian physician. He is considered as the greatest surgeon in the Islamic medical tradition. His comprehensive medical texts, combining Middle Eastern and Greco-Roman classical teachings, shaped European surgical procedures up until the Renaissance. His greatest contribution to history is Kitab al-Tasrif, a thirty-volume collection of medical practice, of which large portions were translated into Latin and in other European languages.

Urinary Stone Disease in Arabian Medicine by: A M Dajani, F.R.C.S(Glas.)
Urinary stone disease (urolithiasis) was discussed in great detail in Arabian Medicine. Explanations given by Ibn Qurrah, Al Razi, Ibn Sina and Al Zahrawi about the formation and growth of urinary stones do not basically differ from modern concepts.

The Marrakech Hospital by: FSTC Limited
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References:
The Role of the Nestorians and Muslims in the History of Medicine by: A.Whipple
A.Whipple: The Role of the Nestorians and Muslims in the History of Medicine. Microfilm-xerography by University Microfilms International Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.A. 1977,p. 99.

Al-Kitat Wal Athar by: AI-Maqrizi
AI-Maqrizi, Al-Kitat Wal Athar, Vol. V, p. 408. Cited by Issa Bey, hopitaux en Islam; Beyrouth; Dar ar ra’id al’arabi; 1981, p. 191.

UYun al-Anba fi Tabaqat al-Atibba by: Ibn abi Usaybi'ah
Ibn abi Usaybi'ah, UYun al-Anba fi Tabaqat al-Atibba, ed. by August Müller, Konigsberg, 1884. Vol. II. p. 155.

Tableau politique et administratif de la Syrie by: Khalil ibn-Shahine al-Zahiri
Khalil ibn-Shahine al-Zahiri: Tableau politique et administratif de la Syrie, Paris, 1894. Quoted by Issa Bey,op cit, p. 192.


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