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Al-Biruni<br />

AL-BIRUNI<br />

Al-Biruni, whose full name is Abu’l-Rayhan Muhammad ibn Ahmad Al-Biruni, was<br />

born in 973 C.E. in what is now Khiva, Uzbekistan (formerly part of <strong>the</strong> Soviet<br />

Union). At <strong>the</strong> time of Al-Biruni’s birth, <strong>the</strong> area was a suburb of Kath, <strong>the</strong> capital of<br />

Khwārizm (north and nor<strong>the</strong>ast of ancient Parthia on <strong>the</strong> lower Oxus River in <strong>the</strong><br />

region south of <strong>the</strong> Aral Sea). Known to <strong>the</strong> classical Greeks and Romans as Chorasmia,<br />

Khiva was <strong>the</strong> homeland of a people related to <strong>the</strong> Sogdian Magi who lived to<br />

<strong>the</strong> south and sou<strong>the</strong>ast of Khwārizm on <strong>the</strong> Oxus in <strong>the</strong> eastern reaches of what had<br />

once been <strong>the</strong> Persian Empire. The proximity of Al-Biruni’s general region, which was<br />

bordered on <strong>the</strong> east by <strong>the</strong> Hindu Kush, meant that Indian cultural and scientific traditions<br />

had certainly pervaded <strong>the</strong> region for centuries. Not far away, on <strong>the</strong> western<br />

shore of <strong>the</strong> Caspian Sea, lay <strong>the</strong> remnants of <strong>the</strong> Jewish empire of <strong>the</strong> Khazars, which<br />

had fallen to <strong>the</strong> duke of Kiev four years prior to Al-Biruni’s birth.<br />

Only 23 years after Al-Biruni’s birth, <strong>the</strong> last of <strong>the</strong> Khwārizmshahs, Abū<br />

Abdallah Muhammad, a direct descendant of <strong>the</strong> Khusraws (<strong>the</strong> last dynasty of Persian<br />

kings before Islam), was overthrown by <strong>the</strong> Muslim emir Ma’mun ibn Muhammad.<br />

Thus, Persian-Magian traditions lingered in and around Al-Biruni’s birthplace. Indeed,<br />

despite <strong>the</strong> conversion to Islam, <strong>the</strong> whole region was steeped not only in Zoroastrianism<br />

but also in Manicheanism and astrological doctrines, as is apparent from Al-<br />

Biruni’s Chronologies of Ancient Nations, India and The Book of Instruction in <strong>the</strong> Elements<br />

of <strong>the</strong> Art of Astrology. The latter work, which was translated into English by R. Ramsay<br />

Wright in 1934, will hereafter be referred to by its Arabic short title, <strong>the</strong> Tafhim.<br />

Thus, Al-Biruni came from a highly cultured society known for its ma<strong>the</strong>matical,<br />

scientific, astronomical, and astrological lore. In his various works, Al-Biruni<br />

shows interest in, and familiarity with, <strong>the</strong> cultures and sciences of <strong>the</strong> peoples who<br />

surrounded him. He shows profound and advanced knowledge of scientific subjects.<br />

His mind was precise and he was a close observer of nature. He studied <strong>the</strong> Hindu<br />

numeral system and showed how to determine latitude and longitude accurately.<br />

When he visited India and viewed <strong>the</strong> Indus Valley, Al-Biruni concluded that it was<br />

an ancient sea basin filled with alluvium. In many ways, he was ahead of his time.<br />

Al-Biruni traveled widely, leaving his birthplace for <strong>the</strong> Samanid court of Nuh<br />

ibn Mansur at Ghaznah in eastern Afghanistan, <strong>the</strong> Samanid capital, sometime after<br />

990 C.E. In 998, he went to Gurgan with Qabus ibn Washmgir Shams al-Ma’ali. While<br />

<strong>the</strong>re, Al-Biruni began his Chronology of Ancient Nations, which is dedicated to<br />

Qabus. In this work, completed in <strong>the</strong> year 1000, he shows advanced understanding of<br />

<strong>the</strong> comparative chronologies of <strong>the</strong> surrounding peoples. He seems to have returned<br />

to Khwa¯rizm around age 37 and to have remained <strong>the</strong>re until age 46, when his<br />

patron, Abu’l-‘Abbas Ma’mun ibn Ma’mun, was murdered by rebellious subjects. As a<br />

result of <strong>the</strong> murder, Mahmud of Ghaznah invaded Khwārizm and subjugated <strong>the</strong><br />

country, exiling its ruling class (and Al-Biruni with <strong>the</strong>m) to Ghaznah in <strong>the</strong> following<br />

year. Al-Biruni served Mahmud as court astrologer, but somehow found time<br />

between 1016 and 1029 to travel to India and write his classic India, detailing <strong>the</strong><br />

social, religious, and scientific characteristics of <strong>the</strong> Indians. During this period he<br />

also produced <strong>the</strong> Tafhim, his text<strong>book</strong> on <strong>astrology</strong> and related subjects.<br />

[14] THE ASTROLOGY BOOK

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