-
Hunayn ibn
Ishaq al-Ibadi (also
Hunain or Hunein) (Arabic: أبو زيد حنين بن إسحاق العبادي; ʾAbū Zayd Ḥunayn ibn ʾIsḥāq al-ʿIbādī (808–873) was an influential...
- on Ophthalmology,
followed by
Hunain ibn Ishaq,
known in the west as
Johannitius, for his work The ten
treatises of the eye. One of
Hunain ibn Ishaq's...
- Santiago, 1983), with
accompanying Spanish translation. The
Isagoge of
Johannitius,
which Constantine may have
translated (the
attribution is contested)...
-
Arabic physicians, and the
Isagoge ad
Tegni Galeni by
Hunayn ibn
Ishaq (
Johannitius) and his
nephew Hubaysh ibn al-Hasan.
Other medical works he translated...
- (1934). "A Bio-Bibliographical
Study of
Hunayn Ibn Is-Haq Al-Ibadi (
Johannitius) (809–877 AD)".
Bulletin of the
Institute of the
History of Medicine...
- soon surp****ed in this
field by his
famous pupil,
Hunayn ibn
Ishaq (aka
Johannitius), whom some
regard as the
father of Arab medicine. Razi, the physician...
- and
forming like a phylactery. The
first two
represent Hippocrates and
Johannitius, then
Hippocrates and Galen,
three classical authors whose works formed...
-
Occulist (Ali Ibn Isa)
Johannes Antonius Scopoli (Giovanni
Antonio Scopoli)
Johannitius (Hunayn ibn Ishaq)
Iohannes Keplerus (Johannes Kepler) John
Caius (John...
- (Yūḥannā ibn Māsawayh)
Syriac Christian c. 830 – 870 –
Hunayn ibn
Ishaq (
Johannitius) Syriac-speaking
Christian also knew Gr**** and Arabic.
Translator and...