Dovud Antokiy
Dovud ibn Umar Antokiy (arabcha: داؤود الأنطاكي) Qohirada faoliyat ko‘rsatgan ko‘zi ojiz musulmon tabib va farmatsevt edi[1]. U XVI asrda Al-Foahda tug‘ilgan va 1597-yilda Makkada vafot etgan. U Makkaga haj qilishdan oldin Antioxiyadan o‘tgan. Keyin Makkaga borib joylashadi.
O‘rta asrlar islom olamida tibbiyotning gullab-yashnagan davridan so‘ng Dovud Antokiy iroqlik olim Yusuf ibn Ismoil Kutubiy va usmonli tabibi Xodir ibn Ali Hoji Basa bilan birga arab tibbiyot olamidagi uchta buyuk tabibdan biri edi[2].
Asarlari
[tahrir | manbasini tahrirlash]Uning “Tazkir al-Qabb” asari oʻsimlik dori vositalariga bagʻishlangan uch qismli tibbiy kitob boʻlib, 3000 dan ortiq dorivor va xushboʻy oʻsimliklarning tavsiflarini oʻz ichiga oladi[3]. [
Boshqalari
[tahrir | manbasini tahrirlash]Dovud Antokiy “Qimmatbaho Kohl kitobi”ni ham yozgan boʻlib, bu Ibn Sino she’rining izohidir. Shuningdek, u astronomiyaga oid uchta kitob,mantiqqa oid ba’zi kitoblar va tibbiy maslahatlarda hadislarni oʻz ichiga olgan psixiatriyaga oid kitob ham yozgan.
Manbalar
[tahrir | manbasini tahrirlash]- ↑ Impact of science on society Unesco - 1976- Volumes 26 à 27 - Page 145 [Reprinted in Ziauddin Sardar The Touch of Midas: Science, Values, and Environment in Islam and the West 1984 p82] "After the work of Ibn Al-Nafis, Muslim creativity in medicine began to decline. Yet the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries produced three great names in the field: Yet the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries produced three great names in the field: the 'Iraqi Yusuf Ibn Isma'il Al-Kutbi, the Turk, Khadir Ibn 'Ali Hajji Basa, and Daud Al-Antaki (d. 1599)."
- ↑ Nuzhat al-Azhaan Fi Islah al-Abdaan by Dawoud al-Antaki who died ca. AH 1008 (AD 1600). It full title is Tazkirat Ulil Al-Albab wa Al-Jami'a Lil 'Ajab Al-'ujab (Popularly known as Tazkirat Daoud Al-Antaki or Tazkirat. The book was completed by his students, contains 1800 entries, a zail (appendix) was included, and in the margins the book: Al-Nuzha Al-Mubhija fi Tashhiz Al-Azhan wa Ta'dil Al-Amzija by Al-Antaki: Cairo: Matba'at 'Abd Al-Raziq (and many other publishers later) [1] (retrieved on August 5, 2010)
- ↑ M. Lakhdar, La Vie Littéraire au Maroc, 1971, p. 187-190