Homepage - MuslimHeritage.com
Timeline - Discover Muslim Heritage through this interactive timeline Virtual Civilisation - Explore Muslim Heritage through this interactive map of the Muslim World Muslim Scholars - Read short biographies on famous Muslims past and present Features - Regular Feature Articles on Muslim Heritage about us feedback
World Events Calendar



Medicine Hospitals

The Modern Hospital in Medieval Islam

See the link below to the full article if you need to obtain PDF reading softwareThis short article is taken from the full article (by Prof. Aydin Sayili) which is available here as 8 page PDF file

Piety and Philanthropy cannot very well be divorced in medieval Islam, but by observing the Muslim hospitals and other institutions of charity and social welfare it is seen quite clearly that the idea of public assistance had developed beyond what piety alone could have produced. A discriminating and comprehensive consideration of the necessity of public assistance and social welfare, beyond mere religiosity, may be said to have been responsible for the quality and quantity of the hospitals of Islam.

Moreover, the humanitarian features of the Islamic medieval hospital must not be allowed to eclipse its high medical standing per se. The hospital was one of the most developed institutions of medieval Islam and one of the high-water marks of the Muslim civilisation. The hospitals of medieval Islam were hospitals in the modern sense of the word. In them the best available medical knowledge was put to practice. They were specialised institutions. Unlike the Byzantine hospitals, they did not have a mixed function of which the treatment of the sick was only one part.

Of the pre-Islamic hospitals, the temples of healing, represented mainly by the Greek asklepion, were places to which the idea of miraculous cure was far from being alien. The psychological effect and the mystifying atmosphere of these temples must certainly have played a great part as far as the experience of t he patients was concerned. Although psychological factors were not ignored or excluded from the Islamic medieval hospitals, the essential and epoch-making characteristic of these institutions was their insistence on high standards and their strict adherence to scientific medicine.

The king of Egypt Mansur Qalawun (1279-1290), while still a prince, fell ill during an expedition which he was directing in Syria. He was so impressed by the Nuri Hospital of Damascus, founded in 1154 by Nuruddin Mahmud Zangi ibn Aksungur, in which he was treated, that he made a vow to found a similar institution as soon as he ascended the throne. The Famous Mansuri Hospital of Cairo thus resulted from that enthusiasm borne out of close acquaintance with Damascus's Nuri Hospital. This shows that the larger hospitals of medieval Islam were fit to cater to people of highest social standing.

As the hospital reached in Islam a high standard to which it had not attained before, it must have gone through a process of development within the World of Islam itself. The first and earliest six hospitals of Islam may be said to mark an initial process of speedy evolution spanning a period of less than two centuries during which, beginning apparently from a modest status, the Islamic hospital became a stronghold of scientific medicine and adapted itself to Muslim ideologies and economic requisites. It thus acquired a stabilised form, spread widely, and became an integral part of city life.

Image Sources

Image (front). Bayazid II Kulliye, Edirne, Turkey from Islamic Science, Seyyed Hossein Nasr, 1976

Image (top). Mansur Qalawun's mosque from http://weekly.ahram.org.eg

Image (bottom). The treatment of a patient by the surgeon miniature by Sharaf al-Din Sabuncuoglu's book Jarrahiyat al-Haniyya

by: FSTC Limited, Wed 13 December, 2006


Related Articles:
Eye Specialists in Islam by: FSTC Limited
"I invite you... to go back with me 1000 years to consider the fascinating history of the old Arabian ophthalmology which I have studied in the past five years." With these words Julius Hirschberg, addressing the American Medical Association in July 1905, presented the work of Muslim ophtalmologists. Inspired by the pionnering work of the eminent German expert, Dr Ibrahim Shaikh describes in brief in this well informed article the contributions of Al-Ghafiqi, Ibn al-Haytham, Salahuddin Ibn Yusuf, Kalifah of Aleppo, Zarrindast, and Ammar Al-Mosuli. He devotes a special interest to the first description of cataract operation by Al-Mosuli and its subsequent impact on the works of his followers.

The Marrakech Hospital by: FSTC Limited
Built by Al-Mansur who rules Morocco and Spain until his death(1184-1199AD). At its time, the hospital had no equal in the world.

The Al-Nuri Hospital by: FSTC Limited
ln 1154 Nur-al-Din Zangi built a hospital in Damascus. It was called al-Nuri, or al-Zangi.

The Beginning of the Islamic Hospitals by: FSTC Limited
Possibly the earliest hospital in Islam was a mobile dispensary following the Muslim armies, dating from the time of Prophet Mohammed (PBUH). By the 12th century, the hospital had become a very advanced institution.

Arabic Medicine in the Mediterranean by: Prof. Charles Burnett
Professor Charles Burnett describes in a talk he recently gave the phenomena of Arabic Medicine which stretched across the Islamic world and embraced all religions and took knoweldge from wherever it was found.

Central Asian Contributions to the earlier phases of hospital building – Activity in Islam by: FSTC Ltd
Modern hospials finds its origin in Islamic civilisation replacing institutions known for magic and religion with a science based tradition which took knowledge from various places including the Greeks, Egytptains, Indians and others.

Al-Razi the Medical Scholar by: FSTC Ltd
Al-Razi was "a writer of rare and incredible productiveness as well as the greatest clinician of Islam." The great works of Al-Razi are of immense significance in the study of medicine.

The Classification of Mental Diseases in the Ottoman Medical Manuscripts by: Prof. Nil Sari Akdeniz
The Ottomans provided great contributions towards the fields of psychiatry and neurology. Their thoughts and writings delve into many depths and are worthy of recognition by those in the medical sphere.

Educating Ottoman Physicians by: Prof. Nil Sari
Medical doctors in the time of the Ottomans had various routes into professional life depending on their specialty. Some were trained on the model of master and apprentice, others studied courses at madrasas and at hospitals that also served as medical school

The Earliest Paediatric Surgical Atlas: Cerrahiye-i Ilhaniye by: S. N. Cenk Buyukunal and Nil Sari
The author of one of the earliest surgical books was Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu. In 1465, he wrote a surgical book in Turkish which contained not only pictures or miniatures of paediatric surgical procedures, but there were also many important and major new contributions to the surgical literature.

Resources:
FULL ARTICLE - The Modern Hospital in Medieval Islam, by: Prof. Dr. Aydin Sayili
The hospital was one of the most developed institutions of medieval Islam and one of the high-water marks of the Muslim civilisation. The hospitals of medieval Islam were hospitals in the modern sense of the word


Topics

About FSTC
Agriculture
Art & Architecture
Art of Living
Economy
Education
Engineering
Events
Geography
History: General/Old World
Islam and Science
Language & Literature
Law
Manuscripts
Mathematics
Medicine
Military Science
Music Science
Muslim Heritage Interviews
Muslim Scholars
Nature
Philosophy
Science
Social Sciences
The Science of History
Town & City
Transfer of Science

Click here for a full list of
Feature Publications

Click here for a glossary of
terms on Architecture

Click here for Muslim Heritage Videos.
MuslimHeritage.com brings you 1001 Inventions. Buy the book today!
Home | About Us | Help | Contact Us | Site Use and Privacy Policy
MuslimHeritage.com | 1001inventions.com 
© Copyright 2003-2009 FSTC Limited.