Hayyan, Ibn Jabir

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:''"Jabir ibn Hayyan" and "Geber" were also pen names of an anonymous [[14th century]] Spanish alchemist: see [[Pseudo-Geber]].'' ''For the crater, see [[Geber (crater)]].''
 
  
[[Image:Geber.jpg|thumb|Jabir ibn Hayyan]]
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[[Image:Geber.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Jabir ibn Hayyan]]
  
'''Jabir ibn Hayyan''' (fl. eighth and early ninth centuries) is an Islamic thinker from the early medieval period to whom is ascribed authorship of a large number of alchemical, practical and philosophical works. Many of these works were translated and distributed throughout the learning centers of Medieval Europe under latinized form of Jabir's name, ''Geber''.
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'''Jabir ibn Hayyan''' (c. eighth and early ninth centuries) was an [[Islam]]ic thinker from the early [[medieval period]] to whom is ascribed authorship of a large number of [[alchemy|alchemical]], practical, and philosophical works. Many of these works were translated and distributed throughout the learning centers of medieval [[Europe]] under the latinized form of Jabir's name, '''Geber'''. Whether or not he was genuinely the author of all the works attributed to him, his contributions were substantial, laying the foundations of modern [[chemistry]].
  
The two earliest biographical sources that mention Jabir are from the tenth century. The first, ''Notes'' of Abu Suaiman al-Mantiqi al-Sijistani, disputes the authorship of several works ascribed to him, and casts doubt on his very existence. Another work, the ''Katib al-Fihrist'' of Ibn al-Nadim, part biography and part bibliography written around 987, ascribes a long list of works to Jabir and insists that he is a real personage.
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The two earliest biographical sources that mention Jabir are from the tenth century. The first, ''Notes of Abu Suaiman al-Mantiqi al-Sijistani,'' disputes the authorship of several works ascribed to him, and casts doubt on his very existence. Another work, the ''Katib al-Fihrist of Ibn al-Nadim,'' part biography and part bibliography, written around 987, ascribes a long list of works to Jabir and insists that he was a real personage. Ibn al-Nadim links Jabir with his teacher, the sixth shi'ite imam, [[Jafar ibn Muhammad al-Sadiq]], who lived between 700 and 765. Others say his teacher was another Jafar, the Barmecide vizier Jafar ibn Yahya, who was put to death in 803, by the ruler [[Harun al-Rashid]]. Either of these hypotheses lead to the conclusion that Jabir's life straddled the eighth and ninth centuries.
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There can be no doubt that works ascribed to Jabir, particularly under the latinized moniker, ''Geber,'' have had a profound influence on the development of chemical knowledge in the West, including as they do advanced chemical processes such as the manufacture of [[nitric acid|nitric]] and [[sulfuric acid]]s and the introduction of the experimental method. Many of Jabir's works, however, are written in esoteric prose that are hardly decipherable in a scientific context. The authorship of some works, particularly those in Latin with no Arabic originals, are disputed by modern scholars, many of whom claim that the chemical knowledge they display is far ahead of what was known to ninth-century practitioners. Still, there are a minority who make a case for Jabir's authorship of all the works attributed to him.
  
Ibn al-Nadim links Jabir with his teacher, the sixth shiite imam, Jafar ibn Muhammad al-Sadiq, who lived between 700 and 765. Others say his teacher was another Jafar, the Barmecide visier Jafar ibn Yahya, who was put to death in 803 by the ruler Harun al-Rashid. Either of these hypotheses lead to the conclusion that Jabir's life straddled the 8th and 9th Centuries.
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==Biography==
  
There can be no doubt that works ascribed to Jabir, particularly under the latinized moniker, ''Geber'', have had a profound influence on the development of chemical knowledge in the West, including as they do advanced chemical processes such as the manufacture of nitric, hydrochloric and sulfuric acids and the introduction of the experimental method. Many of Jabir's works, however, are written in esoteric prose that are hardly decipherable in a scientific context. The authorship of some works, particularly those in Latin with no Arabic originals, are disputed by modern scholars, many of whom claim that the chemical knowledge they display is far ahead of what was known to 9th Century practitioners. Still, there are a minority who make a case for Jabir's authorship of all the works attributed to him.
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Twentieth century scholar [[E.J. Holmyard]] attempts to piece together a life of Jabir from a variety of early sources and a knowledge of the history of the times. According to Holmyard, Jabir Ibn Hayyan was born in 721 or 722, in the town of Tus, in Khorasan, not far from the city of Meshed in modern [[Iran]]. His father, Hayyan, was of the Al-Azd tribe, originally of south Arabia, some members of which had resettled in Kufa. Hayyan became enmeshed in the political intrigues of his time, and was executed shortly after Jabir's birth.
  
==biography==
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Jabir's family fled to [[Arabia]], where Jabir studied under the scholar Harbi al-Himyari. In later years, he became the disciple of Jafar al-Sadiq, a shi'ite imman connected with the Abbasids, who, under the caliphate of [[Harun al-Rashid]], later assumed power in the region. Because his father had died supporting the Abbasids, Jabir was able to form a close association with the Barmecides, who acted as the caliph's ministers. He was thus able to practice medicine under the protection of the caliphate.
  
Twentieth Century scholar E.J. Holmyard attempts to piece together a life of Jabir from a variety of early sources and a knowledge of the history of the times. According to Holmyard, Jabir Ibn Hayyan was born 721 or 722, in the town of Tus, in Khorasan, not far from the city of Meshed in modern Iran. His father, Hayyan, was of the Al-Azd tribe, originally of south Arabia, some members of which had resettled in Kufa. Hayyan became enmeshed in the political intrigues of his time, and was executed shortly after Jabir's birth.
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In one of his works, Jabir relates that he cured a handmaid belonging to the household of Yahya ibn Khalid, a Barmecide, by administering a specially prepared potion. For the caliph himself, Jabir wrote an alchemical work, ''The Book of the Blossom,'' which included information on experimental techniques. He also is said to have facilitated the acquisition of copies of Greek and Latin authors for translation into Arabic.
  
Jabir's family fled to Arabia, where Jabir studied under the scholar Harbi al-Himyari. In later years, he became the disciple of Jafar al-Sadiq, a shi'ite imman connected with the Abbasids, who, under the Caliphate of Harun al-Rashid, later assumed power in the region. Because his father had died supporting the Abbasids, Jabir was able to form a close association with the Barmecides, who acted as the Caliph's ministers. He was thus able to practice medicine under the protection of the Caliphate.
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Jabir kept a working laboratory in Kufa, the ruins of which were discovered two hundred years after his death.
  
In one of his works, Jabir relates that he cured a handmaid belonging to the household of Yahya ibn Khalid, a Barmecide, by administering a specially prepared potion. For the Caliph himself, Jabir wrote an alchemical work, ''The Book of the Blossom'', which includes information on experimental techniques. He also is said to have facilitated the acquisition of copies of Greek and Latin authors for translation into Arabic.
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In 803, Jafar ibn Yahya was put to death and the Barmecides were banished after earning the disfavor of the Caliphate. Jabir fled to Kufa, where he is said to have lived long enough to persuade the succeeding Caliph, Al-Ma'mun, to nominate a successor of Jabir's choice. According to this tradition, Jabir would have died only after the naming of the successor, Ali al-Rida, in 917.
  
Jabir kept a working laboratory in Kufa, the ruins of which were discovered 200 years after his death.
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==Contributions to chemistry==
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It is useful to differentiate the techniques, processes, and theories associated with the Arabic works ascribed to Jabir, and those of the Latin works under the authorship of ''Geber,'' Jabir's latinized name.
  
In 803, Jafar ibn Yahya was put to death and the Barmecides were banished after earning the disfavor of the Caliphate. Jabir fled to Kufa, where he is said to have lived long enough to pursuade the succeeding Caliph, Al-Ma'mun, to nominate a successor of Jabir's choice. According to this tradition, Jabir would have died only after the naming of the successor, Ali al-Rida, in 917.
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''Jabirian'' contributions include:
  
==Contributions to chemistry==
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* The importance of practical knowledge gained from experience and experiment.
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* A broadening of the scope of investigation of materials to include not just minerals, but also plant and animal substances.
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* The importance of number in an understading of the universe. The numbers 17 and 28 bear a particular significance in Jabir's system.
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* The principle of balance in assessing the properties of substances, which can mean their actual densities or their part in the composition of other substances.
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* The introduction of the qualities of warm, cold, moist and dry, in addition to the ancient Greek categories or elements of fire, water, earth and air.
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* The possibility of the artificial production of many naturally occuring entities and phenomena, including life itself.
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* The importance of the religious life in pursuing the scientific. Jabir believes that the stars influence human behavior and conduct, but that through a life of prayer and offerings, the stars themselves come under human influence through the agency of the divine.
  
Jabir's works include references to experimentation. He is credited with the invention of many types of now-basic chemical laboratory equipment, and with the discovery and description of many chemical substances and processes – such as the [[hydrochloric acid|hydrochloric]] and [[nitric acid|nitric]] [[acid]]s, [[distillation]], and [[crystallisation]] – that have become the foundation of modern [[chemistry]] and [[chemical engineering]].
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The works in Latin under the name of Geber include these important chemical processes (Von Meyer, 1906):
  
He also paved the way for most of the later Islamic alchemists, including [[al-Razi|Razi]], [[al-Tughrai|Tughrai]] and [[Abu al-Qasim al-Iraqi|al-Iraqi]], who lived in the 9th, 12th and 13th centuries respectively. His books strongly influenced the medieval European alchemists and justified their search for the [[philosopher's stone]].
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* The manufacture of nitric and sulfuric acids;
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* The separation of gold from other metals through the agency of lead and saltpeter (potassium nitrate).
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* The concept of a chemical compound; the mineral cinnabar, for example, as being composed of sulfur and mercury
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* The purification of mercury.
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* The classification of salts as water soluble, under the generic title "sal."
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* The introduction of the word "alkali" to designate substances such as lye and other bases.
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* The production of nitric acid by distilling a mixture of saltpeter (potassium nitrate), copper vitriol (copper sulfate), and alum (naturally occuring sulfate of iron, potassium, sodium or aluminum).
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* The production of sulfuric acid through the heating of alum .
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* The production of ''aqua regia,'' a solvent capable of dissolving gold, by mixing salmiac (ammonium chloride) and nitric acid.
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* The production of alum from alum shale by recrystallizing it from water.
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* The purification of substances through crystallization
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* The precipitation of silver nitrate crystals from a solution by the addition of common salt, thus establishing a test for the presence of both silver and salt.
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* The preparation of mercuric oxide from mercury by heating it with a metalic oxide, and mercuric chloride by heating mercury with common salt, alum and saltpeter.
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* The preparation of arsenious acid.
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* The dissolving of sulfur in solutions of alkalies, and its transformation when it interacts with ''aqua regia''.
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* The theory that the different metals are composed of varying degrees of sulfur and mercury.
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* The production of saltpeter by mixing potash (potassium carbonate) and nitric acid.
  
In spite of his leanings toward mysticism and superstition, he more clearly recognised and proclaimed the importance of experimentation. "The first essential in chemistry", he declared, "is that you should perform practical work and conduct experiments, for he who performs not practical work nor makes experiments will never attain the least degree of mastery."
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The works ascribed to ''Geber'' introduced improved laboratory equipment such as water baths, furnaces, and systems for filtration and distillation.
  
Jabir is also credited with the invention and development of several chemical instruments that are still used today, such as the [[alembic]], which made distillation easy, safe, and efficient. By distilling various salts together with [[sulfuric acid]], Jabir discovered [[hydrochloric acid]] (from [[sodium chloride|salt]]) and [[nitric acid]] (from [[sodium nitrate|saltpeter]]). By combining the two, he invented [[aqua regia]], one of the few substances that can dissolve [[gold]]. Besides its obvious applications to gold extraction and purification, this discovery would fuel the dreams and despair of alchemists for the next thousand years. He is also credited with the discovery of [[citric acid]] (the sour component of [[lemons]] and other unripe fruits), [[acetic acid]] (from vinegar), and [[tartaric acid]] (from wine-making residues).
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Jabir's works paved the way for most of the later Islamic alchemists, including [[al-Razi|Razi]], [[al-Tughrai|Tughrai]] and [[Abu al-Qasim al-Iraqi|al-Iraqi]], who lived in the ninth, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries respectively. His books strongly influenced the medieval European alchemists and justified their search for the [[philosopher's stone]], a symbol for the method by which the baser metals such as lead and tin could be transformed into gold. But they also provided medieval inestigators a new source of important and practical chemical knowledge.
  
Jabir [[applied science|applied]] his chemical knowledge to the improvement of many manufacturing processes, such as making [[steel]] and other metals, preventing [[rust]], engraving [[gold]], dyeing and waterproofing cloth, tanning leather, and the chemical analysis of pigments and other substances. He developed the use of [[manganese dioxide]] in glassmaking, to counteract the green tinge produced by [[iron]] — a process that is still used today. He noted that boiling [[wine]] released a flammable vapor, thus paving the way to [[Al-Razi]]'s discovery of [[ethanol]].
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In tandem with his leanings toward mysticism, Jabir recognized and proclaimed the importance of experimentation. "The first essential in chemistry," he declared, "is that you should perform practical work and conduct experiments, for he who performs not practical work nor makes experiments will never attain the least degree of mastery."
  
The seeds of the modern classification of elements into [[metals]] and non-metals could be seen in his chemical nomenclature. "Spirits" vaporised on heating, like [[camphor]], [[arsenic]], and [[ammonium chloride]]. "Metals" like gold, [[silver]], [[lead]], [[copper]], and [[iron]], according to Jabir, are composed of different proportions of mercury and sulfur.
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Jabir [[applied science|applied]] his chemical knowledge to the improvement of many manufacturing processes, such as making [[steel]] and other metals, preventing [[rust]], engraving [[gold]], dyeing and waterproofing cloth, tanning leather, and the chemical analysis of pigments and other substances. He developed the use of [[manganese dioxide]] in glass-making, to counteract the green tinge produced by [[iron]] — a process that is still used today. He noted that boiling [[wine]] released a flammable vapor, thus paving the way to [[Al-Razi]]'s discovery of [[ethanol]].
  
In the [[Middle Ages]], Jabir's treatises on alchemy were translated into Latin and became standard texts for [[Europe]]an alchemists. These include the ''[[Kitab al-Kimya]]'' (titled ''[[Book of the Composition of Alchemy]]'' in Europe), translated by [[Robert of Chester]] ([[1144]]); and the ''[[Kitab al-Sab'een]]''<!--Latin title needed—> by [[Gerard of Cremona]] (before [[1187]]). [[Marcelin Berthelot]] translated some of his books under the fanciful titles ''[[Book of the Kingdom]]'', ''[[Book of the Balances]]'', and ''[[Book of Eastern Mercury]]''. Several technical terms introduced by Jabir, such as ''[[alkali]]'', have found their way into various European languages and have become part of scientific vocabulary.
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In the [[Middle Ages]], Jabir's treatises on alchemy were translated into Latin and became standard texts for [[Europe]]an alchemists. These include the ''[[Kitab al-Kimya]]'' (titled ''[[Book of the Composition of Alchemy]]'' in Europe), translated by [[Robert of Chester]] (1144). [[Marcelin Berthelot]] translated some of his books under the fanciful titles ''[[Book of the Kingdom]],'' ''[[Book of the Balances]],'' and ''[[Book of Eastern Mercury]].''
  
 
==Contributions to alchemy==
 
==Contributions to alchemy==
Jabir became an alchemist at the court of [[Caliph]] [[Harun al-Rashid]], for whom he wrote the ''Kitab al-Zuhra'' ("The Book of Venus", on "the noble art of alchemy").
 
  
Jabir states in his ''[[Book of Stones]]'' (4:12) that "The purpose is to baffle and lead into error everyone except those whom God loves and provides for". His works seem to have been deliberately written in highly esoteric code, so that only those who had been initiated into his alchemical school could understand them. It is therefore difficult at best for the modern reader to discern which aspects of Jabir's work are to be read as symbols (and what those symbols mean), and what is to be taken literally. Because his works rarely made overt sense, the term [[gibberish]] is believed to have originally referred to his writings (Hauck, p. 19).
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Alchemy was the study of ways to turn base metals such as tin or lead into Gold. While modern science has revealed the hurdles which any such attempt would be faced with, the state of knowledge from ancient times up until the nineteenth century, was not such as to have been an adequate impediment to the pursuit of alchemical studies. Many of Jabir's writings are devoted to alchemy, and his system, often couched in obscure phraseology, bore some unique characteristics compared to earlier authors on the same subject.
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Jabir states in his ''[[Book of Stones]]'' (4:12), that, "The purpose is to baffle and lead into error everyone except those whom God loves and provides for." Some of his works were written in a manner that perhaps only the inner circle of his students would have understood. It is therefore difficult, at best, for the modern reader to understand these works. Because certain of his works appear to make no sense, the term [[gibberish]] is believed to have originally referred to his writings (Hauck, p. 19).
  
Jabir's alchemical investigations ostensibly revolved around the ultimate goal of ''[[takwin]]'' &mdash; the artificial creation of life. The ''Book of Stones'' includes several recipes for creating creatures such as [[scorpion]]s, [[snake]]s, and even [[human]]s in a laboratory environment, which are subject to the control of their creator. What Jabir meant by these recipes is today unknown.  
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Jabir's alchemical investigations ostensibly revolved around the ultimate goal of ''[[takwin]]''&mdash;the artificial creation of life. The ''Book of Stones'' includes several recipes for creating creatures such as [[scorpion]]s, [[snake]]s, and even [[human]]s in a laboratory environment, which are subject to the control of their creator.  
  
Jabir's interest in alchemy was probably inspired by his teacher [[Ja'far al-Sadiq]], and he was himself called "the [[Sufi]]", indicating that he followed the ascetic form of mysticism within Islam. Ibn Hayyan was deeply religious, and repeatedly emphasizes in his works that alchemy is possible only by subjugating oneself completely to the will of [[Allah]] and becoming a literal instrument of Allah on [[Earth]], since the manipulation of reality is possible only for Allah. The ''Book of Stones'' prescribes long and elaborate sequences of specific prayers that must be performed without error alone in the desert before one can even consider alchemical experimentation. Alchemy had a long relationship with [[Shi'ite]] mysticism; according to the first Imam, [[Ali ibn Abi Talib]], "alchemy is the sister of prophecy".  
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Ibn Hayyan was deeply religious, and repeatedly emphasized in his works that alchemy is possible only by subjugating oneself completely to the will of [[Allah]] and becoming a literal instrument of Allah on [[Earth]], since the manipulation of reality is possible only for Allah. The ''Book of Stones'' prescribes long and elaborate sequences of specific prayers that must be performed without error alone in the desert before one can even consider alchemical experimentation.
  
In his writings, Jabir pays tribute to Egyptian and Greek alchemists [[Hermes Trismegistus]], [[Agathodaimon]], [[Pythagoras]], and [[Socrates]]. He emphasises the long history of alchemy, "whose origin is Arius ... the first man who applied the ''first'' experiment on the [philosopher's] stone... and he declares that man possesses the ability to imitate the workings of Nature" (Nasr, Seyyed Hossein, ''Science and Civilization of Islam'').
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In his writings, Jabir pays tribute to Egyptian and Greek alchemists [[Hermes Trismegistus]], [[Agathodaimon]], [[Pythagoras]], and [[Socrates]].  
  
 
Jabir's alchemical investigations were theoretically grounded in an elaborate [[numerology]] related to [[Pythagoras|Pythagorean]] and [[Neoplatonism|Neoplatonic]] systems. The nature and properties of elements was defined through numeric values assigned the [[Arabic language|Arabic]] consonants present in their name, ultimately culminating in the [[number 17]].
 
Jabir's alchemical investigations were theoretically grounded in an elaborate [[numerology]] related to [[Pythagoras|Pythagorean]] and [[Neoplatonism|Neoplatonic]] systems. The nature and properties of elements was defined through numeric values assigned the [[Arabic language|Arabic]] consonants present in their name, ultimately culminating in the [[number 17]].
  
To [[Aristotle|Aristotelian]] physics, Jabir added the four properties of hotness, coldness, dryness, and moistness ([[Johann Ludwig Burkhardt|Burkhardt]], p. 29). Each Aristotelian element was characterised by these qualities: Fire was both hot and dry, earth cold and dry, water cold and moist, and air hot and moist. This came from the elementary qualities which are theoretical in nature plus substance. In metals two of these qualities were interior and two were exterior. For example, lead was cold and dry and gold was hot and moist. Thus, Jabir theorised, by rearranging the qualities of one metal, based on their sulfur/mercury content, a different metal would result. (Burckhardt, p. 29) This theory appears to have originated the search for ''al-iksir'', the elusive [[elixir]] that would make this transformation possible &mdash; which in European alchemy became known as the [[philosopher's stone]].
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To [[Aristotle|Aristotelian]] physics, Jabir added the four properties of hotness, coldness, dryness, and moistness ([[Johann Ludwig Burkhardt|Burkhardt]], p. 29). Each Aristotelian element was characterised by these qualities: Fire was both hot and dry, earth cold and dry, water cold and moist, and air hot and moist. This came from the elementary qualities which are theoretical in nature plus substance. In metals two of these qualities were interior and two were exterior. For example, lead was cold and dry and gold was hot and moist. Thus, Jabir theorized, by rearranging the qualities of one metal, based on their sulfur/mercury content, a different metal would result (Burckhardt, p. 29). This theory appears to have originated the search for ''al-iksir,'' the elusive [[elixir]] that would make this transformation possible&mdash;which in European alchemy became known as the [[philosopher's stone]].
  
Jabir also made important contributions to [[medicine]], [[astronomy]], and other sciences. Only a few of his books have been edited and published, and fewer still are available in translation. The [[Geber (crater)|Geber crater]], located on the [[Moon]], is named after him.
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Only a few of Jabir's works have been edited and published, and fewer still are available in translation. Scholars generally admit that much more research needs to be done to understand the breadth and depth of Jabir's contribution.
  
 
==Popular culture==
 
==Popular culture==
*The word [[gibberish]] is sometimes theorized to be derived from his name,[http://www.fromoldbooks.org/Grose-VulgarTongue/g/gibberish.html] though sources such as the [[Oxford English Dictionary]]  suggest it stems from [[gibber]]: However, the first known recorded use of the term "gibberish" was before the first known recorded use of the word "gibber". (See [[Gibberish]])
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*The word [[gibberish]] is sometimes theorized to be derived from his name, though sources such as the [[Oxford English Dictionary]]  suggest it stems from [[gibber]]: However, the first known recorded use of the term "gibberish" was before the first known recorded use of the word "gibber."  
 
 
== Quotations ==
 
*"The first essential in chemistry, is that you should perform practical work and conduct experiments, for he who performs not practical work nor makes experiments will never attain the least degree of mastery."{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
*His last statement: "My wealth let sons and brethren part. Some things they cannot share: my work well done, my noble heart — these are mine own to wear."{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
 
 
== What others have said about Jabir ==
 
* [[Max Meyerhoff]]: "His influence may be traced throughout the whole historic course of European alchemy and chemistry."{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
 
  
 
== Writings by Jabir ==
 
== Writings by Jabir ==
 
The writings of Jabir Ibn Hayyan can be divided into four categories:
 
The writings of Jabir Ibn Hayyan can be divided into four categories:
*'''The 112 Books''' dedicated to the [[Barmakids]], viziers of Caliph Harun al-Rashid. This group includes the Arabic version of the ''[[Emerald Tablet]]'', an ancient work that is the foundation of the [[Hermetic]] or "spiritual" alchemy. In the Middle Ages it was translated into Latin (''Tabula Smaragdina'') and widely diffused among European alchemists.
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*'''The 112 Books''' dedicated to the [[Barmakids]], viziers of Caliph Harun al-Rashid. This group includes the Arabic version of the ''[[Emerald Tablet]],'' an ancient work that is the foundation of the [[Hermetic]] or "spiritual" alchemy. In the Middle Ages it was translated into Latin ''(Tabula Smaragdina)'' and widely diffused among European alchemists.
*'''The Seventy Books''', most of which were translated into Latin during the Middle Ages. This group includes the ''Kitab al-Zuhra'' ("Book of Venus") and the ''Kitab Al-Ahjar'' ("Book of Stones").<!--I'm guessing that they are in this group. Someone please check...—>
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*'''The Seventy Books,''' most of which were translated into Latin during the Middle Ages.  
*'''The Ten Books on Rectification''', containing descriptions of "alchemists" such as Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
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*'''The Ten Books on Rectification,''' containing descriptions of "alchemists" such as Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
*'''The Books on Balance'''; this group includes his most famous 'Theory of the balance in Nature'.
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*'''The Books on Balance,''' this group includes his most famous ''Theory of the balance in Nature.''
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Works ascribed to Jabir under his Latinized name, ''Geber,'' include:
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* '''The Sum of Perfection'''
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* '''The Investigation of Perfection'''
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* '''The Invention of Verity'''
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* '''The Book of Furnaces'''
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* '''The Testament'''.
  
Some scholars suspect that some of these works were not written by Jabir himself, but are instead commentaries and additions by his followers. In any case, they all can be considered works of the 'Jabir' school of alchemy.
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The consensus among scholars who have studied the body of work attributed to Jabir is that they could not all have been written by him. Some argue that one man could not have written that much material even in a lifetime. Others note stylistic differences between Jabir's work in Arabic, and the Latin works of ''Geber''. The content of the ''Gerber'' works are said to reflect a state of knowledge closer to the end of the fourteenth century than to the eighth and ninth centuries, when Jabir is thought to have been active. The modern criticism of this body of work was begun by [[Berthelot]] in the late nineteenth century, and has continued to the present. Holmyard expressed a dissenting opinion, in that he believed the question of whether the Latin works were by Jabir should be left open.
  
===Translations Jabir===
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===Translations of Jabir===
*[[E. J. Holmyard]] (ed.) ''The Arabic Works of Jabir ibn Hayyan'', translated by [[Richard Russel]] in [[1678]]. New York, E. P. Dutton (1928); Also Paris, P. Geuther.
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*[[E. J. Holmyard]] (ed.) ''The Arabic Works of Jabir ibn Hayyan'', translated by [[Richard Russel]] in 1678. New York, E. P. Dutton (1928); Also Paris, P. Geuther.
 
*[[Syed Nomanul Haq]], ''Names, Natures and Things'': ''The Alchemists Jabir ibn Hayyan and his Kitab al-Ahjar'' (Book of Stones), [Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science p. 158] (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994).
 
*[[Syed Nomanul Haq]], ''Names, Natures and Things'': ''The Alchemists Jabir ibn Hayyan and his Kitab al-Ahjar'' (Book of Stones), [Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science p. 158] (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994).
*[[Donald R. Hill]], 'The Literature of Arabic Alchemy' in ''Religion'': ''Learning and Science in the Abbasid Period'', ed. by M.J.L. Young, J.D. Latham and R.B. Serjeant (Cambridge University Press, 1990) pp. 328-341, esp. pp 333-5.
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*[[Donald R. Hill]], 'The Literature of Arabic Alchemy' in ''Religion:'' ''Learning and Science in the Abbasid Period,'' ed. by M.J.L. Young, J.D. Latham, and R.B. Serjeant (Cambridge University Press, 1990) pp. 328-341, esp. pp 333-5.
 
*William Newman, ''New Light on the Identity of Geber'', Sudhoffs Archiv, 1985, Vol.69, pp. 76-90.
 
*William Newman, ''New Light on the Identity of Geber'', Sudhoffs Archiv, 1985, Vol.69, pp. 76-90.
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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==See also==
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* Asimov, Isaac. 1982. ''Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology''. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0385177712
* [[Islamic Science]]
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* [[Alchemy]]
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* Gillispie, Charles Coulston. 1975. ''Dictionary of Scientific Biography''. New York: Scribner. ISBN 0-6841-0121-1
* [[Chemistry]]
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* Holmyard, Eric J. 1962. ''The Makers of Chemistry''. London: Oxford University Press.
* [[Al-Razi]]
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Latest revision as of 08:37, 13 March 2024

Jabir ibn Hayyan

Jabir ibn Hayyan (c. eighth and early ninth centuries) was an Islamic thinker from the early medieval period to whom is ascribed authorship of a large number of alchemical, practical, and philosophical works. Many of these works were translated and distributed throughout the learning centers of medieval Europe under the latinized form of Jabir's name, Geber. Whether or not he was genuinely the author of all the works attributed to him, his contributions were substantial, laying the foundations of modern chemistry.

The two earliest biographical sources that mention Jabir are from the tenth century. The first, Notes of Abu Suaiman al-Mantiqi al-Sijistani, disputes the authorship of several works ascribed to him, and casts doubt on his very existence. Another work, the Katib al-Fihrist of Ibn al-Nadim, part biography and part bibliography, written around 987, ascribes a long list of works to Jabir and insists that he was a real personage. Ibn al-Nadim links Jabir with his teacher, the sixth shi'ite imam, Jafar ibn Muhammad al-Sadiq, who lived between 700 and 765. Others say his teacher was another Jafar, the Barmecide vizier Jafar ibn Yahya, who was put to death in 803, by the ruler Harun al-Rashid. Either of these hypotheses lead to the conclusion that Jabir's life straddled the eighth and ninth centuries.

There can be no doubt that works ascribed to Jabir, particularly under the latinized moniker, Geber, have had a profound influence on the development of chemical knowledge in the West, including as they do advanced chemical processes such as the manufacture of nitric and sulfuric acids and the introduction of the experimental method. Many of Jabir's works, however, are written in esoteric prose that are hardly decipherable in a scientific context. The authorship of some works, particularly those in Latin with no Arabic originals, are disputed by modern scholars, many of whom claim that the chemical knowledge they display is far ahead of what was known to ninth-century practitioners. Still, there are a minority who make a case for Jabir's authorship of all the works attributed to him.

Biography

Twentieth century scholar E.J. Holmyard attempts to piece together a life of Jabir from a variety of early sources and a knowledge of the history of the times. According to Holmyard, Jabir Ibn Hayyan was born in 721 or 722, in the town of Tus, in Khorasan, not far from the city of Meshed in modern Iran. His father, Hayyan, was of the Al-Azd tribe, originally of south Arabia, some members of which had resettled in Kufa. Hayyan became enmeshed in the political intrigues of his time, and was executed shortly after Jabir's birth.

Jabir's family fled to Arabia, where Jabir studied under the scholar Harbi al-Himyari. In later years, he became the disciple of Jafar al-Sadiq, a shi'ite imman connected with the Abbasids, who, under the caliphate of Harun al-Rashid, later assumed power in the region. Because his father had died supporting the Abbasids, Jabir was able to form a close association with the Barmecides, who acted as the caliph's ministers. He was thus able to practice medicine under the protection of the caliphate.

In one of his works, Jabir relates that he cured a handmaid belonging to the household of Yahya ibn Khalid, a Barmecide, by administering a specially prepared potion. For the caliph himself, Jabir wrote an alchemical work, The Book of the Blossom, which included information on experimental techniques. He also is said to have facilitated the acquisition of copies of Greek and Latin authors for translation into Arabic.

Jabir kept a working laboratory in Kufa, the ruins of which were discovered two hundred years after his death.

In 803, Jafar ibn Yahya was put to death and the Barmecides were banished after earning the disfavor of the Caliphate. Jabir fled to Kufa, where he is said to have lived long enough to persuade the succeeding Caliph, Al-Ma'mun, to nominate a successor of Jabir's choice. According to this tradition, Jabir would have died only after the naming of the successor, Ali al-Rida, in 917.

Contributions to chemistry

It is useful to differentiate the techniques, processes, and theories associated with the Arabic works ascribed to Jabir, and those of the Latin works under the authorship of Geber, Jabir's latinized name.

Jabirian contributions include:

  • The importance of practical knowledge gained from experience and experiment.
  • A broadening of the scope of investigation of materials to include not just minerals, but also plant and animal substances.
  • The importance of number in an understading of the universe. The numbers 17 and 28 bear a particular significance in Jabir's system.
  • The principle of balance in assessing the properties of substances, which can mean their actual densities or their part in the composition of other substances.
  • The introduction of the qualities of warm, cold, moist and dry, in addition to the ancient Greek categories or elements of fire, water, earth and air.
  • The possibility of the artificial production of many naturally occuring entities and phenomena, including life itself.
  • The importance of the religious life in pursuing the scientific. Jabir believes that the stars influence human behavior and conduct, but that through a life of prayer and offerings, the stars themselves come under human influence through the agency of the divine.

The works in Latin under the name of Geber include these important chemical processes (Von Meyer, 1906):

  • The manufacture of nitric and sulfuric acids;
  • The separation of gold from other metals through the agency of lead and saltpeter (potassium nitrate).
  • The concept of a chemical compound; the mineral cinnabar, for example, as being composed of sulfur and mercury
  • The purification of mercury.
  • The classification of salts as water soluble, under the generic title "sal."
  • The introduction of the word "alkali" to designate substances such as lye and other bases.
  • The production of nitric acid by distilling a mixture of saltpeter (potassium nitrate), copper vitriol (copper sulfate), and alum (naturally occuring sulfate of iron, potassium, sodium or aluminum).
  • The production of sulfuric acid through the heating of alum .
  • The production of aqua regia, a solvent capable of dissolving gold, by mixing salmiac (ammonium chloride) and nitric acid.
  • The production of alum from alum shale by recrystallizing it from water.
  • The purification of substances through crystallization
  • The precipitation of silver nitrate crystals from a solution by the addition of common salt, thus establishing a test for the presence of both silver and salt.
  • The preparation of mercuric oxide from mercury by heating it with a metalic oxide, and mercuric chloride by heating mercury with common salt, alum and saltpeter.
  • The preparation of arsenious acid.
  • The dissolving of sulfur in solutions of alkalies, and its transformation when it interacts with aqua regia.
  • The theory that the different metals are composed of varying degrees of sulfur and mercury.
  • The production of saltpeter by mixing potash (potassium carbonate) and nitric acid.

The works ascribed to Geber introduced improved laboratory equipment such as water baths, furnaces, and systems for filtration and distillation.

Jabir's works paved the way for most of the later Islamic alchemists, including Razi, Tughrai and al-Iraqi, who lived in the ninth, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries respectively. His books strongly influenced the medieval European alchemists and justified their search for the philosopher's stone, a symbol for the method by which the baser metals such as lead and tin could be transformed into gold. But they also provided medieval inestigators a new source of important and practical chemical knowledge.

In tandem with his leanings toward mysticism, Jabir recognized and proclaimed the importance of experimentation. "The first essential in chemistry," he declared, "is that you should perform practical work and conduct experiments, for he who performs not practical work nor makes experiments will never attain the least degree of mastery."

Jabir applied his chemical knowledge to the improvement of many manufacturing processes, such as making steel and other metals, preventing rust, engraving gold, dyeing and waterproofing cloth, tanning leather, and the chemical analysis of pigments and other substances. He developed the use of manganese dioxide in glass-making, to counteract the green tinge produced by iron — a process that is still used today. He noted that boiling wine released a flammable vapor, thus paving the way to Al-Razi's discovery of ethanol.

In the Middle Ages, Jabir's treatises on alchemy were translated into Latin and became standard texts for European alchemists. These include the Kitab al-Kimya (titled Book of the Composition of Alchemy in Europe), translated by Robert of Chester (1144). Marcelin Berthelot translated some of his books under the fanciful titles Book of the Kingdom, Book of the Balances, and Book of Eastern Mercury.

Contributions to alchemy

Alchemy was the study of ways to turn base metals such as tin or lead into Gold. While modern science has revealed the hurdles which any such attempt would be faced with, the state of knowledge from ancient times up until the nineteenth century, was not such as to have been an adequate impediment to the pursuit of alchemical studies. Many of Jabir's writings are devoted to alchemy, and his system, often couched in obscure phraseology, bore some unique characteristics compared to earlier authors on the same subject.

Jabir states in his Book of Stones (4:12), that, "The purpose is to baffle and lead into error everyone except those whom God loves and provides for." Some of his works were written in a manner that perhaps only the inner circle of his students would have understood. It is therefore difficult, at best, for the modern reader to understand these works. Because certain of his works appear to make no sense, the term gibberish is believed to have originally referred to his writings (Hauck, p. 19).

Jabir's alchemical investigations ostensibly revolved around the ultimate goal of takwin—the artificial creation of life. The Book of Stones includes several recipes for creating creatures such as scorpions, snakes, and even humans in a laboratory environment, which are subject to the control of their creator.

Ibn Hayyan was deeply religious, and repeatedly emphasized in his works that alchemy is possible only by subjugating oneself completely to the will of Allah and becoming a literal instrument of Allah on Earth, since the manipulation of reality is possible only for Allah. The Book of Stones prescribes long and elaborate sequences of specific prayers that must be performed without error alone in the desert before one can even consider alchemical experimentation.

In his writings, Jabir pays tribute to Egyptian and Greek alchemists Hermes Trismegistus, Agathodaimon, Pythagoras, and Socrates.

Jabir's alchemical investigations were theoretically grounded in an elaborate numerology related to Pythagorean and Neoplatonic systems. The nature and properties of elements was defined through numeric values assigned the Arabic consonants present in their name, ultimately culminating in the number 17.

To Aristotelian physics, Jabir added the four properties of hotness, coldness, dryness, and moistness (Burkhardt, p. 29). Each Aristotelian element was characterised by these qualities: Fire was both hot and dry, earth cold and dry, water cold and moist, and air hot and moist. This came from the elementary qualities which are theoretical in nature plus substance. In metals two of these qualities were interior and two were exterior. For example, lead was cold and dry and gold was hot and moist. Thus, Jabir theorized, by rearranging the qualities of one metal, based on their sulfur/mercury content, a different metal would result (Burckhardt, p. 29). This theory appears to have originated the search for al-iksir, the elusive elixir that would make this transformation possible—which in European alchemy became known as the philosopher's stone.

Only a few of Jabir's works have been edited and published, and fewer still are available in translation. Scholars generally admit that much more research needs to be done to understand the breadth and depth of Jabir's contribution.

Popular culture

  • The word gibberish is sometimes theorized to be derived from his name, though sources such as the Oxford English Dictionary suggest it stems from gibber: However, the first known recorded use of the term "gibberish" was before the first known recorded use of the word "gibber."

Writings by Jabir

The writings of Jabir Ibn Hayyan can be divided into four categories:

  • The 112 Books dedicated to the Barmakids, viziers of Caliph Harun al-Rashid. This group includes the Arabic version of the Emerald Tablet, an ancient work that is the foundation of the Hermetic or "spiritual" alchemy. In the Middle Ages it was translated into Latin (Tabula Smaragdina) and widely diffused among European alchemists.
  • The Seventy Books, most of which were translated into Latin during the Middle Ages.
  • The Ten Books on Rectification, containing descriptions of "alchemists" such as Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
  • The Books on Balance, this group includes his most famous Theory of the balance in Nature.

Works ascribed to Jabir under his Latinized name, Geber, include:

  • The Sum of Perfection
  • The Investigation of Perfection
  • The Invention of Verity
  • The Book of Furnaces
  • The Testament.

The consensus among scholars who have studied the body of work attributed to Jabir is that they could not all have been written by him. Some argue that one man could not have written that much material even in a lifetime. Others note stylistic differences between Jabir's work in Arabic, and the Latin works of Geber. The content of the Gerber works are said to reflect a state of knowledge closer to the end of the fourteenth century than to the eighth and ninth centuries, when Jabir is thought to have been active. The modern criticism of this body of work was begun by Berthelot in the late nineteenth century, and has continued to the present. Holmyard expressed a dissenting opinion, in that he believed the question of whether the Latin works were by Jabir should be left open.

Translations of Jabir

  • E. J. Holmyard (ed.) The Arabic Works of Jabir ibn Hayyan, translated by Richard Russel in 1678. New York, E. P. Dutton (1928); Also Paris, P. Geuther.
  • Syed Nomanul Haq, Names, Natures and Things: The Alchemists Jabir ibn Hayyan and his Kitab al-Ahjar (Book of Stones), [Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science p. 158] (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1994).
  • Donald R. Hill, 'The Literature of Arabic Alchemy' in Religion: Learning and Science in the Abbasid Period, ed. by M.J.L. Young, J.D. Latham, and R.B. Serjeant (Cambridge University Press, 1990) pp. 328-341, esp. pp 333-5.
  • William Newman, New Light on the Identity of Geber, Sudhoffs Archiv, 1985, Vol.69, pp. 76-90.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Asimov, Isaac. 1982. Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0385177712
  • Ferguson, Pamela. 2002. World Book's Biographical Encyclopedia of Scientists. Chicago: World Book. ISBN 0-7166-7600-1
  • Gillispie, Charles Coulston. 1975. Dictionary of Scientific Biography. New York: Scribner. ISBN 0-6841-0121-1
  • Holmyard, Eric J. 1962. The Makers of Chemistry. London: Oxford University Press.

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