Wednesday’s flowers

status dynamics in 12th-century Baghdad

In twelfth-century Mesopotamia, Awhad al-Zamān moved from his small town to Baghdad.  He sought to study there with a prominent physician-teacher who had many students.  Those choices signal high ambition.  Since Awhad al-Zamān was a Jew, he lived in the Jewish quarter of Baghdad and faced anti-Jewish prejudice among the Islamic elite who ruled Baghdad.  In particular, the distinguished teacher of medicine with whom Awhad al-Zamān sought to study refused to accept Jewish students.  Awhad al-Zamān sought through all possible means to gain a place under the teacher.  The teacher refused to accept him.  Prejudice against Jews in twelfth-century Baghdad thus formally blocked Awhad al-Zamān’s personal advancement.

Following the fabulistic plot of a humble student earnestly seeking knowledge, Awhad al-Zamān got a position with the teacher’s doorman. During the teacher’s lessons, Awhad al-Zamān sat in the antechamber.  He carefully listened and memorized the teacher’s lessons.  After about a year, Awhad al-Zamān heard the teacher’s students struggling unsuccessfully to solve a problem that the teacher had presented to them.  That was Awhad al-Zamān’s opportunity:

he entered and humbled himself in front of the Shaikh {teacher}, saying: “O my master, with your permission I shall speak on this problem.” The Shaikh replied: “Speak, if you have anything to say.” He answered the question with Galen’s words, adding: “O my master, this question arose on such and such a day, of such a month, in such a year, and has stayed in my mind ever since.” The Shaikh was astonished by his intelligence and memory, and asked where he was studying. Abū al-Barakāt {another name for Awhad al-Zamān} told him, and he said: “We cannot refuse knowledge to one in his situation.” From then on he became more and more closely attached to him until he became one of his preferred students. [1]

This story teaches that earnest desire for knowledge trumps low social status.

Awhad al-Zamān sought social status as well as knowledge.  His learning won for him many students and access to the Caliph.  However, one day when he visited the Caliph, the Chief Justice did not stand for him as he entered, as others did.  The Chief Justice did not stand because he was a Muslim, and Awhad al-Zamān, a Jew, was legally inferior to him.  Awhad al-Zamān declared to the Caliph:

O Emir of the Faithful, if the reason for the Chief Justice’s behavior is the fact that I am not of the same faith as he is, let me convert to Islam in front of my master, in order not to give him the chance of underestimating me for being a Jew.[2]

Thus Awhad al-Zamān became a Muslim.  This story teaches that knowledge isn’t sufficient for high social status.

While Awhad al-Zamān strove to capitalize on his conversion from Jew to Muslim, it wasn’t sufficient to secure him against the wits of his rivals.  On of those rivals was Amīn al-Dawlah ibn al-Tilmīdh, an elite physician and a Christian.  The rivalry of Awhad al-Zamān and Amīn al-Dawlah played across religious identifications:

After his conversion to Islam, Awhad al-Zamān used to shun the Jews and curse and slander them vehemently. One day, the matter of the Jews was mentioned in the council of one of the high notables which was attended by a group including Amīn al-Dawlah.  Awhad al-Zamān said: “May God curse the Jews!” and Amīn al-Dawlah retorted: “Yes indeed, and their sons too!” Hearing this, Awhad al-Zamān fell silent, knowing that this remark was directed at him. [3]

Status insecurity manifesting in shunning and attacking one’s former group is psychologically and historically plausible.  So too is refusing to accept a rival’s shift to a higher status group.

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Notes:

[1]  HP p. 503.  A similar structure of secret learning appears in the fable of Aristotle’s entrance into the King’s court as a poor orphan who had surreptitiously studied under Plato (HP pp. 120-4).   The distinguished teacher of medicine was Abū al-Hasan Sa`īd ibn Hibat Allāh ibn al-Husayn.  Galen was by far the leading intellectual authority for physicians.

[2] HP p. 506.  For clarity in the translation, I’ve changed “for it” to “for being a Jew”.  Awhad al-Zamān served Caliph al-Mustanjid bi-Allāh.

[3] HP p. 506.  In another incident of rivalry, Awhad al-Zamān secretly wrote a note falsely implicating Amīn al-Dawlah in crimes. When that ploy was uncovered, the Caliph gave Amīn al-Dawlah the rights to Awhad al-Zamān’s “life, property and books.”  Amīn al-Dawlah nobly declined to exercise those rights and thus gained prestige.  Awhad al-Zamān was banned from the Caliph’s presence and lost prestige.  HP p. 489.

Reference:

HP: Ibn Abi Usaybi’ah, Ahmad ibn al-Qasim. English translation of History of Physicians (4 v.) Translated by Lothar Kopf. 1971. Located in: Modern Manuscripts Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD; MS C 294Online transcription.

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why newspaper content windowing vanished

Newspaper publishers in New York State in 1855 commonly windowed their newspaper content across daily, semi-weekly, and weekly issues.  For example, the New York Evening Post began daily publication about 1802.  In 1855, that newspaper had become three products: The Evening Post, the Semi-Weekly Evening Post, and the Weekly Evening Post, with subscriptions prices $10, $3, and $2 per year, respectively.[*]  For a daily newspaper, being a morning or evening issue is highly relevant.  The name “Weekly Evening Post” reflects the historical legacy of a daily newspaper giving birth to a weekly newspaper.  Providing three newspaper products was a way to segment the newspaper market by spending propensity and demand for newness in news.

U.S. newspapers today offer subscription options, but not content windowing.  Sunday-only, weekday-only, and daily subscriptions aren’t separate newspapers.  Both the Sunday-only and daily subscribers get the same product on Sunday.

Changes in newspapers’ cost and revenue structures and the growth of other communications networks plausibly account for the vanishing of newspaper content windowing.  While good data are lacking, newspapers cost structure has almost surely shifted away from per-copy production and distribution costs and toward reporting, administrative, and management costs.  On the revenue side, advertising revenue as a share of newspaper revenue rose from 49% to 78% from 1880 to 2008.  Advertising revenue was probably much less than 49% of newspaper revenue in 1855.  These changes in costs and revenue structures gave newspaper companies greater incentive to deliver newspapers to readers even when readers value the newspaper relatively low.  In addition, the growth of other communications networks (radio, television, the Internet) makes news lose news value more rapidly over time.  Content windowing for general news is no longer a feasible newspaper business strategy.

The history of newspaper content windowing suggests underlying economics could close entertainment video windowing.  Production and distribution costs for video are decreasing.  Revenue for video producers is shifting from subscriptions and sales to advertising.  The growth of communications networks are generating faster and more transient peaks in mass attention.  Even if, through content controls, rights management, and police action, video producers could prevent others from sharing or marketing video across content windows, content windowing might become an infeasible business strategy.

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Note:

[*] See the table “Newspapers and Other Periodicals Published in New-York in 1855“, New York State Census of 1855, pp. 480-497.  That table includes many other examples of windowed newspapers.

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early history of textual chapters

The division of texts into chapters is associated with intensive study of texts’ conceptual content.  The scholarly literature describes scholasticism giving rise in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries to chapter divisions in western texts.  Islamic scholarship spurred chapter divisions and other paratextual aids in the Islamic world in the tenth century.  Chapter divisions, however, go back even earlier.  Roger Pearse has recently presented strong evidence that chapter headings and numerical chapter labels existed in Gregory of Nyssa’s Contra Eunomium, written in Nyssa (central Anatolia) in the 380s.  He suggests that Gregory of Nyssa adopted chapter divisions from Eusebius of Caesarea’s Ecclesiastical History (finished c. 324).  Eusebius is known to have pioneered a paratextual organization that has come to be called Eusebian Canons.  Eusebius, a formidable scholar, may well have also employed chapter divisions.

Historical practices of textual study and copying have tended to obscure paratextual markers.  Ancient scholars memorized texts as part of their study of them.  For memorized texts, quoting or referencing a particular section of the text doesn’t require an in-line paratextual reference even if paratextual markers existed in the referenced text.  Within scholars’ brains was an alternate, organic textual reference system.  Moreover, texts were prone to re-organization in copying.  As Pearse observes, the manuscript tradition of Gregory of Nyssa’s Contra Eunomium shows that paratextual material was regarded as relatively unimportant.  Because the scope of surviving textual artifacts from antiquity is quite limited, direct evidence of ancient textual organization is also quite limited.

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Wednesday’s flowers

efficient contracting depends on good ethics

dogsled mail deliver

Beginning in 1845, the U.S. Postal Service contacted out mail delivery on some routes that had unusual service circumstances.  The primary terms of the contact was mail delivery with “celerity, certainty, and security.”  These terms became so standardized that they were represented with three stars and generated the name for the service, Star Route Service.  The star-route contracts gave the contractor the flexibility to choose the means of mail delivery:

Star Route contractors relied on a remarkable variety of vehicles to travel across difficult terrain in all kinds of weather. A route from Bayfield to Lapointe, Wisconsin, utilized horse, dogsled, foot travel, a propeller-driven sled, trucks, and a boat, depending on time of year. Another from Yellow Pine to Wallace Ranch, Idaho, employed a pickup truck, 4-wheel drive truck, Sno-Cat®, airplane, horseback, packhorse, motorcycle, foot travel, and snowshoes.

Over time, high-level corruption developed in the awarding of star-route contacts.  To control corruption and to provide more transparency in contracting, the contracts shifted to specifying routes and means of delivery.  Economically efficient, technology-neutral contracts did not endure because general ethical standards were poor.

Public regulation that enables the benefits of private choice depends on virtuous public officials and ethical private businesspersons.

graffiti out of the time stream

This graffiti exists on an out-of-the-way wall in Washington, DC.  It projects a sense of surveillance.  Graffiti is illegal.  Cameras hidden everywhere and cameras that all unnoticefully deploy make continual surveillance a reality.  A young man recent spent nearly two years in jail in Virginia for making graffiti.

Graffiti was once an insistence on space for anyone to write for everyone.  The Internet now provides unlimited, unnoticed public space.  Graffiti on an out-of-the-way wall is as strange today as a print newspaper.

Ibn Abi Usaybia’s historical-biographical book enterprise

Ibn Abi Usaybia’s interest in writing books extended beyond his History of Physicians.   He also wrote a book entitled The Successful Astronomers.[1]  Medicine and astronomy were closely related in practice.   Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book on astronomers probably was quite similar to his historical-biographical reference work on physicians.  His book on astronomers apparently has not survived.  In Ibn Abi Usaybia’s time, astronomers were not clearly distinguished from astrologers.  His book on astronomers/astrologers probably has not survived because Islamic teachers subsequently condemned astrology more strongly and more uniformly.

Ibn Abi Usaybia wrote another book that he referred to simply as Experiences and Morals.[2]  His biographical works provided experiences and morals through biography.   Experiences and Morals probably was a more directly didactic work that drew upon the material from the biographical works.

Ibn Abi Usaybia planned to write additional books.  Ibn Abi Usaybia included in his History of Physicians a lengthy section (54 pages) on Galen.   But Ibn Abi Usaybia had much more to write about Galen:

To sum up, there are many stories and anecdotes which will benefit him who studies them, witticisms and examples scattered in Galen’s books and included in reports about him.  There are also many tales of his treatment of the sick which cannot all be mentioned here, that prove his medical skill.  I intend, with God’s help, to compose a separate book which will include all the relevant details reported in Galen’s works and elsewhere.[3]

Galen lived in the second century.  More than a millennium later,  Galen was by far the leading figure among physicians in thirteenth-century Damascus.   In planning to write a book about Galen, Ibn Abi Usaybia was choosing a popular subject.

While Ibn Abi Usaybia practiced as a physician, he apparently sought to write historical-biographical reference works for all intellectual fields.  In the introduction to his book on physicians, Ibn Abi Usaybi declared:

The philosophers, mathematicians and students of the other sciences will be treated by me exhaustively, if Allāh the Exalted wills, in the book Outstanding Milestones among the Nations and Reports on the Masters of Wisdom.[4]

The order of Ibn Abi Usaybia’s biographical enterprise probably was astronomers, physicians, and others (philosophers, mathematicians, and others).  That probably was the status ranking of intellectual fields in thirteenth-century Damascus.

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Related posts:

Notes:

[1] HP p. 507.  Because HP is an edition from 1270, the year of Ibn Abi Usaybia’s death, references to other of his works in it don’t necessarily mean that those work were written before the original edition of History of Physicians (1242).

[2] HP p. 879.

[3] HP p. 164.

[4] HP p. 3.  Kopf interprets “milestones” as “personalities” and notes: “Literally: sign-posts, milestones; Sang: monuments.  As the book was never written, the author’s intention remains uncertain as to his pointing to persons or works.”

Reference:

HP: Ibn Abi Usaybi’ah, Ahmad ibn al-Qasim. English translation of History of Physicians (4 v.) Translated by Lothar Kopf. 1971. Located in: Modern Manuscripts Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD; MS C 294Online transcription.

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Wednesday’s flowers

Ibn Abi Usaybia in 13th-century Damascus’ status economy

In 1242, Ibn Abi Usaybia dedicated his book, Essential Information Concerning the Classes of Physicians, to Amīn al-Dawlah, the vizier of the Ayyubid sultanate based in Damascus.[1]  Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book is a trans-historical, biographical membership directory for the elite medical profession.  It documented the social capital of prominent physicians.  Because thirteenth-century Damascus did not have well-established institutions of social distinction, e.g. titles of nobility or degrees from prestigious universities, books documenting diverse and fluid social credentials were relatively important.[2]  Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book and other similar ones were valuable products in the highly developed status economy of thirteenth-century Damascus.

Ibn Abi Usaybia rang high notes of praise in the dedication for his book.  He described his book as a service to a worthy lord:

With it I am rendering a contribution to the library of my lord and master, the learned and righteous vizier, the accomplished chief, the lord of viziers, the king of savants, the leader of scholars, the sun of religion, Amīn al-Dawlah Kamāl al-Dīn Shārāf al-Milla Abū al-Hasān ibn Ghazal ibn Abī Sa`id — may Allāh perpetuate his happiness and grant him his desires in this world and in the hereafter. [3]

The book was not meant just for Vizier Amīn al-Dawlah’s library.  A professional membership directory is meant to be distributed throughout the profession.  Being written for the vizier and in his library, however, gave Ibn Abi Usaybia’s Essential Information Concerning the Classes of Physicians authoritative significance.

Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book, which drew upon his status assets and furthered others’ status claims, quickly returned material goods.  Ibn Abi Usaybia explained:

When he {Amīn al-Dawlah}, may God bless him, was still in Damascus, enjoying full powers as a vizier, in the days of {Sultan} al-Malik al-Salih Isma`īl, he was an intimate friend of my father’s.  One day he said to him: “O, Sadīd al-Dīn, I have heard that your son has composed an unrivaled book about the classes of physicians, for which highly important work many of my own physicians praise him greatly in my presence.  I have in my library more than twenty thousand volumes, but none in his special branch, and so I would like you to write to him, asking for a copy of this book.”  I was at the time in Sarkhad, staying with its governor, the Emir `Izz al-Dīn Aibak al-Mu`azzamī and taking his orders.  Upon receiving my father’s letter, I went to Damascus, carrying with me the rough copies of my book.  There I called for the illustrious copyist Shams al-Dīn Muhammad al-Hussaini, who used to do a great deal of work for us and whose handwriting was perfectly proportioned and his mastery of Arabic excellent.  I gave him a room in our house, where he copied the book quickly, putting it into four parts, according to the division of Rubu` the Bagdadian.  Having had them bound, I composed a panegyric poem to the master Amīn al-Dawlah and sent him all this with the Chief Justice of Damascus, Rafī` al-Dīn al-Jīlī, who was one of my professors with whom I was on good terms and with whom I studied a part of Ibn Sīnā’s “Book of Notes and Remarks.”  When Amīn al -Dawlah received my book and poem through the judge he was greatly surprised and extremely happy.  He sent me back with the judge a large sum of money, honorary robes and many thanks, saying: “I should like you to notify me of every new book you write.” [4]

The size of the sultan’s library, and the absence of any similar work, underscored both the importance of books and the need for this book.  The sultan’s physicians, who surely were included in Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book, praised not that book, but Ibn Abi Usaybia for writing it.  The professional positions of the sultan’s physicians were social facts.  Documenting them with prestigious calligraphy and an international brand-name book division helped to give those social facts a tangible, enduring form.

Ibn Abi Usaybia appreciated the value of social status.  He himself was an elite physician.  His father’s intimate friendship with the sultan facilitated the demand for Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book.  His book was supplied through an elite official, the Chief Justice of Damascus, with whom Ibn Abi Usaybia had studied the work of another elite physician, Ibn Sīnā.  In return for his book, Ibn Abi Usaybia received “a large sum of money, honorary robes and many thanks.”  Money and robes were material currencies.  Honors and thanks were status currencies.  All these currencies had broad exchange value.

Ibn Abi Usaybai continued to augment his book after it was dedicated and presented to the vizier.  The Chief Justice of Damascus, Rafī` al-Dīn al-Jīlī, presented Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book to the Vizier Amīn al-Dawlah.  Rafī` al-Dīn had previously been a lecturer in law at `Adrāwīyya University in Damascus.  Ibn Abi Usaybia had studied philosophy under him there.  Ibn Abi Usaybia’s former philosophy professor expressed some minor criticism of Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book on physicians:

Judge Rafī` al-Dīn went over a copy of this book in my presence, in which I did not mention him. He read as far as the passage concerning Shihāb al-Dīn al-Suhrawardī {a philosopher} and was much impressed by it.  He said, “You have mentioned him, but omitted others better than he,” meaning himself. [5]

Ibn Abi Usaybia subsequently added an entry for Rafī` al-Dīn.  In that entry, Ibn Abi Usaybia declared:

He {Rafī` al-Dīn} was preeminent in the philosophical sciences, the principles of religion, religious jurisprudence, the natural sciences and medicine. … He held seminars for his students in the different branches of sciences and medicine.  I studied some philosophy with him.  He was eloquent, very wise, and read abundantly.

Rafī` al-Dīn gained prestige and wealth from becoming Chief Justice of Damascus.  Eventually, however, he succumbed to a status reversal:

His prestige increased, he became wealthy, and continued in this condition for some time.  But many people complained of ways he had committed and vehemently denounced his conduct.  Things came to such a pass that he was seized and done to death — may God have mercy upon him — during the reign of al-Malik al-Sālih Isma`īl.  Following a quarrel between him and the Vizier Amīn al-Dawlah, he was sent with an escort of vizierial officers to a place near Ba`albekk, where there was a yawning abyss known as the Cave of Afqa.  There people were told to pinion his arms behind his back and after doing so push him into the abyss.  One of those present told me that when he was pushed, he was smashed by the fall, but it seems that his clothes caught on the side of the cave’s lower part.  The people stayed there for about three days, listening to his groaning, which became weaker and weaker, until it stopped and they were sure that he was dead; then they went away. [6]

Rafī` al-Dīn may well have been learned, eloquent, and very wise.  Evidently, however, at some point he misjudged popular opinion and his relationship with the vizier.  The result was fatal.  Rafī` al-Dīn’s death illustrates that even those with highly elite status were not able to establish strong institutional protection to tenure their positions within the complicated socio-political currents of thirteenth-century Damascus.  With some prompting, Rafī` al-Dīn did achieve an enduring position in Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book.

Ibn Abi Usaybia incorporated in his book other evidence of the status economy.  He reported that Rashīd al-Dīn Abū Hulaiqa, who was a physician to Egyptian sultans, knew of his book.  He noted:

When I met Rashīd al-Dīn Abū Hulaiqa, he had already heard that the famous physicians in his family were mentioned and their learning and achievements described by me.  He thanked me and was most kind.  I thereupon recited to him the following impromptu poem:

How shall I not praise those whose merits
Are known in both East and West?
There shine on their account, in the sky of nobility,
Stars of good luck that never set.
They are men whose rank in learning among the people
You see transcending the high station of the planets.
How many books on medicine they have written, containing
Everything that arouses wonder and admiration.
My praise to the Banū Shākir has not ceased, whether far or near.
I perpetuate their generosity by writing these glowing lines. [7]

By “perpetuate their generosity,” Ibn Abi Usaybia probably also meant to perpetuate their patronage.  In 1270, Ibn Abu Usaybia heard from Abū Hulaiqa’s son:

I received a letter from him, which revealed his utmost refinement, wide knowledge, penetrating insight, great affection and abundant goodwill.  In that letter he informed me that he had found in Cairo, a copy of the book which I had written on the classes of physicians and that he had bought it and incorporated it in his library.  He spoke of the book in glowing terms, which shows his generous character and noble disposition.

Ibn Abi Usaybia’s book described physician’s characters.  Ibn Abi Usaybia also recognized good character in persons positive responses to his book.  That’s a propitious authorial strategy for gaining acclaim.  Abū Hulaiqa’s son apparently had not met Ibn Abi Usaybia in person, for his letter to Ibn Abi Usaybia began thus:

I am a man who loves you for your notable achievements,
Of which I have heard, the ear being able to love no less than the eye.

Ibn Abi Usaybia responded reciprocally:

I answered him in writing, with a poem which I composed in the same meter and rhyme:

Your letter has reached me, beautifully written
And filled with thoughts which shine like the sun,
The letter of a man noble, generous and praiseworthy,
With a benign countenance, which radiates light.
He is the lord and master through whom East and West flourish in wisdom,
A savant encompassing all the sciences,
To whom no gate of noble action is closed,
A generous man, accumulating all kinds of accomplishments,
But scattering his money with an open hand.
 ...
No wonder that, with regard to the sons of Hulaiqa,
I am bound by the ties of true friendship.
To their father I am obliged for many favors of long ago.
So my gratitude is due to them for ever —
To them, who all aspire to lofty aims, but especially
To him who said to me, while experiencing a great longing:
"I am a man who loves you for your notable achievements,
Of which I have heard, the ear being able to love no less than the eye."
May they continue to enjoy well-being and never-failing health,
As long as the great and lofty trees put forth leaves. [8]

This image of a ruling family as a great and lofty tree doesn’t correspond to the rapidly shifting, treacherous, brutal politics of thirteenth-century Baghdad-Damascus-Cairo political circles.  Extravagant praise seems to have been a counterpart to intense fear of betrayal.

Ibn Abi Usaybia explicitly used his book to seek a position serving Badr al-Dīn, the leading physician in Damascus. Badr al-Dīn, the son of the Judge of Ba`albekk, was appointed  in 1239 chief of all of Sultan al-Jawad Yunis’ physicians, oculists, and surgeons.  In 1247, Badr al-Dīn became head physician of the Great Hospital in Damascus.  Badr al-Dīn and Ibn Abi Usaybia  had studied medicine together in Damascus under a notable physician-teacher.  In addition, Ibn Abi Usaybia’s grandfather and uncle lived many years in Ba`albekk.[9]  Ibn Abi Usaybia thus had useful ties to Badr al-Dīn.   In his book, Ibn Abi Usaybia lavishly praised the highly successful Badr al-Dīn:

An indescribable amount of precious knowledge, extreme intelligence and manly valor was imbued into his {Badr al-Dīn’s} soul by God the Omnipotent. … within the shortest possible time {he} reached to perfection in both {medicine’s} theoretical and practical aspects.  He was highly ambitious in his work and his soul contained all virtues.  I found him to study with a conscientiousness unmatched by any of the other students, for he never ceased to increase his knowledge, improve his scholarship and deepen his understanding.  He knew many medical books and philosophical works by heart.

Ibn Abi Usaybia offered no pretense of objectivity or disinterestedness.  He included in his book poetry that he noted he had sent to Badr al-Dīn in a personal letter:

The rising sun was almost eclipsed by the radiance of Badr al-Dīn,
A virtuous physician, a noble scholar, both in heart and soul.
The most learned of men in the medical art, the science of feeling the pulse,
An expert in curing, not by guesswork, but by sound knowledge;
From Hippocrates and "the old master," from the Greeks and Persians {he got his art};
How many are those whom he has restored to health, saving them from the contrary!

Ibn Abi Usaybia described himself as a mamluk to Badr al-Dīn and floridly evoked blessings for him:

The mamluk kisses the hand of the illustrious master and scholarly physician, the noble chief and unrivaled leader, the hand of Badr al-Dīn, may God prolong its strength and generosity, may he double its favors to the good folk who deserve them and prostrate its grudging enemies by the duration of its happiness.  May it remain in grace and perpetual favor, as long as the days pass into years, as long as the heart pulsates in the arteries.  May God accord the master our best wishes as long as he still feels the breath of life in him; may he well reward him as long as his noble roots still expand and branch out; may he make his praise a continuously fragrant perfume in the gardens of praise; may he adorn his countenance with the perpetually shining and brilliant fame of his benevolence; may he fulfill all our master’s passions and desires, which cannot be fathomed by words or put down on paper.

Ibn Abi Usaybia obscurely refers to a “separation” and urgently seeks a reconciliation in which he is completely subordinate to Badr al-Dīn:

The mamluk ends by expressing his great longing to serve Badr al-Dīn.  Had he the eloquence of the master shaikh together with Galen’s prose style, he still would have been unable to describe the depth of his yearnings and the magnitude of his suffering because of the separation.  He prays to God the Omnipotent to facilitate their prompt meeting and make it good and beneficial. [10]

Such urgent, personal concern for a relationship would be completely incongruous in a modern biographical reference work.  Ibn Abi Usaybia’s Essential Information Concerning the Classes of Physicians, in contrast, is all about social status and personal relations.

Ibn Abi Usaybia’s keen interest in serving Badr al-Dīn may be related to developments in another of Ibn Abi Usaybia’s relationships.  Amīn al-Dawlah, to whom Ibn Abi Usaybia dedicated his book in 1242, was arrested and imprisoned in 1245.   In 1250, Amīn al-Dawlah was executed by hanging.  In a subsequent edition of his book, Ibn Abi Usaybia described details of his former patron’s hanging and the general lesson:

A witness to the hanging told me that the Vizier was clad in a green prisoner’s gown, and his feet shod in boots of a type which he had never before seen on a hanged man. … Amīn al-Dawlah did not suspect what was awaiting him, for Allāh, the glorious and omnipotent, was already engineering his predestined fate, written in the hidden Book. [11]

In the turbulent sociopolitical circumstances of thirteenth-century Damascus, biographical directories of elites gained extra significance as enduring symbolic goods.  Gaining a good place in such a book was the most secure social status achievable.

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Related posts:

Notes:

[1] For the book and an online English translation, see HP.  The Library of Congress’ transliteration of the author’s name is Ibn Abī Uṣaybiʻah.  Various other transliterations also exists.  Previously I’ve used Ibn Abi Usaibia.  Here I use Ibn Abi Usaybia, which seems closer to the most popular transliteration.

[2] Chamberlain (1994) provides an overview of the status economy in thirteenth-century Damascus.  The Bakhtīshū` family of physicians served Abbasid caliphs for three centuries.  Their marginal ethnic and religious position may have fostered strong intra-familial ties.  Religious-ethnic outsider solidarity probably helped the Bakhtīshū` family to achieve an enduring social position among Abbasid elites.

[3] HP p. 3.  Ibn Abi Usaybia describes Amīn al-Dawlah as a “Samaritan who converted to Islam under the name Kamal al-Dīn.”  HP p. 895.

[4] HP p. 899.  Ibn Abi Usaybia evidently allowed sections of his text to circulate before he transformed his rough draft into a luxurious, bound book.

[5] HP p. 814.

[6] HP p. 813.  Also previous quote.

[7] HP p. 760.  Members of Rashīd al-Dīn Abū Hulaiqa’s family were known as Banū Shākir (sons of Shākir) in honor of the physician Abu Shākir, a celebrated forebear.  HP p. 759.

[8] HP pp. 763-4.  Also previous three quotes.

[9] The Great Hospital in Damascus, founded in 1154 by Nur al-Din Zangi, was also known as the al-Nuri Hospital. Al-Jawad Yunus conquered Damascus in 1237. Ibn Abi Usaybia reports his name as al-Malik al-Gawwād Muzaffar al-Dīn Yūnus ibn Shams al-Dīn Mamdūd ibn al-Malik al-`Ādil.  HP p. 931. The master physician who taught both Ibn Abi Usaybia and Badr al-Dīn was Muhadhdhab al-Dīn `Abd al-Rahīm ibn Al.  On Ibn Abi Usaybia’s personal history, see HP. pp. 549, 749, 879, 880, 899, 907, 908-15.   Ibn Abi Usaybia reports accompanying his father, who was also an elite physician, on various trips.  His father died in 1251.  See HP p. 914.  Ibn Abi Usaybia has a separate entry for his uncle, Rashid al-Dīn `Ālī ibn Khalīfa, and quotes extensively his sayings.  In contrast, Ibn Abi Usaybia didn’t add a separate entry for his father and wrote relatively little about him.

[10] HP pp. 930-4.  Also previous three quotes.

[11] HP p. 898.

References:

Chamberlain, Michael. 1994. Knowledge and social practice in medieval Damascus, 1190-1350. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

HP: Ibn Abi Usaybi’ah, Ahmad ibn al-Qasim. English translation of History of Physicians (4 v.) Translated by Lothar Kopf. 1971. Located in: Modern Manuscripts Collection, History of Medicine Division, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD; MS C 294Online transcription.

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