2017-06-30T09:39:50Z
2017-06-30T09:39:50Z
2012
2017-06-30T09:39:50Z
The Tuniso-Andalusian astronomer and polymath Abý þAbd All×h Mu¬ammad b. Ibr×h÷m b. þAl÷ b. A¬mad (Mu¬ammad?) b. Yýsuf al-Murs÷ al-Andalus÷ al-Týnis÷ al-Aws÷, known as Ibn al-Raqq×m, is considered by Ibn al-KhaÐ÷b1 to belong to "the people of Murcia" (min ahl Mursiya). Since he died in Granada the 21st ½afar 715 (26th May 1315) at an advanced age (Ibn al-KhaÐ÷b) and a son of his was born in Tunis in 1266 (see below), he may have been born in Murcia - a city conquered in 1266 by James I of Aragon for his nephew Alfonso X, king of Castile ca. 1246. Before 1266 Ibn al-Raqq×m seems to have migrated to Tunis, and Ibn al-KhaÐ÷b says that he lived in Tunis and in Bij×ya, which belonged at that time to the kingdom of the ©af½ides of Tunis. Ibn al-KhaÐ÷b also states that he migrated from Bij×ya to Granada during the reign of Mu¬ammad II (1273-1302). We might conjecture that he moved to Granada after 1288-89 (the date of the table of the lunar mansions2 in the Sh×mil Z÷j, compiled in Bij×ya), or even after 1290 (the date calculated using the table of the solar equation extant in the Sh×mil and in the Qaw÷m, on which see more below). Another chronological detail can be obtained from the horoscope Ibn al-Raqq×m cast on the occasion of the birth of a son of his who was, beyond any doubt, born in Ifr÷qiy× in 685/1266).
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Astronomia antiga; Història de la ciència; Ancient astronomy; History of sciences
Universitat de Barcelona
Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.raco.cat/index.php/Suhayl/article/view/267264
Suhayl. Journal for the History of the Exact and Natural Sciences in Islam, 2012, vol. 11, p. 189-229
cc-by-nc-nd (c) Bellver Martínez, José et al., 2012
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es
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