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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 03, 2012 14:48 UTC (39 seconds ago)

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Abul-Hasan Kūshyār ibn Labbān ibn Bashahri Gilani (971 - 1029), also known as Kūshyār Gīlānī (Persian: کوشیار گیلانی), was a Persian mathematician, geographer, and astronomer from Jilan, a.k.a. Gilan, south of the Caspian Sea, Iran.

His main work was probably done about the beginning of the eleventh century, and seems to have taken an important part in the elaboration of trigonometry. For example, he continued the investigations of Abul Wáfa, and devoted much space to this in his zij (or collection of tables) az-Zīj al-Jamī wal-Baligh ("the comprehensive and mature tables"), which incorporated the improved values of the planetary apogees observed by al-Battani.[1] The tables were translated into Persian before the end of the century. He wrote also an astrological introduction and an arithmetic treatise (extant in Hebrew).

He was the teacher of Ahmad Nasawi. He is thought to have died in Baghdad.

Contents

Notes

  1. ^ E. S. Kennedy, A Survey of Islamic Astronomical Tables, (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series, 46, 2), Philadelphia, 1956, pp. 3, 34-5.

Sources

  • H. Suter: Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber (83, 235, 1900; 168, 1902).
  • M Levey and M Petruck (trs.), Kushyar ibn Labban, Principles of Hindu reckoning (Madison, 1965).

See also

External links








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