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Astrology & Astronomy in
Iran and Ancient Mesopotamia
Astrology is an occult practice that originated
in ancient Mesopotamia, Egypt, India and China. The oldest records belong to the
2nd millennium BC, Old Babylonian period. However Sumerians a 1000
years earlier had some understanding of the subject. The astrologers observed
the movements of the planets and assigned them godlike features and powers. Each
planet represented a god or a goddess and ruled certain areas of life. The
astrologers advised the rulers and interpreted the pattern of planetary
movements as omens or signs for understanding the future. The practice is deeply
rooted in the concept of Divination an important aspect of the Mesopotamian
life. Divination was employed as a technique to communicate with gods, who
according to the Mesopotamian religious thought, shaped the destinies of humans
and controlled all events in the cosmos. Divination presupposes supernatural
cause and effect in all perceived phenomena and assumes the cooperation of the
gods in their willingness to reveal their future intentions. Observing the
planets resulted in rudimentary scientific advances in astronomy and the
practitioners of the prophetic aspects of astronomy became astrologers with
great prestige and influence.
The oldest records are astrological omens preserved from the reign of king Ammi-saduqa
(1683-47 BC). Appearance and disappearance of the planet Venus behind the sun
is recorded primarily for interpretation of omens. The observations might have
been important to the regulation of the calendar as well. More records exist
from the later periods and most are from the library and archive of Assurbanipal
at Nineveh (668-627 BC). Celestial omens are discovered in at least 70 tablets
with observations relating to the moon occupying 23 tablets. Meteorological
phenomena thunder, rain, hail and earthquakes are also observed and thought
to have prophetic validity. Six observatories located in different cities including
Babylon itself are mentioned in the tablets. The Babylonian/Assyrian astrology
later took hold in Egypt, Persia and other regions. Remnants of the Babylonian
practice, such as the omens and settings of the planets and stars merged with
Egyptian traditions. Scientists from both nations made accurate measurements
of areas using geometry and developed arithmetic in an algebraic direction.
Mathematical astronomy was used to build multistory ziggurat towers (Choga Zanbil
in Susa is an example built by the Elamite). The towers were usually seven-floor
high and astrologers/astronomers conducted observations of the movements of
heavenly bodies from the rooftop. They recorded empirical observations of the
sun, the moon and the arrangement of the planets and constellations.
Tables with astronomical computations of the
distances between stars have been preserved and contain information on the basic
fixed stars and constellations, their relative positions, periods of the solar
rising and settings, etc. Around 1000BC the astronomical knowledge of the
Babylonians was passed on to the Greeks, who identified 48 constellations. The
Greeks employed geometrical explanations of motion rather than the numerical
relationships the Babylonians used. As a result Greeks progressed in astronomy
and moved slowly into pure sciences while Babylonians remained closer to
vernacular astrology. One of the principal stars in Mesopotamian religion and
astronomy was Venus, personified by the goddess Ishtar in Babylonia and Assyria,
Astarte in Phoenicia, Athtar in Arabia, Astar in Abyssinia (now Ethiopia), and
Ashtart in Canaan and Israel (Persian world Setareh comes from the same origin).
As Ishtar of Erech (in Babylonia) she was
worshipped in connection with the evening star, while as Ishtar of Akkad (also
in Babylonia) she was identified with the morning star. Ishtar was called
"the eldest of heaven and earth", and daughter of Anu, the god of
heaven. She was the goddess of love and beauty, the "Great Mother",
and to the Assyrians, a goddess of hunting and war. Greeks identified Ishtar
with the goddess Venus. The earliest formal calendar in Mesopotamia was probably
the Sumerian lunar calendar. The lunar calendar required intercalation
(insertion of days or other portions of time in calendars) and was later
improved by the Babylonia priests. They intercalated months according to an
8-year cycle when they would add 3 extra months. The calendar months started
with the direct observation of a new crescent moon at dusk. Today Judaism and
Islamic calendars still use the same principle that the new calendar day begins
at sunset. The constellations of the Zodiac preserved at the British Museum from
this period have several familiar representations. The Bull, the Tortoise, a
female figure with wings, the Scorpion, the Archer and the Goat-fish are all
portrayed on stones, cylinder seals and gems. Calendars extensively utilized all
such information and were both civil and religious institutions. Their origin
was attributed to be the work of Gods and Goddesses.
The time of Persian dominion, particularly from
the last quarter of the fifth century BC until the Greek conquest was the most
creative period for Babylonian mathematical astronomy. Astronomical schools
existed in Uruk, Sippar, Babylon and Borsippa. The Achaemenians maintained an
atmosphere favorable to the development of science. Under Darius a great
Babylonian astronomer, Nabu-rimanni (Naburianus), was instructed to carry out a
study of lunar eclipses and arrived at calculations more accurate than those of
Ptolemy and Copernicus. His works were translated and used for many centuries by
all including Seleucid and Parthian rulers of Persia. His picture of Heavens was
borrowed by the Greeks and eventually reached the famous Greek scientist
Democritus. The terminology employed by Naburianu includes spheres, orbits,
ecliptic, inclination, celestial equator, poles, circular motion, revolutions,
retrogression, moon’s highest north and south latitudes. All were used
extensively by Greek astronomers including the brilliant Eudoxus of Cnidus,
precursor of Euclid. Another well known Babylonian astronomer under Persian
rule, Kidinnu (Cidenas) of Sippar, distinguished the solar year from the lunar,
discovered the precession of the equinoxes and arrived at an exact calculation
of the length of the year, making an error of only 7 minutes, 41 seconds.
The advances enabled the astronomers to draw
almanacs for the ensuing year. Almanacs in which eclipses of the sun and the
moon, and times of the new and full moon were accurately noted. Also the
positions of the planets throughout the year were determined using astrological
charts. There are tablets that set forth observations of Jupiter from the 43rd
year of the reign of Artaxerexes II to the thirteenth year of Alexander the
Great. Some old Persian names in astronomy have barely survived. The names of
the four "Royal Stars" which were standing guard at the equinoxes and
solstices still resembles the modern ones. Aldebaran, Watcher of the East;
Regulus, Watcher of the North; Antares, watcher of the West; Fomalhaut, Watcher
of the South were used by the Persians. Today’s equivalents would probably be
Alcoyne, Regulus, Albireo and Bungula.
Despite all advances astronomy remained
inseparably linked to astrology. Astronomical texts, in particular, contain
allusions to the ties between the stars and various illnesses. By the end of the
Achaemenid period in Babylonia and other territories under Persian rule science
had declined and the potential for its development was stalled. Science was no
opponent of religion in the ancient times. In fact it developed in the shadow of
temples and was influenced by religion.
By this time the dominance of religious
concepts hindered new methods and modes of thought for understanding nature. The
Greeks introduced the next major change. They launched new ideas that
revolutionized science in general including astronomy and astrology. Empiricism
and experimentation were encouraged and metaphysical basis of natural phenomenon
was rejected. They adopted Babylonian, Egyptian and Persian knowledge, mixed it
with Greek thought, developed it and through the medium of Greek made them
universal.
The Egyptian contribution to
astronomy/astrology was immense. The latter Hellenistic (Greek) astrologers of
Egypt attribute the root of their discipline to Nechepso and Petosiris, an
Egyptian pharaoh and his high priest. By 1st century BC the entire
apparatus of horoscopic astrology was in place and the language of Egyptian
astrology had become Greek. The famed Greek astrologer, Valens traveled
throughout Egypt and studied with at least a few living teachers of the old
traditions and recorded his observations. Originally the astrology texts were
written in Coptic, the last form of ancient Egyptian, but no clear reference to
any has survived. The Hellenistic Egypt systematized the omen materials of the
earlier Babylonian astrologers. Many astrological methods, such as the use of 12
houses, lots and aspects were developed at this time and spread throughout the
area by the Greek writers. By the 2nd century BC the Greek scientist
Hipparchus developed the mathematical astronomy that was given its final form by
Ptolemy in the second century AD. Ptolemy’s work in turn influenced all
astrological/astronomical works till the advent of new sciences, including
Islamic celestial concepts and astronomical studies of the Middle Ages.
After 126 BC, the Parthians, rose up against
the Seleucids, the Greek successors to Alexander the Great, and re-conquered
most of the Persian Empire. The Parthians were hostile to the Greeks (and later
the Romans) and effectively cut off communication between the main body of
Hellenistic peoples and Persians plus the Bactrian Greeks in Afghanistan and
Pakistan. This created a new school of astronomy/astrology independent from the
Greek and Egyptian traditions. There are no material left from this time but its
impact on Indian and Hebrew astrology has left its mark. There are fragments in
Hebrew astrology that are unlike the Hellenistic astrology that was emerging at
the same time. The emphasis of Light and Dark recalls the Zoroastrian religion
and the impact of Persian astrology. One can compare such literature to similar
material at the end of the Indian astrological classic, Parashara’s Hora
Sastra. This omen-like material of reading bodily characteristics as personality
or morality traits seems to have also been influenced by the Persian astrology.
There are also similarities between Indian and Persian astrological
history/narrative. This is the account of dynastic history in terms of cyclical
periods of varying lengths of time governed by the stars and planets. Many
stories from Sassanian period (Karnameh Ardeshir Papakan) and Shahnameh contain
such dynastic history and more were produced after the Arab conquest (Abu
Sahl’s Kitab an-Nahmutan). However despite hostility by the Parthians, Greek
sciences, arts and philosophy remained and with the coming of Sassanian rulers
they reached a new peak and advances were made in the field.
The Sassanian Empire of Persia (226-642), with
its state religion of Zoroastrianism, saw itself as heir to the legendary
Achaemenid dynasty and their civilization, and developed an ideology and culture
to reflect and promote this image. An imposing succession of Sassanian emperors
actively engaged in collecting, recording and editing the historical and
religious record of their civilization and the neighboring countries. According
to Dinkard, the Zoroastrian canon in Pahlavi, Book IV, "all knowledge and
sciences was received by Zoroaster from Ahura Mazda and transmitted through
Avesta. Destruction of Persia by Alexander dispersed the texts throughout the
world. The Greeks, the Egyptians derived all their knowledge and science from
these dispersed texts. Subsequently Sassanian emperors took it upon themselves
to collect all these texts from all over". The sources name, Byzantium,
India and China as the main centers where book collecting was taking place.
Such activities reached their peak at the time
of Khosro I (Anoshirvan, (531-578). Greek Philosophers, Syriac speaking
Christians and Nestorians fleeing persecution by the Byzantines (Orthodox
Christians of Constantinople) were received by Anoshirvan and were commissioned
to translate Greek and Syriac texts into Pahlavi. Paul the Persian dedicated
Works of logic to the king. The Greek philosopher Priscianus Lydus wrote a book
in response to the king’s questions on a number of subjects in Aristotelian
physics, theory of the soul, meteorology and biology. Dinkard itself shows
familiarity with all these topics, especially Aristotelian physics. Books in
medicine, Ptolemy’s Almagest (A collection of mathematical anthology) and
other works in astronomy, Aristotle’s Organon and a number of texts in crafts
and skills were translated from Greek sources. Indian scientific material in
astronomy, astrology, mathematics and medicine were also translated into
Pahlavi. The Book of Nativities (Kitab al-Mawalid) was a five part astronomical
work that was translated from Pahlavi into Arabic in 750. It was ascribed to
Zoroaster and according to the Iranian historian Sa’id ibn-Khurasan-Khurreh,
"it was translated by Mahankard, an Iranian scholar from among the books of
Zoroaster".
Astrological history was important to Sassanian
Imperial ideology. The stars decreed the fate of the mortals and the kings
expected to receive special protection. Shahnameh is full of stories where the
fate of the heroes is sealed in the astronomical charts read at the time of
their birth. Ptolemy and Greek astronomy was very well known in Iran. To what
extent astronomy was separated from astrology is not clear and very likely
astrology would have dominated the field. The Muslim Arabs destroyed almost all
of the literature of the Zoroastrian Sassanian including their astrological
works. However there are some clues as to what their astrology might have been.
Most of the greatest astrologers in the Islamic era were Persians! The astrology
Iranians taught is quite different from both the Hindu and the Greek traditions.
It had orbs of aspect, the Great Cycles of Jupiter and Saturn, all of the
elaborate systems of planetary interactions such as Frustration, Abscission of
Light, Translation of Light and so forth. While Muslim era astrology owes a
large debt to Hellenistic astrology, it is also clear that in the two or three
centuries between the last known Hellenistic astrologers and the first known
Muslim ones, something new had come into the field. This was very likely the
Persian stream of astrology.
The famous university and the hospital at
Jundaishapur built earlier reached its peak at Anoshirvan’s time. In
Jundaishapur Greek (Egyptian & Byzantine), Indian and Persian scientific
traditions were assimilated. Indian scientific material in astronomy, astrology,
mathematics and medicine were translated into Pahlavi along with Chinese Herbal
medicine and religion.
The books were kept at the university and the
royal libraries and Greek sciences flourished. The Arab conquest in 7th
century introduced many changes. The destruction of major cities, libraries, and
eventual closure of universities in Alexandria, Antioch and Persia in the long
run stalled development of science and technology except for the first 300
years.
The destruction of such major centers of
learning with the compulsory use of Arabic made it clear to the scholars and
intellectuals that all pre-Islamic knowledge and national identities were in
danger of total obliteration and they had to be preserved. Massive and heroic
efforts were made to save the ancient knowledge. The result was the formation of
a dynamic and significant translation movement for almost two hundred years till
10th century. The movement started in Damascus in Umayyad times and
flourished in Abbasid Baghdad (754 AD). This is the period that is known as the
Golden age of Islam. All major Greek Syriac Persian and some Indian texts were
translated into Arabic and Neo Persian. Pre-Abbasid translations from Pahlavi
included major religious, literary and historical texts. Greek and Indian texts
translated into Pahlavi were re-translated into Arabic and Neo Persian.
With the Abbasid the translation of scientific
texts was added. Nawbakht the court astrologer and his son Abu Sahl and other
colleagues Fazari and Umar Tabari and many others sponsored by the Barmakid
family (the chief ministers to the early Abbasids who were murdered later)
translated and promoted Pahlavi texts into Arabic and Neo-Persian. They were all
Iranians and aimed to incorporate Sassanian culture into Abbasid ideology and
guarantee the continuity of the Iranian heritage. Christian and Jewish learned
families of Sassanian Persia such as Bukhtishu and Hunyan families were also
great translators of Syriac Greek Pahlavi and other texts into Arabic. Both
families had served at Jundaishapur University for generations and were
instrumental in founding the Adudi Hospital and Medical School in Baghdad.
Baghdad a suburb of Ctesiphon was chosen as the site of the New Abbasid capital
(Baghdad is Persian and means God given, it was founded in 762 by Mansur). The
Royal library was based on the Sassanian model and was called the same name
(house of knowledge, Bayt al-Hikmat). Even at Caliph Mamun’s time when the
persecution of Iranian elements had started, the director of the library was the
great Persian nationalist and Pahlavi expert, Musa Sahl ibn-Harun (9th
century). The famed Iranian mathematician and astronomer Musa Khawrazmi was
employed full time by the library at this time. Ibn-an-Nadim, the author of
Al-fihrist (the index), one of the most famous associates of the library listed
all the books and their origins in his famous index. A great part of the index
has survived and is a valuable source of information.
Before Islam, Hellenistic Greek knowledge was
preserved in Alexandria, home of Ptolemy (85 to 165 AD). His great Book
"Mathematike Syntaxis" was translated into Arabic and was titled the
"Greatest," Greek "Megiste," which became
"al-majisti," (Almagest in Latin). Ptolemy’s knowledge was kept
alive by Hypatia (355? - 415AD), the first great woman of science. She was a
well-known professor of philosophy, mathematics and astronomy at Alexandria.
With her father Theon, she edited and wrote commentaries on Ptolemy’s work.
Some sources mention that Caliph Mamun acquired Almagest (813-833) in a peace
treaty with the Byzantine emperor. Once translated into Arabic it influenced
Islamic and Western cosmology, astronomy and astrology for centuries to come.
Muslims had great interest in astronomy in
order to find the direction to Mecca for praying. While latitude (north-south
location) is easy to find, longitude (east-west location) requires accurate
time. Without accurate portable clocks, longitude can only be found by sighting
a star in two different places at the same time. A lunar eclipse gives
astronomers in two places a natural way of adjusting their clocks to the same
time. The great Iranian scientist and mathematician Khawrazmi was the first to
publish astronomical tables to address the quest.
In fact most of the major scientists of the era
were non-Arabs and mostly Iranians and though they traveled extensively in the
Muslim world many carried out their research in Iranian territories.
Khawrazmi’s tables were used to find days of new moon, rising and setting
times of the sun, moon, and planets, and to predict eclipses. Because they made
these calculations easier, the tables served the same function as today’s
computers. He also adapted Ptolemy’s Geographike Hyphegesis and composed the
first independent textbook for algebra; as a result his name survives in the
term algorithm (Al Khawrazmi) for the formulation of a calculating method. His
book of tables introduced the Indian system of decimal numbers to the west. The
tables were laborsaving devices for astronomical calculations. He also improved
astrolabe (Ostorlab), Ptolemy had used the device for observing and computing
but its use was limited before it was improved. Trigonometry was improved since
it was essential to the computation of planetary orbits as well as to
terrestrial mapping, and consequently medieval ‘qibla’ tables attained great
accuracy.
Major observatories were built in Persian
territories such as Maragheh and Samarkand over the centuries. At these
observatories, astronomers gathered to refine Ptolemy’s coordinates for the
stars and, eventually, to revise Ptolemy’s catalog of stars. His catalogue
gave the positions of 1,022 stars by magnitude, or brightness. The l0th-century
astronomer Al Sufi (Azophil) heavily revised the book. Azophil’s Book of the
fixed Stars is the earliest illustrated astronomical manuscript known; the
earliest copy, the work of the author’s son, is dated 1009 and the author
expressly states that he traced the drawings from a celestial globe. The Persian
astrologer Abu Ma’shar Balkhi (787-886 AD) was one of the most influential
figures in the field. His works were translated into Latin in the twelve century
and exerted a powerful influence on the development of Western Astrology. A
student of al-Kindi (Latin Alkindi) his works represent a fusion of Sabian,
Hermeticism, Persian chronology and Islamic religious doctrine plus Greek
science and Mesopotamian astrology. He was an extremely successful practitioner
of the Art of astrology and traveled throughout the area in service to numerous
Indian, Persian, Arab, and Egyptian heads of states. With his Iranian student
Abu Sa’id Schadsan, who recorded his teachers answers and astrological deeds
they were very popular in Medieval Europe’s scholarly circles.
Biruni was another Brilliant Iranian scientist
who has made great contributions to sciences in general and mathematics and
astronomy in particular. Born in Khawrazm (ruled by Iranian Samanids) by 990 AD,
at age 17 he computed the latitude of his city Kath by observing the maximum
altitude of the sun and shortly afterwards produced his Cartography, a work on
map projections. He corrected Khujandi’s astronomical calculations at the
observatory in Ray near Tehran. In Gilan near Caspian area he observed a major
eclipse in 997 and by comparing his results with another astronomer in Baghdad
was able to calculate the difference in longitude between the cities.
BY 1000 AD he was observing more eclipses at
Gurgan and dedicated his work Chronology to Qabus, the Ziyarid ruler of the
area. The Chronology refers to seven earlier works which he had written: one on
the decimal system, one on the astrolabe, one on astronomical observations,
three on astrology, and two on history. He also produced major astronomical
works for the Ghaznavid ruler, Sultan Mahmoud. Biruni’s contribution to
science, astronomy and social studies are enormous. His massive work India
covers many aspects of life in this country while travelling with Mahmoud’s
army. He describes literature, religion and philosophy of India, its caste
system and marriage customs. He then studies the Indian systems of writing and
numbers before going on to examine the geography of the country. He studied
Indian literature in the original, translating several Sanskrit texts into
Arabic. He also wrote several treatises devoted to Indian astronomy,
mathematics, geography and grammar. He produced around 146 works in his lifetime
(around 13000 pages) covering all the sciences of his time and made corrections
to Ptolemy’s calculations. He shows no prejudice against different religions
or sects and very strongly criticized the Arab conquers for destroying the
ancient books and texts at the libraries in the cities. ‘Shadows’ is one of
his most important texts written around 1021. The contents of the work include
the Arabic nomenclature of shade and shadows, applications of the shadow
functions to the astrolabe and to other instruments, shadow observations for the
solution of various astronomical problems, and the shadow-determined times of
Muslim prayers. The book is an extremely important source for the history of
mathematics, astronomy, and physics.
He made valuable contributions to theoretical
and practical arithmetic, summation of series, combinatorial analysis, the rule
of three, irrational numbers, ratio theory, algebraic definitions, method of
solving algebraic equations, geometry, Archimeds’ theorems, trigonometry, the
sine theorem in the plane, and solving spherical triangles. He corresponded with
other brilliant Iranian scientists Avicenna (Ibn Sina) and Sijzi about various
scientific topics such as heat and light. One fifth of his works have survived.
His most important astrological textbook, ‘Elements of the Art of Astrology’
was published in Ghaznah in 1029. It included detailed rules for the
interpretation of nativity and horoscope charts for the time of birth.
Avicenna himself was an accomplished
mathematician with a number of works in astronomy. He lived during the Samanid,
Buyid and Ghaznavid rulers of Iran and worked as physician at a number of
courts. His famous book ‘The Book of Healing’ is a scientific encyclopaedia
covering logic, natural sciences, psychology, geometry, astronomy, arithmetic
and music. One quarter of the work is devoted to mathematics with astronomy and
music included as branches of mathematics. He divided astronomy into
astronomical and geographical tables, and the calendar. Ibn Sina made
astronomical observations at Isfahan and Hamden. He observed Venus as a spot
against the surface of the Sun and correctly deduced that Venus must be closer
to the Earth than the Sun. He invented an instrument for observing the
coordinates of a star. Another of Avicenna’s contributions to astronomy was
his attempt to calculate the difference in longitude between Baghdad and Gurgan
by observing the moon at the later location.
Omar Khayyam (1044-1123ad) is another
celebrated Iranian mathematician, philosopher, astronomer and poet who made
great contributions to both science and literature. He was born at Nishapur, the
provincial capital of Khurasan. He also visited Samarqand and other centers of
learning such as Bukhara, Balkh and Isfahan. He was an expert in Algebra and
made an attempt to classify most algebraic equations.
He has been considered to be the first to find
the binomial theorem and determine binomial coefficients. In geometry, he
studied generalities of Euclid and contributed to the theory of parallel lines.
He was invited to Ray by the Saljuq Sultan, Malikshah to work at the new
observatory around 1074 and started the task of producing a new and more
accurate solar calendar. His calendar is still in use today and it called Jalali
calendar. It had an error of one day in 3770 years and was thus superior to the
Georgian calendar (error of 1 day in 3330 years). His contributions to other
fields of science include a study of generalities of Euclid, development of
methods for the accurate determination of specific gravity. He became very
popular in the Western world, when Edward Fitzgerald in 1839 published an
English translation of his (quatrains) Ruba’iyat.
The famous Iranian mathematician, Nasir Din
Tusi, founded the observatory at Maragha in 1259, one-year after the fall of
Baghdad to the Mongols. He was born in Tus, Khurasan in 1201 and studied all
subjects popular at the time. In 1262, he improved the observatory by building a
twelve-foot wall quadrant made from copper. He used many instruments including
astrolabes, representations of constellation, epicycles and shapes of spheres
for various calculations.
The main theoretical work done at the
observatory involved simplifying the Ptolemy’s model and bringing it into line
with the Aristotelian model, which postulated uniform circular orbits for the
planets. Although they were often misguided, they made very important
contributions; Ibn Shatir [early 14th century] used the information
and came up with models for the movement of the Moon and of Mercury that are
strikingly similar to those of Copernicus. Tusi invented new instruments for
observing the stars accurately. He also invented an ingenious mechanical device
(torquetum) for computing star positions and discovered how a special pair of
circles (called a Tusi couple) can draw a straight line. Tusi was one of the
greatest scientists, mathematicians, astronomers, philosophers, theologians and
physicians of his time. He was a prolific writer. He wrote many treatises on
such varied subjects as Algebra, Arithmetic, Trigonometry, Geometry, Logic,
Metaphysics, Medicine, Ethics, and theology. Ilkhanid ruler Hulaku Khan
appointed him as one of his ministers. Tusi produced a very accurate table of
planetary movements and a star catalogue, and he published it under the title
"Zij-Ilkhani" which was dedicated to the Khan and was in use till 15th
century. The tables were developed from observations over a twelve-year period
and were primarily based on original observations.
Tusi also pointed out several serious
shortcomings in Ptolemy’s models. His critique of Ptolemy’s theories
convinced future astronomers of the need to develop an alternative model ending
in Copernicus discoveries. Tusi pioneered spherical trigonometry and one of his
most important mathematical contributions was the treatment of trigonometry as a
new mathematical discipline and revived the philosophy of Avicenna. He wrote his
works in Arabic and Persian, sixty-four treatises have survived. These were
translated into Latin and other European languages in the Middle Ages. Among
Tusi’s well-known Iranian students are Nizam Araj, who wrote a commentary on
the Almagest, and Qutb ad-Din Shirazi who gave the first satisfactory
mathematical explanation of the rainbow.
Despite great emphasis on astronomy, astrology
also had a strong presence. Some scholars denied any scientific base for it.
Biruni himself despite numerous works on the subject did not believe in it.
Other writers ridiculed fortunetellers and magicians during this period and
superstition and blind fate are criticized by the likes of Biruni, Ibn Sina and
Ibn Khaldun (1406 AD). The later makes a clear distinction between prophecy, a
divine act bestowed upon chosen saints and prophets as compared to fortune
telling a fake and deceitful act. The astrologers from the time of Mansur when
Baghdad was first built used it extensively. In fact the site and the time was
chosen by advice from Iranian court astrologer Nawbakht with help from Fazari
and Tabari. These astrologers recommended 30th of July 762 as a
blessed time to lay the foundation for Baghdad. Mansur accepted the verdict and
it was Nawbakht who also consulted the charts and advised him of the future
revolt by Ibrahim ibn-Abdullah (762-63 AD). "Astrology made its gradual
appearance in the public life of Arab rulers as a result of the infiltration of
Sassanian cultural patterns" and all the subsequent rulers in the area used
it in both its scientific and popular forms.
The Islamic principle of pre-destiny boasted
the practice. Muslims believed that all their lives and actions were written
down from the beginning of creation in the sacred tablet called ‘Lowh e
Mahfuz’. Only Allah knew every ones’ destiny but the astrologers could gain
some insight by learning the subject. Star charts became very popular and people
consulted the charts for everything from choosing the appropriate time (Saad)
for a wedding to bad omen times called Nahs and fortune telling. Such practices
were very common in Iran till the beginning of 20th century. Legend
has it that the great astronomer Tusi consulted the stars and advised the ruler,
Rukn Din Khurshah, that in order to save the Ismailis, he should surrender his
castles in Rudbar, Alamut and other areas to the invading Mongols. If true, the
stars saved him for a little while around 1257, but shortly after, the ruler and
the rest of the Ismaili community and their castles and provinces were virtually
reduced to ashes by Hulaku the Mongol ruler. Had they stayed in their castles
they might not have vanished with such ease!
By the end of the 11th century AD,
the Golden Age of Islam was over for many reasons including political/economic
stagnation and foreign attacks. The great families who supported the translation
movement and promoted advancement of science and philosophy in Persian,
Byzantine and other territories were eradicated. The Muslim schools were fully
established and were dominated by the fundamentalists where political ideology
emphasized fate over reason. The Hellenistic cultures of Egypt, Syria and the
Holy Land with its’ Greek and Syriac elements and the Byzantine (Turkey) did
not survive. They lost their language and their culture of scientific tradition
and enquiry.
Persian culture partially survived but
empirical knowledge and scientific traditions were lost. Astronomy like other
branches of empirical science was virtually vanished and like medicine was only
revived in 20th century Iran. Astrologers on the other hand dominated
every aspect of life including love and sexuality. With the coming of
monotheistic religions i.e. Judo-Christianity and Islam the ancient goddesses of
love, sexuality and fertility were totally eliminated. Their temples were closed
down and communal acts and festivities to ease tension were banned. People
particularly women turned to fortunetellers and soothsayers for comfort.
Christianity had banned such practices but Islamic ideas of pre-destiny
encouraged it.
Astrologers by consulting charts and stars
prescribed remedies, charms, and talisman and made haphazard recommendations.
Most were not educated as the ancient or classical astrologers used to be and
incorporated everything including magic and were basically charlatans. Exclusion
of women from public life during the Islamic period, polygamy and women’s’
inferior legal status created unemployment, psychological disorders (for both
males and females), insecurity and as a result there was great demand for
astrologers and fortunetellers by women. In fact one of the few employment
opportunities left to women at this time was fortune telling. However such women
were rarely literate and could not use star charts like their trained male
counterparts. As a result they had lower status and were paid less. By 19th
century very few astrologers were properly trained with no observatories. The
very few that existed remained at the service of the courts. There are many
documents and star charts from 18th and 19thcentury Iran. They belong
to the old aristocratic families of the time.
The practice of writing a chart for the male
newborns of the grand families was common till the end of the 19th
century. Astronomy was revived in the 20th century and had become an
important scientific discipline. However the lack of research facilities and
progressive institutions has hindered its growth. The country has no
international standing other than many brilliant Iranian individuals working in
first class facilities in Europe and North America.
It is interesting to note that since the
Islamic revolution fortune telling and astrology that was ridiculed in the
earlier part of the 20th century has made a comeback in Iran. Along
with mystical cults, believing in supernatural and seeking help from divinity
has become popular particularly amongst women including educated ones. Insecure,
emotionally drained, legally, socially and economically inferior once again
women are seeking comfort with fortunetellers and astrologers. Western astrology
is also incorporated and horoscopes, taro cards, Chinese and Indian astrology
and their practitioners are read widely and their principles are followed.
Internationally such trends are enjoying a comeback as well but their popularity
in Iran no doubt to a large extent is a result of the tragic events of the last
two decades.
Dec. 2001, Massoume Price massoume@hotmail.com
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