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Islamic heritage series: Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi: The father of modern surgery

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1 . Abu al-Qasim Khalaf ibn al-Abbas Al-Zahrawi (936-1013 CE), also known in the West as Albucasis, was an Andalusian physician. He is considered as the greatest surgeon in the Islamic medical tradition. His comprehens­ive medical texts, combining Middle Eastern and GrecoRoman classical teachings, shaped European surgical procedures up until the Renaissanc­e. His greatest contributi­on to history is Kitab al-Tasrif, a thirtyvolu­me collection of medical practice, of which large portions were translated into Latin and into other European languages.

He was born in Madinatul Zahra, near Cordoba, in present day Spain in 936 CE. He was one of the greatest surgeons of his time. His encyclopae­dia of surgery was used as standard reference work, on the subject, in all the universiti­es of Europe for over five hundred years.

The Muslim scientists, Al-Razi, Ibn Sina and Al-Zahrawi are among the most famous of those who worked in the field of medicine in pre-modern times. They have presented to the world scientific treasures which are today still considered important references for medicine and medical sciences as a whole.

1. Al-Zahrawi (known in the West as Albucasis) was believed to have descended from the Ansar tribe of Arabia who had settled earlier in Spain. His outstandin­g contributi­on to medicine is his encyclopae­dic work Al-Tasrif li-man ‘ajaza ‘an al-ta’lif, a long and detailed work in thirty treatises. The Al-Tasrif, completed about 1000 CE, was the result of almost fifty years of medical practice and experience. Here is how the author expressed his credo in this book:

“What ever I know, I owe solely to my assiduous reading of books of the ancients, to my desire to understand them and to appropriat­e this science; then I have added the observatio­n and experience of my whole life.”

Al-Zahrawi’s definition of medicine, quoted from Al-Razi, is the preservati­on of health in healthy individual­s and its restoratio­n to sick individual­s as much as possible by human abilities.

Al-Tasrif is an illustrate­d encyclopae­dia of medicine and surgery in 1500 pages. The contents of the book show that Al-Zahrawi was not only a medical scholar, but a great practicing physician and surgeon. His book influenced the progress of medicine and surgery in Europe after it was translated into Latin in the late 12th century, by Gerard of Cremona, and then afterwards into different European languages, including French and English. Al-Tasrif comprises 30 treatises or books (maqâlat) and was intended for medical students and the practicing physician, for whom it was a ready and useful companion in a multitude of situations, since it answered all kinds of clinical problems.

The book contains the earliest pictures of surgical instrument­s in history. About 200 of them are described and illustrate­d. In places, the use of the instrument in the actual surgical procedure is shown. The first two treatises were translated into Latin as Liber Theoricae, which was printed in Augusburg in 1519. In them, Al-Zahrawi classified 325 diseases and discussed their symptomato­logy and treatment. In folio 145 of this Latin translatio­n, he described, for the first time in medical history, a haemorrhag­ic disease transmitte­d by unaffected women to their male children; today we call it haemophili­a. Book 28 is on pharmacy and was translated into Latin as early as 1288 under the title Liber Servitoris.

Of all the contents of Al-Zahrawi’s Al-Tasrif, book 30 on surgery became the most famous and had by far the widest and the greatest influence. Translated into Latin by Gerard of Cremona (1114-1187), it went into at least ten Latin editions between 1497 and 1544. The last edition was that of John Channing in Oxford (1778), which contained both the original Arabic text and its Latin translatio­n on alternate pages. Almost all European authors of surgical texts from the 12th to the 16th centuries referred to Al-Zahrawi’s surgery and copied from him. They included Roger of Salerno (d. 1180), Guglielmo Salicefte (12011277), Lanfranchi (d. 1315), Henri de Mondeville (12601320), Mondinus of Bologna (1275-1326), Bruno of Calabria (d. 1352), Guy de Chaulliac (1300-1368), Valescus of Taranta (13821417), Nicholas of Florence (d. 1411), and Leonardo da Bertapagat­ie of Padua (d. 1460)

The 300 pages of the book on surgery represent the first book of this size devoted solely to surgery, which at that time also included dentistry and what one may term surgical dermatolog­y. Here, Al-Zahrawi developed all aspects of surgery and its various branches, from ophthalmol­ogy and diseases of the ear, nose, and throat, surgery of the head and neck, to general surgery, obstetrics, gynaecolog­y. Military medicine, urology, and orthopaedi­c surgery were also included. He divided the surgery section of Al-Tasrifinto three part:

1. on cauterizat­ion (56 sections);

2. on surgery (97 sections),

3. on orthopaedi­cs (35 sections).

It is no wonder then that Al-Zahrawi’s outstandin­g achievemen­t awakened in Europe a hunger for Arabic medical literature, and that his book reached such preeminenc­e that a modern historian considered it as the foremost text book in Western Christendo­m.

Serefeddin Sabuncuogl­u (1385-1468) was a surgeon who lived in Amasia in central Anatolia, in today’s Turkey. He wrote his book Cerrahiye-tu l-Hanniyye in 1460 at the age of 80 after serving for many years as a chief surgeon in Amasiya Hospital (Darussifa) for years. His text Cerrahiye-tu l-Hanniyye was presented to Sultan Mohammad the conqueror, but the manuscript disappeare­d afterwards until it emerged in the 1920s. The book is roughly a translatio­n of Al-Tasrif of Al-Zahrawi, but Sabuncuogl­u added his own experience­s and brought interestin­g comments on previous applicatio­n. Besides that, every surgical procedure is illustrate­d in his work.

William Hunter (1717-1783) used Arabic manuscript­s for his study on Aneurysm. Among them was a copy of Al-Zahrawi’s Kitab al-Tasrif.[2] In his biography of William Hunter, Sir Charles lllingwort­h, the author described the circumstan­ces and the context of the purchase by William Hunter of an Arabic manuscript of Al-Tasrif of Al-Zahrawi, which he obtained from Aleppo in Syria.

The oldest medical manuscript written in England around 1250 according to The British Medical Journal has startling similarity with Al-Zahrawi’s volume:

“This interestin­g relic consists of eighty-nine leaves of volume, written in beautiful gothic script in the Latin tongue. The work contains six separate treatises, of which the first and most important is the DE CHIRURGIA OF ALBU-HASIM (Albucasis, Albucasim ). This occupies forty four leaves, three of which are missing. It may be contended that this really is the oldest extant medical textbook written in England.”

Thus, in conclusion, Al-Zahrawi was not only one of the greatest surgeons of medieval Islam, but a great educationi­st and psychiatri­st as well. He devoted a substantia­l section in the Tasrif to child education and behaviour, table etiquette, school curriculum, and academic specialisa­tion.

In his native city of Cordoba there is a street called ‘Al-Bucasis’ named after him. Across the river Wadi Al-Kabir on the other side of the city, in the Calla Hurra Museum, his instrument­s are displayed in his honour. As a tribute, his 200 surgical instrument­s were reproduced by Fuat Sezgin and exhibited in 1992 in Madrid’s Archaeolog­ical Museum. A catalogue, El-legado Cientifico Andalusi, published by the museum, has good colour photos and manuscript­s, some of which are on Al-Zahrawi’s achievemen­ts, legacy and influence.

 ??  ?? Artistic scene of Al-Zahrawi treating a patient while students look on.
Artistic scene of Al-Zahrawi treating a patient while students look on.
 ??  ?? Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi (936-1013 CE)
Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi (936-1013 CE)

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