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Da'ud Abu al-Fadl: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Karaite Jewish physician and scholar}}
'''Da'ud Abu al-Fadl''' (1161–1242) was a [[Karaite Judaism|Karaite]] [[Jew]]ish physician who lived in [[Egypt]] in the twelfth century CE. He born at [[Cairo]] in 1161 and died there about 1242. Having studied medicine under the Jewish physician [[Hibat Allah ibn Jami]], and under [[Abu al-Fafa'il ibn Naqid]], he became the court physician of the sultan [[Al-Adil I|al-Malik al-'Adil Abu Bakr ibn Ayyub]], the brother and successor of [[Saladin]]. He was also chief professor at the [[al-Nasiri]] hospital at Cairo, where he had a great many pupils, among them being the historian [[ibn Abi Usaibiyyah]]. The latter declared that Abu al-Fadl was the most skillful physician of the time and that his success in curing the sick was miraculous. Abu al-Fadl was the author of an Arabic pharmacopoeia in twelve chapters, entitled ''Aḳrabadhin'', and treating chiefly of antidotes.
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'''Da'ud Abu al-Fadl''' (1161–1242) was a [[Karaite Judaism|Karaite]] [[Jew]]ish physician who lived in [[Ayyubid Egypt]] in the twelfth century CE. He was born atin [[Cairo]] in 1161 and died there about 1242. Having studied medicine under the Jewish physician [[Hibat Allah ibn Jami]], and under [[Abu al-Fafa'il ibn Naqid]], he became the [[court physician]] of the sultan [[Al-Adil I|al-Malik al-'Adil Abu Bakr ibn Ayyub]], the brother and successor of [[Saladin]]. He was also chief professor at the [[al-Nasiri Hospital]] hospital at Cairo, where he had a great many pupils, among them being the historian [[ibnIbn Abi Usaibiyyah]]. The latter declared that Abu al-Fadl was the most skillful physician of the time and that his success in curing the sick was miraculous. Abu al-Fadl was the author of an Arabic [[pharmacopoeia]] in twelve chapters, entitled ''Aḳrabadhin'', and treating chiefly of antidotes.
 
==ResourcesSources==
[http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=2&letter=F Kohler, Kaufmann and M. Seligsohn. "Fadl, Daud Abu al-".] ''[[Jewish Encyclopedia]]''. Funk and Wagnalls, 1901–1906, citing:
*Ibn Abi Usaibi'ah, ''Uyun al-Anha' fi Ṭabaḳat al-Aṭibba','' ed. Aug. Müller, ii. 118-119118–119, Königsberg, 1884:
*Carmoly, in ''Revue Orientale'', i. 418;
*Steinschneider, ''Jewish Literature,'' pp. 195, 366, note 16a;
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{{Islamic medicine}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Fadl, Da'udDaud Abu al-}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Daud Abu Al-Fadl
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Physicians and scholar
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1161
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Cairo]], [[Egypt]]
| DATE OF DEATH = 1242
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fadl, Da'ud Abu al-}}
[[Category:1161 births]]
[[Category:1242 deaths]]
[[Category:Medieval13th-century Egyptian physicians]]
[[Category:Medieval Karaite Jewish physicians]]
[[Category:Medieval Jewish physicians of Egypt]]
[[Category:Karaite rabbis]]
[[Category:12th-century Egyptian Jewsrabbis]]
[[Category:Physicians offrom medievalthe IslamAyyubid Sultanate]]
[[Category:13th-century physiciansEgyptian rabbis]]
[[Category:12th-century Egyptian physicians]]
[[Category:Court physicians]]
[[Category:Rabbis from Cairo]]
[[Category:Egypt under the Ayyubid Sultanate]]
 
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{{Egypt-med-bio-stub}}