His native language was Persian | |
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, Avicenna's Canon Of Medicine,by Cibeles Jolivette Gonzalez• Sudan 180Jewish Archives 181Sudan Jewish Cemetery 181• Avicenna , 980-1037, Islamic philosopher and physician, of Persian origin• 2nd edition " excerpt from pg 277: "Iranian Platonic philosopher" |
"Avicenna" in Sandra Clayton-Emmerson 2005 , Key Figures in Medieval Europe: An Encyclopedia Routledge Encyclopedias of the Middle Ages.
He was born in Bukhara and died in Hamada, Persia" | Malka: Jacob's Children in the Land of the Mahdi: Jews of the Sudan Hardcover Syracuse Univ Pr Sd ; 1st edition April 1997• " D Charles Lindholm,"The Islamic Middle East: Tradition and Change", Wiley-Blackwell, 2002 |
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pg 98:"by the Persian philosopher Ibn Sina Avicenna in the eleventh century | ibn sina Avicenna in Latinized form , a Persian polymath |
excerpt: "Avicenna was the greatest of all Persian thinkers; as physician and metaphysician"• F Joyce Moss, " Middle Eastern literatures and their times", Volume 6 of World Literature and Its Times: Profiles of Notable Literary Works and the Historical Events that Influenced Them.
24The Persian polymath Ibn Sina 981—1037 consolidated all of this learning, along with Ancient Greek and Indian knowledge, into his The Canon of Medicine 1025 , a work still taught in European medical schools in the seventeenth century | 562, Edition I, 1964, Lahore, Pakistan• His native language was Persian |
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Malka, Jeffrey S:Sephardic Genealogy Discovering Your Sephardic Ancestors and Their World, Avotaynu; second edition 9 chapter 23 about Jews in Sudan 23 | Henry Corbin, "The Voyage and the messenger: Iran and Philosophy", North Atlantic Books, 1998 |