The Hadith of the Prophet contain many instructions concerning health, including dietary habits. These sayings became the foundation of what came to be known later as "Prophetic medicine" (al-tibb al-nabawi). Because of the great attention paid in Islam to the need to take care of the body and to hygiene, early in Islamic history Muslims began to cultivate the field of medicine, turning once again to all the knowledge that was available to them from Greek, Persian and Indian sources.
At first the great physicians among Muslims were mostly Christian
but by the 9th century Islamic medicine, properly speaking, was
born with the appearance of the major compendium, The Paradise
of Wisdom (Firdaws al-hikmah) by 'Ali ibn Rabban al-Tabari,
who synthesized the Hippocratic and Galenic traditions of
medicine with those of India and Persia. His student, Muhammad
ibn Zakariyya' al-Razi (the Latin Rhazes), was one of the greatest
of physicians who emphasized clinical medicine and observation.
He was a master of prognosis and psychosomatic medicine and
also of anatomy. He was the first to identify and treat smallpox,
to use alcohol as an antiseptic and make medical use of mercury
as a purgative. His Kitab al-hawi (Continens) is the longest work
ever written in Islamic medicine and he was recognized as a
medical authority in the West up to the 18th century.
The greatest of all Muslim physicians, however, was Ibn Sina
who was called "the prince of physicians" in the West. He
synthesized Islamic medicine in his major masterpiece, al-Qanun
fi'ltibb (The Canon of Medicine), which is the most famous of all
medical books in history. It was the final authority in medical
books in history. It was the final authority in medical matters in
Europe for nearly six centuries and is still taught wherever
Islamic medicine has survived to this day in such lands as Pakistan
and India. Ibn Sina discovered many drugs and identified and
treated several ailments such as meningitis but his greatest
contribution was in the philosophy of medicine. He created a
system of medicine within which medical practice could be
carried out and in which physical and psychological factors,
drugs and diet are combined.
After Ibn Sina, Islamic medicine divided into several branches. In
the Arab world Egypt remained a major center for the study of
medicine, especially ophthalmology which reached its peak at the
court of al-Hakim. Cairo possessed excellent hospitals which also
drew physicians from other lands including Ibn Butlan, author of
the famous Calendar of Health, and Ibn Nafis who discovered the
lesser or pulmonary circulation of the blood long before Michael
Servetus, who is usually credited with the discovery.
As for the western lands of Islam including Spain, this area was
likewise witness to the appearance of outstanding physicians such
as Sa'd al-Katib of Cordoba who composed a treatise on
gynecology, and the greatest Muslim figure in surgery, the 12th
century Abu'l-Qasim al-Zahrawi (the Latin Albucasis) whose
medical masterpiece Kitab al-tasrif was well known in the West
as Concessio. One must also mention the Ibn Zuhr family which
produced several outstanding physicians and Abu Marwan 'Abd
al-Malik who was the Maghrib's most outstanding clinical
physician. The well known Spanish philosophers, Ibn Tufayl and
Ibn Rushd, were also outstanding physicians.
Islamic medicine continued in Persia and the other eastern lands
of the Islamic world under the influence of Ibn Sina with the
appearance of major Persian medical compendia such as the
Treasury of Sharaf al-Din al-Jurjani and the commentaries upon
the Canon by Fakhr al-Din al-Razi and Qutb al Din al-Shirazi.
Even after the Mongol invasion, medical studies continued as can
be seen in the work of Rashid al-Din Fadlallah, and for the first
time there appeared translations of Chinese medicine and interest
in acupuncture among Muslims. The Islamic medical tradition
was revived during Safavid period, when several diseases were cured for the
first time and much attention was paid to pharmacology. Many
Persian doctors, such as 'Ayn al-Mulk of Shiraz also traveled to
India at this time to usher in the golden age of Islamic medicine on the
subcontinent and to plant the seed of the Islamic medical tradition
which continues to flourish to this day in the soil of that land.
The Ottoman world was also an arena of great medical activity
derived from the heritage of Ibn Sina. The Ottoman Turks were
especially known for the creation of major hospitals and medical
centers. These included not only units for the care of the
physically ill, but also wards for patients with psychological
ailments. The Ottomans were also the first to receive the influence
of modern European medicine in both medicine and
pharmacology.
In mentioning Islamic hospitals it is necessary to mention that all
major Islamic cities had hospitals; some like those of Baghdad
were teaching hospitals while some like the Nasiri hospital of
Cairo had thousands of beds for patients with almost any type of
illness. Hygiene in these hospitals was greatly emphasized and
al-Razi had even written a treatise on hygiene in hospitals. Some
hospitals also specialized in particular diseases including
psychological ones. Cairo even had a hospital which specialized
in patients having insomnia.
Islamic medical authorities were also always concerned with the
significance of pharmacology and many important works such as
the Canon have whole books devoted to the subject. The Muslims
became heir not only to the pharmacological knowledge of the
Greeks as contained in the works of Dioscorides, but also the
vast herbal pharmacopias of the Persians and Indians. They also
studied the medical effects of many drugs, especially herb's, themselves. The greatest contributions in this field came
from Maghribi scientists such as Ibn JulJul, Ibn al-Salt and the
most original of Muslim pharmacologists, the 12th century
scientist, al-Ghafiqi, whose Book of Simple Drugs provides the
best descriptions of the medical properties of plants known to
Muslims. Islamic medicine combined the use of drugs for medical
purposes with dietary considerations and a whole lifestyle derived
from the teachings of Islam to create a synthesis which has not
died out to this day despite the introduction of modern medicine
into most of the Islamic world.