Muhyi l'din al-Maghribi was an eminent astronomer who was born in
Spain, but who first worked in Damascus in Syria. His life seems to have been
greatly affected by the wars of the period and he seems to have found favour
with the winning side eventually working with al-Tusi at the Mongol observatory
at Maragha, Iran.
In 1256 the castle of Alamut was attacked by the forces of the Mongol leader Hulegu, a grandson of Genghis Khan, who was at that time set on extending Mongol
power in Islamic areas. Some claim that al-Tusi, who was in the castle at this
time, betrayed the defences of Alamut to the invading Mongols. Certainly Hulegu's forces destroyed Alamut and since Hulegu was himself interested in
science, he treated al-Tusi with great respect. Hulegu attacked Baghdad in 1258,
laid siege to the city, and entered it in February 1258. Hulegu, however, had
made Maragha, in the Azerbaijan region of northwestern Iran, his capital.
Muhyi l'din went to Maragha in 1258 as a guest of Hulegu. Al-Tusi and Muhyi
l'din were involved in the construction of an Observatory. Work began in 1259
west of Maragha, and traces of it can still be seen there today. The observatory
at Maragha became operational in 1262. There is a unique manuscript by Muhyi
l'din in which he lists precise observations made at the Maragha Observatory
between 1262 and 1274. The author of [4] discusses the three observations of the
sun and the mathematical methods which Muhyi l'din used to find the solar
eccentricity and
apogee.
Perhaps Muhyi l'din is most famous for his work on trigonometry. He wrote
Book on the theorem of Menelaus and Treatise on the calculation of sines.
In this second work he used interpolation to calculate an approximate value for
the sine of one degree. He did this by two different methods, then compared the
values he obtained achieving an accuracy of 4 places. A more accurate value was
not obtained until the work of Qadi Zada and al-Kashi. In doing this work Muhyi
l'din also found an approximate value for which he compared
with the bounds obtained by Archimedes using 96 inscribed and circumscribed
polygons.
Muhyi l'din also considered the classical problem of doubling the cube
which he approached by Hippocrates' method of finding two mean proportionals
between two given lines.
Another important aspect of Muhyi l'din's work was the critical commentaries
which he produced on some of the classic Greek works such as Euclid's
Elements, Apollonius's
Conics,
Theodosius's Spherics, and Menelaus's Spherics. A particularly
important commentary by Muhyi l'din is that on Book XV of the Elements (which
was not written by Euclid). Hypsicles added a Book XIV to the Elements
which dealt with the mensuration of the regular dodecahedron and icosahedron. Later
Book XV was written in Arabic by an unknown author, perhaps using Greek works
which are now lost. Book XV has common features with Book XIV by Hypsicles but
contains considerably more.
The original Arabic version of Book XV is lost but there are four surviving
manuscripts containing Muhyi l'din's commentary on it. We know that there was
more than one version of the Arabic Book XV, for recently a Hebrew translation
of Book XV has been discovered which has been translated from a different
version to that which Muhyi l'din used for his commentary.
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