Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 THE JALAYIRIDS, MUZAFFARIDS AND SARBADĀRS
- 2 TĪMŪR IN IRAN
- 3 THE SUCCESSORS OF TĪMŪR
- 4 THE TÜRKMEN DYNASTIES
- 5 THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 6 THE SAFAVID ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM
- 7 EUROPEAN CONTACTS WITH PERSIA, 1350–1736
- 8 TRADE FROM THE MID-14TH CENTURY TO THE END OF THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 9 SOCIAL AND INTERNAL ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
- 10 THE EXACT SCIENCES IN TIMURID IRAN
- 11 PERSIAN SCIENCE IN SAFAVID TIMES
- 12 RELIGION IN THE TIMURID AND SAFAVID PERIODS
- 13 SPIRITUAL MOVEMENTS, PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY IN THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 14 CARPETS AND TEXTILES
- 15 (a) TIMURID ARCHITECTURE
- (b) SAFAVID ARCHITECTURE
- 16 (a) THE PICTORIAL ARTS IN THE TIMURID PERIOD
- (b) THE ARTS IN THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 17 (a) PERSIAN LITERATURE IN THE TIMURID AND TÜRKMEN PERIODS (782–907/1380–1501)
- (b) HĀFIZ AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES
- (c) PERSIAN LITERATURE IN THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 18 PERSIAN POETRY IN THE TIMURID AND SAFAVID PERIODS
- Bibliographies
- Plate section
- Plate section
- Plate section
- Maps
- References
10 - THE EXACT SCIENCES IN TIMURID IRAN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- 1 THE JALAYIRIDS, MUZAFFARIDS AND SARBADĀRS
- 2 TĪMŪR IN IRAN
- 3 THE SUCCESSORS OF TĪMŪR
- 4 THE TÜRKMEN DYNASTIES
- 5 THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 6 THE SAFAVID ADMINISTRATIVE SYSTEM
- 7 EUROPEAN CONTACTS WITH PERSIA, 1350–1736
- 8 TRADE FROM THE MID-14TH CENTURY TO THE END OF THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 9 SOCIAL AND INTERNAL ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
- 10 THE EXACT SCIENCES IN TIMURID IRAN
- 11 PERSIAN SCIENCE IN SAFAVID TIMES
- 12 RELIGION IN THE TIMURID AND SAFAVID PERIODS
- 13 SPIRITUAL MOVEMENTS, PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY IN THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 14 CARPETS AND TEXTILES
- 15 (a) TIMURID ARCHITECTURE
- (b) SAFAVID ARCHITECTURE
- 16 (a) THE PICTORIAL ARTS IN THE TIMURID PERIOD
- (b) THE ARTS IN THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 17 (a) PERSIAN LITERATURE IN THE TIMURID AND TÜRKMEN PERIODS (782–907/1380–1501)
- (b) HĀFIZ AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES
- (c) PERSIAN LITERATURE IN THE SAFAVID PERIOD
- 18 PERSIAN POETRY IN THE TIMURID AND SAFAVID PERIODS
- Bibliographies
- Plate section
- Plate section
- Plate section
- Maps
- References
Summary
Throughout the four centuries preceding the rise of Tīmūr, science had been actively cultivated in many parts of the Iranian plateau by practitioners who were in the forefronts of their respective disciplines. The dissipation of political power which attended the breakup of the ‘Abbasid empire entailed also a dispersal of the scientists concentrated at Baghdad. But lines of inquiry opened by them were pursued by scholars supported at the various later dynastic centres. During this time trigonometry emerged as an independent branch of mathematics. The foundations of geometry were repeatedly re-examined, and steps were taken towards generalising the concept of number; solutions were given for extensive classes of algebraic equations. Advances were made in mathematical geography, and in astronomy, both in theory and in observation. In optics, a start was made in explaining the phenomenon of the rainbow. It is the object of this chapter to give an account of the extent to which these activities were continued during the century and a half between, say, 1350 and 1500. In point of fact, most of what follows describes the accomplishments of one man, Jamshīd Ghiyās al-Dīn al-Kāshī (d. 832/1429), working at one place, Ulugh Beg's Samarqand observatory, and in one subject, numerical analysis. The names of a number of other scientists at Samarqand are known, and many more can be assembled from other localities, but only the writings of Jamshīd transcend competence and are contributions to knowledge.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge History of Iran , pp. 568 - 580Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986