Omar Khayyam
Omar Khayyam عمر خیام | |
---|---|
File:Omar Khayyam Profile.jpg | |
Pronunciation | /ˈoʊmɑːr kaɪˈjɑːm/ Persian: [ˈoːmɒːɾ xæjˈjɒːm] |
Born | 18 May[1] 1048[2] |
Died | 4 December[1] 1131 (aged 83)[2] |
Nationality | Persian |
School | Mathematics, Persian poetry, Persian philosophy |
Main interests | Mathematics, Astronomy/Astrology, Avicennism, Poetry |
Omar Khayyam (Persian pronunciation: [xæjˈjɑːm]; عمر خیّام (Persian); 18 May 1048 – 4 December 1131) was a Persian mathematician, astronomer, and poet.[3][4]: 7 As a mathematician, he is most notable for his work on the classification and solution of cubic equations, where he provided geometric solutions by the intersection of conics.[5][6] As an astronomer, he composed a calendar which proved to be a more accurate computation of time than that proposed five centuries later by Pope Gregory XIII.[7]: 659 [8] Omar was born in Nishapur, in northeastern Iran. He spent most of his life near the court of the Karakhanid and Seljuq rulers in the period which witnessed the First Crusade. There is a tradition of attributing poetry to Omar Khayyam, written in the form of quatrains (rubāʿiyāt رباعیات). This poetry became widely known due to the English translation by Edward FitzGerald (Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, 1859), which enjoyed great success in the Orientalism of the fin de siècle.
Life
Omar Khayyam was born in Nishapur, a metropolis in Khorasan that was later destroyed by the Mongols in 1220.[9][10][11] Nishapur was then a Seljuq capital and it was religiously a major center of Zoroastrians. It is likely that Khayyam's father was a Zoroastrian who had converted to Islam.[4]: 68 He was born into a family of tent-makers (Khayyam). His full name, as it appears in the Arabic sources, was Abu’l Fath Omar ibn Ibrāhīm al-Khayyām.[4]: 18 [a] In medieval Persian texts he is usually simply called Omar Khayyām.[7]: 658 [b] The historian Bayhaqi, who was personally acquainted with Omar, provides the full details of his horoscope: "he was Gemini, the sun and Mercury being in the ascendant[...]".[12]: 471 This was used by modern scholars to establish his date of birth as 18 May 1048.[7]: 658
He spent part of his childhood in the town of Balkh (in present-day northern Afghanistan), studying under the scholar Sheikh Muhammad Mansuri. He later studied under Imam Mowaffaq Nishapuri, one of the greatest teachers of the Khorasan region. In 1073, at the age of twenty-six, he entered the service of Sultan Malik-Shah I as an adviser. In 1076 Khayyam was invited to Isfahan by Nizam al-Mulk to take advantage of the libraries and centers in learning there. His years in Isfahan were productive. It was at this time that he began to study the work of Greek mathematicians Euclid and Apollonius much more closely. But after the death of the Malik-Shah I (presumably by the Assassins' sect), Omar had fallen from favour at court, and as a result, he soon set out on his Hajj or pilgrimage to Mecca. A possible ulterior motive for his pilgrimage reported by Al-Qifti, is that he was attacked by the clergy for his apparent skepticism. So he decided to perform his pilgrimage as a way of demonstrating his faith and freeing himself from all suspicion of unorthodoxy.[4]: 29 He was then invited by the new Sultan Sanjar to Marv, possibly to work as a court astrologer.[1] He was later allowed to return to Nishapur owing to his declining health. Upon his return, he seemed to have lived the life of a recluse.[13]: 99 Khayyam died in 1131, and is buried in the Khayyam Garden in Nishapur.
Mathematics
Khayyam was famous during his life as a mathematician. Three of his treatises are extant: A commentry on Euclid's Elements (Risāla fī šarḥ mā aškala min muṣādarāt kitāb Uqlīdis, completed in December 1077[3]), an essay on dividing the quadrant of a circle, and a treatise on algebra (Maqāla fi l-jabr wa l-muqābala, undated[3]).[14] He furthermore wrote a treatise on extracting the nth root of natural numbers, which has been lost.
The treatise on algebra contains his work on cubic equations.[15] It is divided into three parts, (a) equations which can be solved with ruler and compass, (b) equations which can be solved by means of conic sections, and (c) equations which involve the inverse of the unknown.[16] He was the first to geometrically solve every type of cubic equation, so far as positive roots are concerned.[17] He wrote on the triangular array of binomial coefficients known as Pascal's triangle. The second of Omar's mathematical works deals with the the parallel axiom.[5]: 282
Theory of parallels
Khayyam wrote Explanations of the difficulties in the postulates in Euclid's Elements. The book consists of several sections on the parallel postulate (Book I), on the Euclidean definition of ratios and the Anthyphairetic ratio (modern continued fractions) (Book II), and on the multiplication of ratios (Book III).
The first section is a treatise containing some propositions and lemmas concerning the parallel postulate. It has reached the Western world from a reproduction in a manuscript written in 1387–88 by the Persian mathematician Tusi. Tusi mentions explicitly that he re-writes the treatise "in Khayyam's own words" and quotes Khayyam, saying that "they are worth adding to Euclid's Elements (first book) after Proposition 28."[18] This proposition[19] states a condition enough for having two lines in plane parallel to one another. After this proposition follows another, numbered 29, which is converse to the previous one.[20] The proof of Euclid uses the so-called parallel postulate (numbered 5). Objection to the use of parallel postulate and alternative view of proposition 29 have been a major problem in foundation of what is now called non-Euclidean geometry.
The treatise of Khayyam can be considered the first treatment of the parallels axiom not based on petitio principii, but on a more intuitive postulate. Khayyam refutes the previous attempts by other Greek and Persian mathematicians to prove the proposition. And he, as Aristotle, refuses the use of motion in geometry and therefore dismisses the different attempt by Al-Haytham, too.[21] In a sense he made the first attempt at formulating a non-Euclidean postulate as an alternative to the parallel postulate,[22]
Khayyam illustrated Euclid's parallel postulate in Book I of Explanations of the Difficulties in the Postulates of Euclid.[23] Khayyam was not trying to prove the parallel postulate as such but to derive it from an equivalent postulate he formulated from "the principles of the Philosopher" (Aristotle):
- Two convergent straight lines intersect and it is impossible for two convergent straight lines to diverge in the direction in which they converge.[24]
Khayyam then considered the three cases (right, obtuse and acute) that the summit angles of a Saccheri quadrilateral can take and after proving a number of theorems about them, he (correctly) refuted the obtuse and acute cases based on his postulate and hence derived the classic postulate of Euclid.
Tusi's commentaries on Khayyam's treatment of parallels made its way to Europe. John Wallis, the professor of geometry at Oxford, translated Tusi's commentary into Latin. Jesuit geometrician Girolamo Saccheri, whose work (euclides ab omni naevo vindicatus, 1733) is generally considered as the first step in the eventual development of non-Euclidean geometry, was familiar with the work of Wallis. The American historian of mathematics, David Eugene Smith mentions that Saccheri "used the same lemma as the one of Tusi, even lettering the figure in precisely the same way and using the lemma for the same purpose". He further says that "Tusi distinctly states that it is due to Omar Khayyam, and from the text, it seems clear that the latter was his inspirer."[13]: 104 [25][4]: 195
Geometric algebra
Whoever thinks algebra is a trick in obtaining unknowns has thought it in vain. No attention should be paid to the fact that algebra and geometry are different in appearance. Algebras are geometric facts which are proved by propositions five and six of Book two of Elements.
Omar Khayyam[26]
This philosophical view of mathematics (see below) has influenced Khayyam's celebrated approach and method in geometric algebra and in particular in solving cubic equations. His solution is not a direct path to a numerical solution, and his solutions are not numbers but line segments. Khayyam's work can be considered the first systematic study and the first exact method of solving cubic equations,[27] although similar methods had appeared sporadically since Menaechmus.
In work on cubic equations by Khayyam discovered in the 20th century,[26] where the above quote appears, Khayyam works on problems of geometric algebra. First is the problem of "finding a point on a quadrant of a circle such that when a normal is dropped from the point to one of the bounding radii, the ratio of the normal's length to that of the radius equals the ratio of the segments determined by the foot of the normal." Again in solving this problem, he reduces it to another geometric problem: "find a right triangle having the property that the hypotenuse equals the sum of one leg (i.e. side) plus the altitude on the hypotenuse ".[28] To solve this geometric problem, he specializes a parameter and reaches the cubic equation x3 + 2x = 2x2 + 2.[26] Indeed, he finds a positive root for this equation by intersecting a hyperbola with a circle.
This particular geometric solution of cubic equations has been further investigated and extended to degree four equations.[29]
Regarding more general equations he states that the solution of cubic equations requires the use of conic sections and that it cannot be solved by ruler and compass methods.[26] A proof of this impossibility was only plausible 750 years after Khayyam died.[citation needed] In this text Khayyam mentions his will to prepare a paper giving full solution to cubic equations: "If the opportunity arises and I can succeed, I shall give all these fourteen forms with all their branches and cases, and how to distinguish whatever is possible or impossible so that a paper, containing elements which are greatly useful in this art, will be prepared."[26]
This refers to the book Treatise on Demonstrations of Problems of Algebra (1070), which laid down the principles of algebra, part of the body of Persian mathematics that was eventually transmitted to Europe.[27] In particular, he derived general methods for solving cubic equations and even some higher orders.
Binomial theorem and extraction of roots
From the Indians one has methods for obtaining square and cube roots, methods based on knowledge of individual cases—namely the knowledge of the squares of the nine digits 12, 22, 32 (etc.) and their respective products, i.e. 2 × 3 etc. We have written a treatise on the proof of the validity of those methods and that they satisfy the conditions. In addition we have increased their types, namely in the form of the determination of the fourth, fifth, sixth roots up to any desired degree. No one preceded us in this and those proofs are purely arithmetic, founded on the arithmetic of The Elements.
Omar Khayyam Treatise on Demonstration of Problems of Algebra[30]
In his algebraic treatise, Khayyam alludes to a book he had written on the extraction of the th root of the numbers using a law which he had discovered which did not depend on geometric figures.[8] The manuscript of this book is not extant. Based on the context, some historians of mathematics such as Struik, believe that Omar must have known the formula for the expansion of the binomial , where n is a positive integer.[5] The case of power 2 is explicitly stated in Euclid's elements and the case of at most power 3 had been established by Indian mathematicians. Khayyam was the mathematician who noticed the importance of a general binomial theorem. The argument supporting the claim that Khayyam had a general binomial theorem is based on his ability to extract roots.[31]
Astronomy
Like most Persian mathematicians of the period, Khayyam was also an astronomer and achieved fame in that role, especially for his expertise in horoscopic astrology[clarification needed]. In 1073, the Seljuq Sultan Jalal al-Din Malik-Shah Saljuqi (Malik-Shah I, 1072–92), invited Khayyam to build an observatory, along with various other distinguished scientists. A popular claim to the effect that Khayyam believed in heliocentrism is based on Edward FitzGerald's popular but anachronistic rendering of Khayyam's poetry, in which the first lines are mistranslated with a heliocentric image of the Sun flinging "the Stone that puts the Stars to Flight".[36]
Calendar reform
Khayyam was a member of a panel that reformed the Iranian calendar. The panel was convened by Seljuk Sultan Malik Shah I, and completed its reforms in 1079, resulting in the Jalali calendar.[37][38]
The calendar is based on actual solar transit, similar to Hindu calendars, and requires an ephemeris for calculating dates. The lengths of the months can vary between 29 and 31 days depending on the moment when the sun crosses into a new zodiacal area (an attribute common to most Hindu calendars). This meant that seasonal errors were lower than in the Gregorian calendar.
According to some accounts,[by whom?] the version of the medieval Iranian calendar in which 2,820 solar years together contain 1,029,983 days (or 683 leap years, for an average year length of 365.24219858156 days) was based on the measurements of Khayyam and his colleagues.[39] Another proposal is that Khayyam's calendar simply contained eight leap days every thirty-three years (for a year length of 365.2424 days).[40]
The Jalali calendar is more accurate than the Gregorian calendar of 1582,[7]: 659 with an error of one day accumulating over 5,000 years, compared to one day every 3,330 years in the Gregorian calendar.[4]: 200 Moritz Cantor considered it the most perfect calendar ever devised.[13]: 101
The Jalali calendar remained in use across Greater Iran from the 11th to the 20th centuries. In 1911 the Jalali calendar became the official national calendar of Qajar Iran. In 1925 this calendar was simplified and the names of the months were modernised, resulting in the modern Iranian calendar.
Poetry
The earliest allusion to Omar Khayyam's poetry is from the historian Imad ad-Din al-Isfahani, a younger contemporary of Khayyam, who explicitly identifies him as both a poet and a scientist (Kharidat al-qasr, 1174).[4]: 49 [41]: 35 One of the earliest specimens of Omar Khayyam's Rubiyat is from Fakhr al-Din Razi. In his work Al-tanbih ‘ala ba‘d asrar al-maw‘dat fi’l-Qur’an (ca. 1160), he quotes one of his poems (corresponding to quatrain LXII of FitzGerald's first edition). Daya in his writings (Mirsad al-‘Ibad, ca. 1230) quotes two quatrains, one of which is the same as the one already reported by Razi. An additional quatrain is quoted by the historian Juvayni (Tarikh-i Jahangushay, ca. 1226-1283).[41]: 36–37 [4]: 92 In 1340 Jajarmi includes thirteen quatrains of Khayyam in his work containing an anthology of the works of famous Persian poets (Munis al-ahrār), two of which have hitherto been known from the older sources.[42] A comparatively late manuscript is the Bodleian MS. Ouseley 140, written in Shiraz in 1460, which contains 158 quatrains on 47 folia. The manuscript belonged to William Ouseley (1767-1842) and was purchased by the Bodleian Library in 1844.
There are occasional quotes of verses attributed to Omar in texts attributed to authors of the 13th and 14th centuries, but these are also of doubtful authenticity, so that skeptic scholars point out that the entire tradition may be pseudepigraphic.[41]: 11 Hans Heinrich Schaeder in 1934 commented that the name of Omar Khayyam "is to be struck out from the history of Persian literature" due to the lack of any material that could confidently be attributed to him. De Blois (2004) presents a bibliography of the manuscript tradition, concluding pessimistically that the situation has not changed significantly since Schaeder's time.[43] Five of the quatrains later attributed to Omar are found as early as 30 years after his death, quoted in Sindbad-Nameh. While this establishes that these specific verses were in circulation in Omar's time or shortly later, it doesn't imply that the verses must be his. De Blois concludes that at the least the process of attributing poetry to Omar Khayyam appears to have begun already in the 13th century.[44] Edward Granville Browne (1906) notes the difficulty to disentangle the authentic poems from the inauthentic ones: "while it is certain that Khayyam wrote many quatrains, it is hardly possible, save in a few exceptional cases, to assert positively that he wrote any of those ascribed to him".[7]: 663
In addition to the Persian quatrains, there are twenty-five Arabic poems attributed to Khayyam which are attested by historians such as al-Isfahani, Shahrazuri (Nuzhat al-Arwah, ca. 1201-1211), Qifti (Tārikh al-hukamā, 1255), and Hamdallah Mustawfi (Tarikh-i guzida, 1339).[4]: 39
Richard N. Frye (1975) emphasizes that there are a number of other Persian scholars who occasionally wrote quatrains, including Avicenna, Ghazzali, and Tusi. He concludes that it is also possible that poetry with Khayyam was the amusement of his leisure hours: "these brief poems seem often to have been the work of scholars and scientists who composed them, perhaps, in moments of relaxation to edify or amuse the inner circle of their disciples".[7]: 662
The poetry attributed to Omar Khayyam has contributed greatly to his popular fame in the modern period as a direct result of the extreme popularity of the translation of such verses into English by Edward FitzGerald (1859). FitzGerald's Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam contains loose translations of quatrains from The Bodleian manuscript. It enjoyed such success in the fin de siécle period that a bibliography compiled in 1929 listed more than 300 separate editions,[45] and many more have been published since.[46]
Philosophy
Khayyam himself rejected any association with the title falsafī "philosopher" in the sense of Aristotelianism and stressed he wishes "to know who I am". In the context of philosophers he was labeled by some of his contemporaries as "detached from divine blessings".[47]
Khayyam for decades taught the philosophy of Avicena, especially the Book of Healing, in his home town Nishapur, till his death.[48] In an incident he had been requested to comment on a disagreement between Avicena and a philosopher called Abu'l-Barakāt al-Baghdādī who had criticized Avicena strongly. Khayyam is said to have answered "[he] does not even understand the sense of the words of Avicenna, how can he oppose what he does not know?"[47]
Khayyam's popularity in the West is closely associated with the reception of his poetry as extolling wine and praising a life of mystic ecstasy and hedonism. This reception also became prevalent in modern Iran, where nightclubs are named after Khayyam[citation needed]. Sadegh Hedayat portrayed Khayyam as "a materialist, hedonist , agnostic", who "looked at all religions' questions with a skeptical eye".[citation needed][year needed] Conversely, Khayyam has also been described as a mystical Sufi poet.
Mathematical philosophy
As a mathematician, Khayyam has made fundamental contributions to the philosophy of mathematics especially in the context of Persian Mathematics and Persian philosophy with which most of the other Persian scientists and philosophers such as Avicenna, Abū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī and Tusi are associated. There are at least three basic mathematical ideas of strong philosophical dimensions that can be associated with Khayyam.
- Mathematical order: From where does this order issue, and why does it correspond to the world of nature? His answer is in one of his philosophical "treatises on being". Khayyam's answer is that "the Divine Origin of all existence not only emanates wujud "being", by virtue of which all things gain reality, but It is the source of order that is inseparable from the very act of existence."[49]
- The significance of axioms in geometry and the necessity for the mathematician to rely upon philosophy and hence the importance of the relation of any particular science to prime philosophy. This is the philosophical background to Khayyam's total rejection of any attempt to "prove" the parallel postulate, and in turn his refusal to bring motion into the attempt to prove this postulate, as had Ibn al-Haytham, because Khayyam associated motion with the world of matter, and wanted to keep it away from the purely intelligible and immaterial world of geometry.[49]
- Clear distinction made by Khayyam, on the basis of the work of earlier Persian philosophers such as Avicenna, between natural bodies and mathematical bodies. The first is defined as a body that is in the category of substance and that stands by itself, and hence a subject of natural sciences, while the second, called "volume", is of the category of accidents (attributes) that do not subsist by themselves in the external world and hence is the concern of mathematics. Khayyam was very careful to respect the boundaries of each discipline, and criticized Ibn al-Haytham in his proof of the parallel postulate precisely because he had broken this rule and had brought a subject belonging to natural philosophy, that is, motion, which belongs to natural bodies, into the domain of geometry, which deals with mathematical bodies.[49]
Skepticism vs. Sufism
Sadegh Hedayat is one of the most notable proponents of Khayyam's philosophy as agnostic skepticism. According to Jan Rypka (1934), Hedayat even considered Khayyam an atheist.[50] Hedayat states in his introductory essay to his second edition of the Quatrains of the Philosopher Omar Khayyam that "while Khayyam believes in the transmutation and transformation of the human body, he does not believe in a separate soul; if we are lucky, our bodily particles would be used in the making of a jug of wine".[51] He further maintains that Khayyam's usage of Sufic terminology such as "wine" is literal, and that "Khayyam took refuge in wine to ward off bitterness and to blunt the cutting edge of his thoughts."[52]
Edward FitzGerald emphasized the religious skepticism he found in Omar Khayyam.[53] In his preface to the Rubáiyát, he describes Omar's philosophy as Epicurean and claims that Omar was "hated and dreaded by the Sufis, whose practice he ridiculed and whose faith amounts to little more than his own, when stripped of the Mysticism and formal recognition of Islamism under which Omar would not hide."[54]
Al-Qifti (ca. 1172–1248) appears to confirm this view of Omar's philsophy. In his work The History of Learned Men he reports that Omar's poems were only outwardly in the Sufi style, but were written with an anti-religious agenda.[55] Furthermore, Frye emphasizes that Khayyam was intensely disliked by a number of celebrated Sufi mystics who belonged to the same century. This includes Shams Tabrizi (spiritual guide of Rumi)[4]: 58 , Najm al-Din Daya, and Attar, who regarded Khayyam not as a fellow-mystic, but a free-thinking scientist who awaited punishments hereafter.[7]: 663 Mohammad Ali Foroughi concluded that Khayyam's ideas may have been consistent with that of Sufis at times but there is no evidence that he was formally a Sufi. Aminrazavi (2007) states that "Sufi interpretation of Khayyam is possible only by reading into his Rubaiyat extensively and by stretching the content to fit the classical Sufi doctrine".[4]: 128 In this tradition, Omar's poetry has been cited in the context of New Atheism, e.g. in The Portable Atheist by Christopher Hitchens.[56]
Other commentators do not accept that Omar's poetry has an anti-religious agenda and interpret his references to wine and drunkenness in the conventional metaphorical sense common in Sufism. Seyyed Hossein Nasr argues that it is "reductive" to use a literal interpretation of his verses (many of which are of uncertain authenticity to begin with) to establish Omar's philosophy. Instead, he adduces Khayyam's translation of Avicenna's treatise Discourse on Unity (Al-Khutbat al-Tawhīd), where he expresses orthodox views on Divine Unity in agreement with the author.[48] Omar's most important single work on philosophy is a treatise on existence (Fi’l-wujūd), which is explicitly theistic, citing Quranic verses and asserting that all things come from God and that there is an order to all things.[48] In his book On the elaboration of the problems concerning the book of Euclid, Omar also praises a compassionate God and refers to "the master of prophets, Muhammad, and his pure companions."[4]: 64
The view of Omar Khayyam as a Sufi was defended by Bjerregaard (1915).[57] Dougan (1991) likewise attributes the reputation of hedonism to the failings of FitzGerald's translation, arguing that Omar's poetry is to be understood as "deeply esoteric".[58] Idries Shah (1999) similarly accuses FitzGerald of misunderstanding Omar's poetry.[59] Edward Henry Whinfield (2000) concludes that "we must not run away with the idea that he was himself a Sufi."[60]
Reception
Omar Khayyam was held in very high esteem by his contemporaries. He was primarily venerated as a scholar and scientist, according to contemporary anecdotes primarily for his expertise in horoscopic astrology.[61] It was not unusual for him to be given flowery epithets such as "Proof of Truth", "Philosopher of the World", "Lord of the Wise Men of East and West". Shahrazuri (d. 1300) calls him "Successor to Avicenna", and Al-Qifti (d. 1248) even though disagreeing with his views concedes he was "unrivalled in his knowledge of natural philosophy and astronomy". Al-Zamakhshari (d. 1143/4) calls him "Sage of the World" or "Philosopher of the Universe".[62]
The first non-Persian scholar to study Omar Khayyam was the English orientalist Thomas Hyde, who in his Historia religionis veterum Persarum eorumque magorum (1700) translated some of his verses into Latin. Western interest in Persia increased with the Orientalism movement in the 19th century. Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall (1774-1856) translated some of Khayyam's poems into German in 1818, and Gore Ouseley (1770-1844) into English in 1846, but Khayyam remained relatively unknown in the West until after the publication of Edward FitzGerald's Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam in 1859. FitzGerald's work at first was unsuccessful, but was popularised by Whitley Stokes from 1861 onward, and the work came to be greatly admired by the Pre-Raphaelites. In 1872 FitzGerald had a third edition printed which increased interest in the work in America. By the 1880s, the book was extremely well known throughout the English-speaking world, to the extent of the formation of numerous "Omar Khayyam Clubs" and a "fin de siècle cult of the Rubaiyat"[63]
FitzGerald rendered Omar's name as "Tentmaker", and the anglicized name of "Omar the Tentmaker" resonated in English-speaking popular culture for a while. Thus, Nathan Haskell Dole published a novel called Omar, the Tentmaker: A Romance of Old Persia in 1898. Omar the Tentmaker of Naishapur is a historical novel by John Smith Clarke, published in 1910. "Omar the Tentmaker" is also the title of a 1914 play by Richard Walton Tully in an oriental setting, adapted as a silent film in 1922. US General Omar Bradley was given the nickname "Omar the Tent-Maker" in World War II.[64] The name has also been recorded as a slang expression for "penis".[65]
Omar Khayyam's poems have been translated into many languages, many of the more recent ones more literal than the 1850s translation by FitzGerald.[66]
FitzGerald's translations also reintroduced Khayyam to Iranians, "who had long ignored the Neishapouri poet".[67] Sadeq Hedayat in his Songs of Khayyam (Taranehha-ye Khayyam, 1934) first introduced Omar's poetry to modern Iran, and under the Pahlavi dynasty, he was shaped into one of Iran's national icons along with Hafez, Saadi, Avicenna and others. The Mausoleum of Omar Khayyam was reconstructed under Reza Shah, by architect Hooshang Seyhoun, completed in 1963. A statue by Abolhassan Sadighi was erected in Laleh Park, Tehran in the 1960s. A bust by the same sculptor was erected near Khayyam's mausoleum in Nishapur.
A lunar crater Omar Khayyam was named after him in 1970 and a minor planet called 3095 Omarkhayyam, discovered by Soviet astronomer Lyudmila Zhuravlyova in 1980, is named after him.[68]
In 2009, the state of Iran donated a pavilion to the United Nations Office in Vienna, erected at Vienna International Center.[69] The pavilion includes four statues of medieval Persian scholars, one of Omar Khayyam alongside statues of Avicenna, Abu Rayhan Biruni, Zakariya Razi.[70][71] In 2016, three statues of Khayyam was by Iranian sculptor Hossein Fakhimi were unveiled: one at the University of Oklahoma, one in Nishapur and one to in Florence, Italy.[72][73]
See also
- Astronomy in medieval Islam
- Mathematics in medieval Islam
- Nozhat al-Majales
- Omar Khayyam (film)
- The Keeper: The Legend of Omar Khayyam
Notes
- a For instance, in the work of Al-Qifti[4]: 55 or Abu'l-Hasan Bayhaqi[12]: 436 .
- b For instance, in the work of Rashid-al-Din Hamadani[74]: 409–410 or in Munis al-ahrār[75]: 436 .
- ^ a b c "Omar Khayyam (Persian poet and astronomer)". Britannica.com. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
- ^ a b Seyyed Hossein Nasr and Mehdi Aminrazavi. An Anthology of Philosophy in Persia, Vol. 1: From Zoroaster to 'Umar Khayyam, I.B. Tauris in association with The Institute of Ismaili Studies, 2007.
- ^ a b c Multiple Authors. "KHAYYAM, OMAR". Encyclopædia Iranica Online. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Mehdi Aminrazavi, The Wine of Wisdom: The Life, Poetry and Philosophy of Omar Khayyam, Oneworld Publications (2007)
- ^ a b c Struik, D. (1958). Omar Khayyam, mathematician. The Mathematics Teacher, 51(4), 280-285.
- ^ O'Connor, John J.; Robertson, Edmund F., "Omar Khayyam", MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, University of St Andrews
- ^ a b c d e f g The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 4. Cambridge University Press (1975): Richard Nelson Frye
- ^ a b Kennedy, E. (1958). Omar Khayyam. The Mathematics Teacher, Vol. 59, No. 2 (1966), pp. 140-142.
- ^ The Tomb of Omar Khayyâm, George Sarton, Isis, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Jul., 1938), 15.
- ^ Edward FitzGerald, Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, Ed. Christopher Decker, (University of Virginia Press, 1997), xv;"The Saljuq Turks had invaded the province of Khorasan in the 1030s, and the city of Nishapur surrendered to them voluntarily in 1038. Thus Omar Khayyam grew to maturity during the first of the several alien dynasties that would rule Iran until the twentieth century.".
- ^ Peter Avery and John Heath-Stubbs, The Ruba'iyat of Omar Khayyam, (Penguin Group, 1981), 14;"These dates, 1048-1031, tell us that Khayyam lived when the Saljuq Turkish Sultans were extending and consolidating their power over Persia and when the effects of this power were particularly felt in Nishapur, Khayyam's birthplace.
- ^ a b E. D. R., & H. A. R. G. (1929). The Earliest Account of 'Umar Khayyām. Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London, 5(3), 467-473.
- ^ a b c Great Muslim Mathematicians. Penerbit UTM (July 2000): Mohaini Mohamed
- ^ "A treatise on restoration and comparison", alternatively Risāla fi l-barāhin ʿalā masāʾil al-jabr wa l-muqābala "A treatise on the demonstrations of the problems of algebra". Luke Hodgkin, A History of Mathematics: From Mesopotamia to Modernity (2005), p. 103. Translated into French by Franz Woepcke, L'algèbre d'Omar Alkhayyâmî, publiée, traduite et accompagnée d'extraits des manuscrits inédits (1851).
- ^ "Omar Al Hay of Chorassan, about 1079 AD did most to elevate to a method the solution of the algebraic equations by intersecting conics." Guilbeau, Lucye (1930), "The History of the Solution of the Cubic Equation", Mathematics News Letter, 5 (4): 8–12, doi:10.2307/3027812, JSTOR 3027812
- ^ Bijan Vahabzadeh, "KHAYYAM, OMAR xv. As Mathematician", Encyclopædia Iranica.
- ^ Howard Eves, Omar Khayyam's Solution of Cubic Equations, The Mathematics Teacher (1958), pages 302-303.
- ^ (Smith 1935, p. 6)
- ^ Euclid. "Proposition 28". Elements. I. 28.
If a straight line falling on two straight lines make the exterior angle equal to the interior and opposite angle on the same side, or the interior angles on the same side equal to two right angles, the straight lines will be parallel to one another.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ Euclid. "Proposition 29". Elements. I. 29.
A straight line falling on parallel straight lines makes the alternate angles equal to one another, the exterior angle equal to the interior and opposite angle, and the interior angles on the same side equal to two right angles.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: location (link) - ^ (Rozenfeld 1988, pp. 64–65)
- ^ (Katz 1998, p. 270). Excerpt: In some sense, his treatment was better than ibn al-Haytham's because he explicitly formulated a new postulate to replace Euclid's rather than have the latter hidden in a new definition.
- ^ Boris Abramovich Rozenfelʹd (1988), A History of Non-Euclidean Geometry: Evolution of the Concept of a Geometric Space, p. 65. Springer, ISBN 0-387-96458-4.
- ^ Boris A Rosenfeld and Adolf P Youschkevitch, "Geometry" in Roshdi Rashed, Régis Morelon (1996), Encyclopedia of the history of Arabic science (1996), p. 467.
- ^ Smith, David, 1935, "Euclid, Omar Khayyam and Saccheri," Scripta Mathematica.
- ^ a b c d e A. R. Amir-Moez, "A Paper of Omar Khayyám", Scripta Mathematica 26 (1963), pp. 323–37
- ^ a b Mathematical Masterpieces: Further Chronicles by the Explorers, p. 92
- ^ E. S. Kennedy, Chapter 10 in Cambridge History of Iran (5), p. 665.
- ^ A. R. Amir-Moez, Khayyam's Solution of Cubic Equations, Mathematics Magazine, Vol. 35, No. 5 (November 1962), pp. 269–271. This paper contains an extension by the late Mohsen Hashtroodi of Khayyam's method to degree four equations.
- ^ "Muslim extraction of roots". Mactutor History of Mathematics.
- ^ J. L. Coolidge, The Story of the Binomial Theorem, Amer. Math. Monthly, Vol. 56, No. 3 (Mar., 1949), pp. 147–157
- ^ دقیق ترین تقویم جهان، هدیه خیام به ایرانیان (in Persian). Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
- ^ پيمانه کردن سال و ماه از ديرباز تا کنون در گفتگو با دکتر ايرج ملک پور (in Persian). Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
- ^ پژوهشهای ایرانی | پاسداشت گاهشماری ایرانی (in Persian). Ghiasabadi.com. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
- ^ پژوهشهای ایرانی | گاهشماری تقویم جلالی (in Persian). Ghiasabadi.com. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
- ^ Donald and Marilynn Olson (1988), 'Zodiac Light, False Dawn, and Omar Khayyam', The Observatory, vol. 108, p. 181-182. "Rex Pay, 2000". Humanistictexts.org. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
- ^ Farrell, Charlotte (1996), "The ninth-century renaissance in astronomy", The Physics Teacher, 34 (5): 268–272, Bibcode:1996PhTea..34..268F, doi:10.1119/1.2344432.
- ^ Struik, D. J. (1958), "Omar Khayyam, mathematician", The Mathematics Teacher, 51 (4): 280–285, JSTOR 27955652.
- ^ "Early History of Astronomy – The Middle East". Ephemeris.com. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
- ^ Mapping Time: The Calendar and its History by E.G. Richards (Oxford University Press, 1998) ISBN 978-0-19-286205-1, p. 235
- ^ a b c Ali Dashti (translated by L. P. Elwell-Sutton), In Search of Omar Khayyam, Routledge Library Editions: Iran (2012)
- ^ Edward Denison Ross, Omar Khayyam, Bulletin of The School Of Oriental Studies London Institution (1927)
- ^ Francois De Blois , Persian Literature - A Bio-Bibliographical Survey: Poetry of the Pre-Mongol Period (2004), p. 307.
- ^ Francois De Blois , Persian Literature - A Bio-Bibliographical Survey: Poetry of the Pre-Mongol Period (2004), p. 305.
- ^ Ambrose George Potter, A Bibliography of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (1929).
- ^ Francois De Blois , Persian Literature - A Bio-Bibliographical Survey: Poetry of the Pre-Mongol Period (2004), p. 312.
- ^ a b Bausani, A., Chapter 3 in Cambridge History of Iran (5), p. 289.
- ^ a b c S. H. Nasr, 2006, Islamic Philosophy from Its Origin to the Present, Chapter 9., pp. 165–183
- ^ a b c S. H. Nasr Chapter 9, p . 170-1
- ^ Hedayat's "Blind Owl" as a Western Novel. Princeton Legacy Library: Michael Beard[page needed]
- ^ Katouzian, H. (1991). Sadeq Hedayat: The life and literature of an Iranian writer (p. 138). London: I.B. Tauris
- ^ Bashiri, Iraj. "Hedayat's Learning".
- ^ Davis, Dick. "FitzGerald, Edward". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
- ^ FitzGerald, E. (2010). Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (p. 12). Champaign, Ill.: Project Gutenberg
- ^ "Sufis understood his poems outwardly and considered them to be part of their mystical tradition. In their sessions and gatherings, Khayyam's poems became the subject of conversation and discussion. His poems, however, are inwardly like snakes who bite the sharia [Islamic law] and are chains and handcuffs placed on religion. Once the people of his time had a taste of his faith, his secrets were revealed. Khayyam was frightened for his life, withdrew from writing, speaking and such like and traveled to Mecca. Once he arrived in Baghdad, members of a Sufi tradition and believers in primary sciences came to him and courted him. He did not accept them and after performing the pilgrimage returned to his native land, kept his secrets to himself and propagated worshiping and following the people of faith." cited after Aminrazavi (2007)[page needed]
- ^ Hitchens, C. (2007). The portable atheist: Essential readings for the nonbeliever (p. 7). Philadelphia, PA: Da Capo.
- ^ "The writings of Omar Khayyam are good specimens of Sufism, but are not valued in the West as they ought to be, and the mass of English-speaking people know him only through the poems of Edward FitzGerald. It is unfortunate because FitzGerald is not faithful to his master and model, and at times he lays words upon the tongue of the Sufi which are blasphemous. Such outrageous language is that of the eighty-first quatrain for instance. FitzGerald is doubly guilty because he was more of a Sufi than he was willing to admit." C. H. A. Bjerregaard, Sufism: Omar Khayyam and E. Fitzgerald, The Sufi Publishing Society (1915), p. 3
- ^ "Every line of the Rubaiyat has more meaning than almost anything you could read in Sufi literature" Abdullah Dougan Who is the Potter? Gnostic Press 1991 ISBN 0-473-01064-X
- ^ "FitzGerald himself was confused about Omar. Sometimes he thought that he was a Sufi, sometimes not." Idries Shah, The Sufis, Octagon Press (1999), pp. 165-166
- ^ E. H. Whinfield, The Quatrains of Omar Khayyam, Psychology Press (2000), l
- ^ Ali Dasht, In Search of Omar Khayyam (2012), p. 45.
- ^ Ali Dasht, In Search of Omar Khayyam (2012), p. 42.
- ^ J. D. Yohannan, Persian Poetry in England and America, 1977., p. 202.
- ^ Jeffrey D. Lavoie, The Private Life of General Omar N. Bradley (2015), p. 13.
- ^ Michael Kimmel, Christine Milrod, Amanda Kennedy, Cultural Encyclopedia of the Penis (2014), p. 93.
- ^ The Great Umar Khayyam: A Global Reception of the Rubaiyat (AUP – Leiden University Press) by A. A. Seyed-Gohrab, 2012.
- ^ Molavi, Afshin, The Soul of Iran, Norton, (2005), p.110f.
- ^ Dictionary of Minor Planet Names – p.255. Books.google.com. 1979-02-26. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
- ^ UNIS. "Monument to Be Inaugurated at the Vienna International Centre, 'Scholars Pavilion' donated to International Organizations in Vienna by Iran".
- ^ "The Monument donated by the Islamic Republic of Iran to the International Organization in Vienna". Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations Office – Vienna.
- ^ Hosseini, Mir Masood. "Negareh: Persian Scholars Pavilion at United Nations Vienna, Austria".
- ^ "Khayyam statue finally set up at University of Oklahoma". Tehran Times. Retrieved 2016-04-04.
- ^ "University of Oklahoma to establish Center for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies". NewsOK.com. Retrieved 2016-04-04.
- ^ Browne, E. (1899). Yet More Light on 'Umar-i-Khayyām. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 409-420.
- ^ Ross, E. (1927). 'Omar Khayyam. Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London, 4(3), 433-439.
References
- Turner, Howard R. (1997). Science in Medieval Islam: An Illustrated Introduction. University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-78149-0.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Jos Biegstraaten (2008). "Omar Khayyam (Impact On Literature And Society In The West)". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Vol. vol. 15. Encyclopaedia Iranica Foundation.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
:|volume=
has extra text (help) - Nasr, S. H. (2006). Islamic Philosophy from Its Origin to the Present: Philosophy in the Land of Prophecy. SUNY Press. ISBN 0-7914-6799-6.
- Katz, Victor (1998). A History of Mathematics: An Introduction (2 ed.). Addison-Wesley. p. 879. ISBN 0-321-01618-1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - KnoebelNasr, Arthur; Laubenbacher, Reinhard; Lodder, Jerry; Pengelley, David (2007). Mathematical Masterpieces: Further Chronicles by the Explorers. Springer. ISBN 0-387-33061-5.
- ed. by J.A. Boyle. (1968). The Cambridge History of Iran (5): The Saljug and Mongol Periods. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06936-X.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - Smith, David Eugene (1935). "Euclid, Omar Khayyâm, and Saccheri". Scripta Mathematica. III (1): 5–10. OCLC 14156259.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Rozenfeld, Boris A. (1988). A History of Non-Euclidean Geometry: Evolution of the Concept of a Geometric Space. Springer Verlag. pp. 65, 471. ISBN 0-387-96458-4.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - E.G. Browne (1998). Literary History of Persia. (Four volumes, 2,256 pages, and 25 years in the writing). ISBN 0-7007-0406-X
- Jan Rypka (1968). History of Iranian Literature. Reidel Publishing Company. OCLC 460598. ISBN 90-277-0143-1
- Omar Khayyam: Vierzeiler (Rubāʿīyāt) übersetzt von Friedrich Rosen mit Miniaturen von Hossein Behzad. ISBN 978-3-86931-622-2 Details
For further reference:
- R. M. Chopra, Great Poets of Classical Persian, June 2014, Sparrow Publication, Kolkata. (ISBN 978-81-89140-99-1).
External links
- Hashemipour, Behnaz (2007). "Khayyām: Ghiyāth al‐Dīn Abū al‐Fatḥ ʿUmar ibn Ibrāhīm al‐Khayyāmī al‐Nīshāpūrī". In Thomas Hockey; et al. (eds.). The Biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers. New York: Springer. pp. 627–8. ISBN 978-0-387-31022-0. (PDF version)
- Umar Khayyam, at the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Khayyam's works in original Persian at Ganjoor Persian Library
- Khayyam in Tarikhema.ir
- Works by Omar Khayyam at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Omar Khayyám at Faded Page (Canada)
- Works by or about Omar Khayyam at the Internet Archive
- Works by Omar Khayyam at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- The illustrated Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám at Internet Archive.
- Omar Khayyam's Rubaiyat as translated by Edward Fitzgerald – 1st edition
- The Rubaiyat by Omar Khayyam – The Internet Classics Archive
- Illustrations to the Rubaiyat by Adelaide Hanscom
- Omar Khayyam
- 1048 births
- 1131 deaths
- Algebra
- Philosophers from Nishapur
- Mathematicians from Nishapur
- 11th-century Persian poets
- 12th-century Persian poets
- Medieval Persian astronomers
- Medieval Persian mathematicians
- Persian philosophers
- Persian spiritual writers
- 11th-century mathematicians
- 12th-century mathematicians
- Medieval Persian writers
- Astronomers of medieval Islam
- Mathematicians of medieval Islam
- 12th-century astronomers
- 11th-century Iranian people
- 12th-century Iranian people
- Seljuq scholars
- Seljuq-period poets
- Persian physicists
- Persian poets