"ജാബിർ ബിൻ ഹയ്യാൻ" എന്ന താളിന്റെ പതിപ്പുകൾ തമ്മിലുള്ള വ്യത്യാസം

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വരി 10:
| Religion = [[Islam]]
| school_tradition = [[Shia]]<ref>{{cite book |last=Henderson |first=Joseph L.|coauthors=Dyane N. Sherwood |editor= |title=Transformation of the Psyche: The Symbolic Alchemy of the Splendor Solis |url=http://books.google.com/?id=NOcY_p6bz_0C&printsec=frontcover#PPA11,M1 |edition= |year=2003 |publisher=Psychology Press |location=East Sussex, UK |isbn=1-58391-950-3 |page=11|quote= }}</ref>
| ethnicity =[[Arab people|Arab]]<ref name="EI2">{{Cite encyclopedia | edition = 2nd|publisher = Brill Academic Publishers| volume = 2| pages = 357–359| last = Kraus|first = P.| title = Djābir B. Ḥayyān| encyclopedia = Encyclopaedia of Islam| year = 1962 |quote=As for Djābir's historic personality, Holmyard has suggested that his father was "a certain Azdī called Hayyan, druggist of Kufa...mentioned...in connection with the political machinations that were used by many people, in the eighth century, finally resulted in the overthrow of the Umayyad dynasty.}}</ref><ref>Holmyard, Eric John, "Introduction" to ''The Works of Geber'', Englished by Richard Russell (London: Dent, 1928), p. vii: "Abu Musa Jabir ibn Hayyan, generally known merely as Jabir, was the son of ana imamdruggist belonging to the famous South Arabian tribe of Al-Azd. Members of this tribe had settled at the town of Kufa, in Iraq, shortly after the Muhammadan conquest in the seventh century A.D., and it was in Kufa that Hayyan the druggist lived."</ref>
| region =
| main_interests = <small>[[Alchemy and chemistry in Islam|Alchemy and Chemistry]],[[Islamic astronomy|Astronomy]], [[Islamic astrology|Astrology]], [[Islamic medicine|Medicine and Pharmacy]], [[Islamic philosophy|Philosophy]], [[Islamic physics|Physics]], philanthropist</small>
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