From coffee to cheques and the three-course
meal, the Muslim world has given us many innovations that we take for
granted in daily life. As a new exhibition opens, Paul Vallely nominates
20 of the most influential- and identifies the men of genius behind
them
1) The story goes that an Arab named Khalid was tending his goats in
the Kaffa region of southern Ethiopia, when he noticed his animals
became livelier after eating a certain berry. He boiled the berries to
make the first coffee. Certainly the first record of the drink is of
beans exported from Ethiopia to Yemen where Sufis drank it to stay awake
all night to pray on special occasions. By the late 15th century it had
arrived in Mecca and Turkey from where it made its way to Venice in
1645. It was brought to England in 1650 by a Turk named Pasqua Rosee who
opened the first coffee house in Lombard Street in the City of London.
The Arabic qahwa became the Turkish kahve then the Italian caffé and
then English coffee.
2) The ancient Greeks thought our eyes emitted rays,
like a laser, which enabled us to see. The first person to realise that
light enters the eye, rather than leaving it, was the 10th-century
Muslim mathematician, astronomer and physicist Ibn al-Haitham. He
invented the first pin-hole camera after noticing the way light came
through a hole in window shutters. The smaller the hole, the better the
picture, he worked out, and set up the first Camera Obscura (from the
Arab word qamara for a dark or private room). He is also credited with
being the first man to shift physics from a philosophical activity to an
experimental one.
3) A form of chess was played in ancient India but
the game was developed into the form we know it today in Persia. From
there it spread westward to Europe – where it was introduced by the
Moors in Spain in the 10th century – and eastward as far as Japan. The
word rook comes from the Persian rukh, which means chariot.
4) A thousand years before the Wright brothers a
Muslim poet, astronomer, musician and engineer named Abbas ibn Firnas
made several attempts to construct a flying machine. In 852 he jumped
from the minaret of the Grand Mosque in Cordoba using a loose cloak
stiffened with wooden struts. He hoped to glide like a bird. He didn’t.
But the cloak slowed his fall, creating what is thought to be the first
parachute, and leaving him with only minor injuries. In 875, aged 70,
having perfected a machine of silk and eagles’ feathers he tried again,
jumping from a mountain. He flew to a significant height and stayed
aloft for ten minutes but crashed on landing – concluding, correctly,
that it was because he had not given his device a tail so it would stall
on landing. Baghdad international airport and a crater on the Moon are
named after him.
5) Washing and bathing are religious requirements for
Muslims, which is perhaps why they perfected the recipe for soap which
we still use today. The ancient Egyptians had soap of a kind, as did the
Romans who used it more as a pomade. But it was the Arabs who combined
vegetable oils with sodium hydroxide and aromatics such as thyme oil.
One of the Crusaders’ most striking characteristics, to Arab nostrils,
was that they did not wash. Shampoo was introduced to England by a
Muslim who opened Mahomed’s Indian Vapour Baths on Brighton seafront in
1759 and was appointed Shampooing Surgeon to Kings George IV and William
IV.
6) Distillation, the means of separating liquids
through differences in their boiling points, was invented around the
year 800 by Islam’s foremost scientist, Jabir ibn Hayyan, who
transformed alchemy into chemistry, inventing many of the basic
processes and apparatus still in use today – liquefaction,
crystallisation, distillation, purification, oxidisation, evaporation
and filtration. As well as discovering sulphuric and nitric acid, he
invented the alembic still, giving the world intense rosewater and other
perfumes and alcoholic spirits (although drinking them is haram, or
forbidden, in Islam). Ibn Hayyan emphasised systematic experimentation
and was the founder of modern chemistry.
7) The crank-shaft is a device which translates
rotary into linear motion and is central to much of the machinery in the
modern world, not least the internal combustion engine. One of the most
important mechanical inventions in the history of humankind, it was
created by an ingenious Muslim engineer called al-Jazari to raise water
for irrigation. His 1206 Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical
Devices shows he also invented or refined the use of valves and pistons,
devised some of the first mechanical clocks driven by water and
weights, and was the father of robotics. Among his 50 other inventions
was the combination lock.
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