Glen van Brummelen
Sijzī: Abū Saʿīd Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al‐Jalīl al‐Sijzī
Born Sijistān, (Iran), circa 945
Died circa 1020
Sijzī, well known for his contributions to geometry, was also a prolific astrologer and astronomer. We possess few details of his life; his name suggests that he was born in Sijistān. His father, Abū al‐Ḥūsayn Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al‐Jalīl, was also a mathematician and astronomer. Parts of Sijzī's life were spent in Sijistān and Khurāsān. In Shīrāz in 969/970, he was present (with Kūhī, Būzjānī, and others) for the famous observations of meridian transits of the Sun conducted by ʿAbd al‐Raḥmān al‐Ṣūfī. Later in life he became a friend of Bīrūnī, who often quoted Sijzī's results in his own works.
Of approximately 20 astrological and astronomical treatises composed by Sijzī, many were compilations and summaries of the works of others, enhanced and systematized by the addition of tables and commentary. His Jāmi ʿ al‐Shāhī contains 13 astrological works, three of which are summaries of treatises by Abū Maʿshar. One of these, the Muntakhab Kitāb al‐ulūf, is an important source of information on Abū Maʿshar's Book of Thousands. Another of Sijzī's works, the Kitāb al‐qirānāt (Book of Conjunctions), may be thought of as a supplement to the Kitāb al‐ulūf. This material likely originated in Sasanian sources and deals with various topics, including astrological world history. Other astrological contributions include the Kitāb Zarādushtṣuwar darajāt al‐falak (The book of Zoroaster on the pictures of the degrees of the zodiac) and Zāʾirjāt li‐istikhrāj al‐haylāj wa‐ʾl‐kadkhudāh, a book of horoscopes with tables based on Hermes, Ptolemy, Dorotheus, and “the moderns.”
Sijzī seems to have had more than a passing interest in astronomical instruments. He wrote a treatise on the astrolabe that contains the geometric “method of the artisans” for drawing azimuth circles on an astrolabe, as well as descriptions of variations in the retes on astrolabes known to him. Bīrūnī describes three astrolabe variants invented by Sijzī, and in the Exhaustive Treatise on Shadows he discusses several of Sijzī's contributions to the theory and use of a gnomon. Sijzī's treatise On [the Fact that] All Figures are Derived from the Circle contains a geometric description of an instrument that could be used to find the direction of Mecca (the qibla). Finally, in his Introduction to Geometry he says:
I made in Sijistān a great and important instrument, a model of the whole world, composed of the celestial spheres, the celestial bodies, the orbs of their motions with their sizes, their distances and their bodies, and the form of the earth, the places, towns, mountains, seas and deserts, inside a hollow sphere provided with a grid. I called it “the configuration of the universe.”
Most of Sijzī's 40 mathematical works, including a unique medieval treatise on problem‐solving strategies, focus on geometry in the Euclidean style. One of these treatises contains a systematic mathematical approach to establishing the 12 relations that emerge from the transversal figure in spherical trigonometry (the theorem of Menelaus). Although the work is strictly mathematical, Sijzī is explicitly aware of its fundamental importance to mathematical astronomy.
Selected References
Berggren, J. L. (1981). “Al‐Sijzī on the Transversal Figure.” Journal for the History of Arabic Science 5: 23–36.
——— (1991). “Medieval Islamic Methods for Drawing Azimuth Circles on the Astrolabe.” Centaurus 34: 309–344.
Dold‐Samplonius, Yvonne (1997). “Al‐Sijzī.” In Encyclopaedia of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine in Non‐Western Cultures, edited by Helaine Selin, pp. 898–900. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Frank, Josef (1918/1919). “Zur Geschichte des Astrolabs.” Sitzungsberichte der Physikalisch‐Medizinischen Sozietät in Erlangen 50–51: 275–305.
Hogendijk, Jan P. (English trans. and annot.) and Mohammad Bagheri (Arabic ed. and Persian trans.) (1996). Al‐Sijzī's Treatise on Geometrical Problem Solving. Tehran: Fatemi.
Kennedy, E. S. (1976). The Exhaustive Treatise on Shadows by Abū al‐Rayḥān Muḥammad b. Aḥmad al‐Bīrūnī. Translation and commentary. 2 Vols. Aleppo: Institute for the History of Arabic Science.
Kennedy, E. S. and B. L. van der Waerden (1963). “The World‐Year of the Persians.” Journal of the American Oriental Society 83: 315–327.
Pingree, David (1968). The Thousands of Abu Maʿshar. London: Warburg Institute.