- Iberian lynx (mammal)
lynx: Iberian lynx: The Iberian lynx (L. pardinus), which is also known as the Spanish lynx or the Pardel lynx, bears a strong resemblance to the Eurasian lynx but may be distinguished by its smaller size; short, dark-tipped tail; and the presence of long, white, beardlike…
- Iberian Peninsula (peninsula, Europe)
Iberian Peninsula, peninsula in southwestern Europe, occupied by Spain and Portugal. Its name derives from its ancient inhabitants whom the Greeks called Iberians, probably for the Ebro (Iberus), the peninsula’s second longest river (after the Tagus). The Pyrenees mountain range forms an effective
- Iberian range (mountains, Spain)
Aragon: Geography: The Sierra de Gúdar occupies almost all of Teruel province as well as the southwestern corner of Zaragoza.
- Iberic alphabet
Celto-Iberian language: …the western part of the Iberian Peninsula. Celto-Iberian was written in the Iberic script (borrowed from speakers of the non-Indo-European Iberian language in eastern and southern Spain) and is known primarily from a small number of coin inscriptions and an even smaller number of inscriptions on stone. Leading scholars believe…
- Iberio
Hibernia, in ancient geography, one of the names by which Ireland was known to Greek and Roman writers. Other names were Ierne, Iouernia and (H)iberio. All these are adaptations of a stem from which Erin and Eire are also derived. The island was known to the Romans through the reports of traders,
- Iberis (plant)
candytuft, (genus Iberis), genus of about 40 species of Eurasian plants of the mustard family (Brassicaceae). Candytufts are generally herbaceous annuals or perennials, and most species are native to the Mediterranean region. Many are grown as ornamentals for their showy flowers. Globe candytuft
- Iberis amara (plant)
candytuft: Rocket candytuft (I. amara) has thick, deeply lobed leaves and large white, often pink-tinged, fragrant flowers on 22-cm (9-inch) stalks. It grows on chalky hills and in fields. The evergreen candytuft (I. sempervirens) is a matting perennial with white flowers and is widely planted in…
- Iberis gibraltarica (plant)
Gibraltar: Land: The Gibraltar candytuft is a flower native only to the Rock. Wild olive and pine trees grow on the Upper Rock. Mammals include rabbits, foxes, and Barbary macaques (often erroneously identified as apes). Barbary macaques have roamed the Rock for hundreds of years and are Europe’s…
- Iberis sempervirens (plant)
candytuft: The evergreen candytuft (I. sempervirens) is a matting perennial with white flowers and is widely planted in gardens.
- Iberis umbellata (plant)
candytuft: Globe candytuft (Iberis umbellata) is a common garden annual that bears flat clusters of pink, violet, white, purple, or red flowers in late summer. The plants are 40 cm (16 inches) tall and have long, narrow leaves. Rocket candytuft (I. amara) has thick, deeply lobed…
- Ibero (people)
Iberian, one of a prehistoric people of southern and eastern Spain who later gave their name to the whole peninsula. The waves of migrating Celtic peoples from the 8th to 6th century bc onward settled heavily in northern and central Spain, penetrated Portugal and Galicia, but left the indigenous
- Ibero-Caucasian languages
Caucasian languages, group of languages indigenous to Transcaucasia and adjacent areas of the Caucasus region, between the Black and Caspian seas. As used in this article, the term excludes the Indo-European (Armenian, Ossetic, Talysh, Kurdish, Tat) and Turkic languages (Azerbaijani, Kumyk, Noghay,
- Ibero-Maurusian industry (archaeology)
Ibero-Maurusian industry, North African stone-tool industry dating from the late Würm (last) Glacial Period, about 16,000 years ago. The former presumption that the industry extended into Spain explains the prefix “Ibero-” in the name. The industry does bear a close resemblance to the late
- Iberoamerica
history of Latin America, history of the region from the pre-Columbian period and including colonization by the Spanish and Portuguese beginning in the 15th century, the 19th-century wars of independence, and developments to the end of the 20th century. Latin America is generally understood to
- Ibert, Jacques (French composer)
Jacques Ibert was a composer whose music is admired for its colourful, technically polished, and often witty neoclassical style. Ibert studied at the Paris Conservatory and in 1919 won the Prix de Rome for his cantata Le Poète et la fée (“The Poet and the Fairy”). In Rome he composed his most
- Ibert, Jacques-François-Antoine (French composer)
Jacques Ibert was a composer whose music is admired for its colourful, technically polished, and often witty neoclassical style. Ibert studied at the Paris Conservatory and in 1919 won the Prix de Rome for his cantata Le Poète et la fée (“The Poet and the Fairy”). In Rome he composed his most
- Iberus River (river, Spain)
Ebro River, river, the longest in Spain. The Ebro rises in springs at Fontibre near Reinosa in the Cantabrian Mountains, in the Cantabria province of northern Spain. It flows for 565 miles (910 km) in a southeasterly course to its delta on the Mediterranean coast in Tarragona province, midway
- Iberville, Pierre Le Moyne d’ (French-Canadian soldier and explorer)
Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville was a French-Canadian naval hero and explorer, noted for his exploration and battles on behalf of the French in Hudson Bay and in the territory of Louisiana. The son of prominent Montreal fur trader Charles Le Moyne, Iberville spent his young manhood in raids against
- ibex (mammal)
ibex, any of several sure-footed, sturdy wild goats of the genus Capra in the family Bovidae (order Artiodactyla) that are found in the mountains of Europe, Asia, and northeastern Africa. The European, or Alpine, ibex (C. ibex ibex) is typical. Adult males weigh around 100 kg (220 pounds), while
- IBF (international sports organization)
badminton: The Badminton World Federation (BWF; originally the International Badminton Federation), the world governing body of the sport, was formed in 1934. Badminton is also popular in Malaysia, Indonesia, Japan, and Denmark. The BWF’s first world championships were held in 1977. A number of regional, national, and…
- IBF (international sports organization)
boxing: Professional organizations: The International Boxing Federation (IBF) was established in 1983, which added to an already convoluted situation. Since the 1980s it has been common for most weight divisions to have three so-called world champions, and this has considerably diluted the championship class in boxing.
- Ibi (Nigeria)
Ibi, town and river port, Taraba state, east-central Nigeria, on the south bank of the Benue River, opposite the mouth of the Shemankar River. Founded in the 1850s by a slave of Hamman, the Fulani emir of Muri (to the northeast), it became a post for slave traders from Muri, known as the bayin
- IBI
State Bank of India (SBI), state-owned commercial bank and financial services company, nationalized by the Indian government in 1955. SBI maintains thousands of branches throughout India and offices in dozens of countries throughout the world. The bank’s headquarters are in Mumbai. The oldest
- Ibibio (people)
Ibibio, people of southeastern Nigeria, mainly in the Cross River state. They speak dialects of Efik-Ibibio, a language now grouped within the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo language family. The Ibibio comprise the following major divisions: Efik, Northern (Enyong), Southern (Eket), Delta
- Ibibio language
Benue-Congo languages: Cross River: …largest of these languages is Ibibio, which together with its written cousin, Efik, has some 3,500,000 speakers. Other languages with more than 100,000 speakers are Anang, Khana, Ogbia, Loko, Mbembe, Obolo, and Gokana.
- Ibicuí River (river, South America)
Río de la Plata: Physiography of the Uruguay basin: The Ijuí, Ibicuí, and the Cuareim are short rivers but of considerable volume; the last forms part of the boundary between Brazil and Uruguay. At the mouth of the Cuareim, the Uruguay becomes the boundary line between Argentina and Uruguay, and the river flows almost directly south.…
- Ibidorhyncha struthersii (bird, Ibidorhyncha struthersii)
ibisbill, (Ibidorhyncha struthersii), Asian bird named for its long, red, down-curved bill (similar to that of an ibis), which it uses to probe for food under stones along streams and ponds. Rather heavyset birds about 40 centimetres (16 inches) long, ibisbills have shorter legs than their familial
- Ibina (river, Africa)
Ituri Forest: Climate and drainage: … in the centre, and the Ibina in the south. None of these rivers is navigable, even by pirogue, for more than a few miles. The streams are fed by rains that are highly variable from month to month and from year to year. Average annual rainfall is 75 inches (1,900…
- Ibirapuera Park (park, São Paulo, Brazil)
São Paulo: West of the centre: …of Avenida Paulista is spacious Ibirapuera Park, the distinguished home of the state legislature, the 9 de Julho Palace. The Palace lies at the park’s northern tip, and the prosaic former city hall (the city headquarters has been housed in the Matarazzo Building since 2004) faces it across a lake.…
- ibis (bird, Threskiornithinae subfamily)
ibis, any of about 26 species of medium-sized wading birds constituting the subfamily Threskiornithinae of the family Threskiornithidae (order Ciconiiformes), which also includes the spoonbills. Ibises range in length from about 55 to 75 cm (22 to 30 inches). They occur in all warm regions except
- Ibis (poem by Ovid)
Ovid: Works of Ovid: …is shown by his poem Ibis. That, written not long after his arrival at Tomis, is a long and elaborate curse directed at an anonymous enemy. It is a tour de force of abstruse mythological learning, composed largely without the aid of books. But in the absence of any sign…
- Ibis ibis (bird)
stork: The African wood stork (Ibis ibis), or yellow-billed stork, is about 100 cm (3 feet) tall, with a yellowish bill and red facial skin.
- ibisbill (bird, Ibidorhyncha struthersii)
ibisbill, (Ibidorhyncha struthersii), Asian bird named for its long, red, down-curved bill (similar to that of an ibis), which it uses to probe for food under stones along streams and ponds. Rather heavyset birds about 40 centimetres (16 inches) long, ibisbills have shorter legs than their familial
- Ibiza (Spain)
Spain: Phoenicians of Spain: Eivissa (Ibiza) became a major Carthaginian colony, and the island produced dye, salt, fish sauce, and wool. A shrine with offerings to the goddess Tanit was established in the cave at Es Cuyram, and the Balearic Islands entered Eivissa’s commercial orbit after 400 bce. In 237…
- Ibiza (island, Spain)
Ibiza, island, Balearic Islands provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), Spain. Ibiza is the third largest of the Balearic Islands. It lies in the western Mediterranean 50 miles (80 km) southwest of Majorca. The island was a strategic point of great importance in ancient
- Iblīs (Islam)
Iblīs, in Islam, the personal name of the Devil, possibly derived from the Greek diabolos. Iblīs, the counterpart of Satan in Christianity, is also referred to as ʿAduw Allāh ( “Enemy of God”), al-Aduw (“Enemy”), or, when he is portrayed as a tempter, al-Shayṭān (“Demon”). At the creation of
- Iblomorpha (crustacean)
cirripede: Annotated classification: …Praelepadomorpha) and 4 extant (Heteralepadomorpha, Iblomorpha, Lepadomorpha, and Scalpellomorpha), the 3 best-known characterized below. Order Sessilia (operculate or sessile barnacles) Late Jurassic?, Cretaceous to present; capitulum relatively rigid; cemented directly to the substratum; supporting an operculum of 2 or 3 movable plates, or
- IBM (American corporation)
IBM, leading American computer manufacturer, with a major share of the market both in the United States and abroad. Its headquarters are in Armonk, New York. It was incorporated in 1911 as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company in a consolidation of three smaller companies that made punch-card
- IBM (machine tool technology)
machine tool: Ion beam machining (IBM): In IBM a stream of charged atoms (ions) of an inert gas, such as argon, is accelerated in a vacuum by high energies and directed toward a solid workpiece. The beam removes atoms from the workpiece by transferring energy and momentum to…
- IBM 1401 (computer)
computer: The IBM 360: …computers of one model: the IBM 1401. The chain printer required a lot of magnetic core memory, and IBM engineers packaged the printer support, core memory, and disk support into the 1401, one of the first computers to use this solid-state technology.
- IBM 360 (operating system)
computer: The IBM 360: IBM had been selling business machines since early in the century and had built Howard Aiken’s computer to his architectural specifications. But the company had been slow to implement the stored-program digital computer architecture of the early 1950s. It did develop the IBM…
- IBM 650 (computer)
computer: The age of Big Iron: The IBM 650, delivered at the end of 1954 for colleges and businesses, was a decimal implementation of the IAS design. With this low-cost magnetic drum computer, which sold for about $200,000 apiece (compared with about $1,000,000 for the scientific model, the IBM 701), IBM had…
- IBM 7030 (supercomputer)
Fred Brooks: …where he worked on the IBM 7030 (known as Stretch), a supercomputer ordered by the U.S. National Security Agency for the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Together with Dura Sweeney, Brooks invented the computer’s interrupt system, which is used to recognize different computing “events” that require immediate attention and to synchronize…
- IBM 704 (computer)
computer: IBM develops FORTRAN: …a machine in mind: the IBM 704, which had built-in floating-point math operations. That the 704 used floating-point representation made it especially useful for scientific work, and Backus believed that a scientifically oriented programming language would make the machine even more attractive. Still, he understood the resistance to anything that…
- IBM Building (building, Chicago, Illinois, United States)
AMA Plaza, a 52-story skyscraper in downtown Chicago, Illinois, U.S., designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and completed in 1972. It is a towering example of both the International Style and the elegant pin-striped steel-and-glass buildings Mies crafted in the postwar era. Rising on a narrow site
- IBM OS/2 (operating system)
IBM OS/2, operating system introduced in 1987 by IBM and Microsoft to operate the second-generation line of IBM personal computers, the PS/2 (Personal System/2). Although initially IBM and Microsoft worked together on OS/2, the companies parted ways after disputes arose regarding how the system
- IBM OS/360 (operating system)
IBM OS/360, operating system introduced by IBM in 1964 to operate its 360 family of mainframe computer systems. The 360 system was unprecedented in its ability to support a wide array of applications, and it was one of the first operating systems to require direct-access storage devices. The
- IBM PC (computer line)
personal computer: IBM PC: IBM Corporation, the world’s dominant computer maker, did not enter the new market until 1981, when it introduced the IBM Personal Computer, or IBM PC. The IBM PC was significantly faster than rival machines, had about 10 times their memory capacity, and was…
- IBM PC clone (computer line)
Compaq: Building IBM PC clones: Compaq was founded in 1982 by Joseph R. (“Rod”) Canion, James M. Harris, and William H. Murto, all former employees of Texas Instruments Incorporated, for the purpose of building a portable computer that could use all of the software and peripheral devices…
- IBM Personal Computer (computer line)
personal computer: IBM PC: IBM Corporation, the world’s dominant computer maker, did not enter the new market until 1981, when it introduced the IBM Personal Computer, or IBM PC. The IBM PC was significantly faster than rival machines, had about 10 times their memory capacity, and was…
- IBM WebSphere (software)
middleware: WebSphere, a set of integration software produced by International Business Machines Corporation (IBM), is one of the most widely used middleware programs. Another familiar example of middleware is the application programming interface (API) used by the American social networking site Facebook. Facebook’s API enables its
- IBM-compatible computer (computer line)
Compaq: Building IBM PC clones: Compaq was founded in 1982 by Joseph R. (“Rod”) Canion, James M. Harris, and William H. Murto, all former employees of Texas Instruments Incorporated, for the purpose of building a portable computer that could use all of the software and peripheral devices…
- Ibn Abī al-Dunyā (Muslim author)
Islamic arts: Development of literary prose: …multifaceted, are the treatises of Ibn Abī al-Dunyā (died 894).
- Ibn Abī al-Rijāl, Aḥmad (Yemeni scholar)
Aḥmad Ibn Abī al-Rijāl was a Yemeni scholar and theologian, who is the best source of historical information on the little-known sect of Shīʿī Muslims in Yemen called the Zaydīs. After completing his education, Ibn Abī al-Rijāl joined the religious-bureaucratic establishment and reached the
- Ibn Abī al-Rijāl, Aḥmad ibn Ṣāliḥ (Yemeni scholar)
Aḥmad Ibn Abī al-Rijāl was a Yemeni scholar and theologian, who is the best source of historical information on the little-known sect of Shīʿī Muslims in Yemen called the Zaydīs. After completing his education, Ibn Abī al-Rijāl joined the religious-bureaucratic establishment and reached the
- Ibn Abī Sarḥ (governor of Egypt)
ʿAbd Allāh ibn Saʿd ibn Abī Sarḥ was the governor of Upper (southern) Egypt for the Muslim caliphate during the reign of ʿUthmān (644–656) and the cofounder, with the future caliph Muʿāwiyah I, of the first Muslim navy, which seized Cyprus (647–649), Rhodes, and Cos (Dodecanese Islands) and
- Ibn Abī ʿAṣrūn (Islamic theologian)
Ibn Abī ʿAṣrūn was a scholar who became a leading Shāfiʿī (one of the four schools of Islamic law) theologian and the chief judicial officer of the Ayyūbid caliphate. After completing his theological training, Ibn Abī ʿAṣrūn held various religious and judicial posts in Iraq. In 1154 he was invited
- Ibn al-Abbār (Islamic scholar)
Ibn al-Abbār was a historian, theologian, and humorist who became one of the most famous students of Islamic Spain. Ibn al-Abbār began his official career as a secretary to the Muslim governor of the Emirate of Balansiya. After the fall of Valencia (September 1238), he settled in Tunisia and was
- Ibn al-Afṭas (Afṭasid ruler)
Afṭasid dynasty: …Maslamah, who was known as Ibn al-Afṭas, seized control of the kingdom and, assuming the title Al-Manṣūr Billāh (“Victorious by God”), ruled fairly peacefully until 1045. But trouble with the neighbouring ʿAbbādids of Sevilla (Seville), which had begun at the end of al-Manṣūr’s rule, consumed the energies of his son…
- Ibn al-Ashʿath (Arab general)
Ibn al-Ashʿath was an Umayyad general who became celebrated as the leader of a revolt (ad 699–701) against the governor of Iraq, al-Ḥajjāj. A member of the noble tribe of Kindah of the old aristocracy, Ibn al-Ashʿath was at first friendly toward the Umayyad authorities but then began to smart under
- Ibn al-Athīr (Arab historian)
Ibn al-Athīr was an influential Arab historian. Ibn al-Athīr spent a scholarly life in Mosul, but often visited Baghdad. He was for a time with Saladin’s army in Syria and later lived in Aleppo and Damascus. His chief work was a history of the world, al-Kāmil fī al-tārīkh (“The Complete History”),
- Ibn al-Bawwāb (Arab calligrapher)
Ibn al-Bawwāb was an Arabic calligrapher of the ʿAbbāsid Age (750–1258) who reputedly invented the cursive rayḥānī and muḥaqqaq scripts. He refined several of the calligraphic styles invented a century earlier by Ibn Muqlah, including the naskhī and tawqī scripts, and collected and preserved for
- Ibn al-Fāriḍ (Arab poet)
Ibn al-Fāriḍ was an Arab poet whose expression of Sufi mysticism is regarded as the finest in the Arabic language. Son of a Syrian-born inheritance-law functionary, Ibn al-Fāriḍ studied for a legal career but abandoned law for a solitary religious life in the Muqaṭṭam hills near Cairo. He spent
- Ibn al-Haytham (Arab astronomer and mathematician)
Ibn al-Haytham was a mathematician and astronomer who made significant contributions to the principles of optics and the use of scientific experiments. Conflicting stories are told about the life of Ibn al-Haytham, particularly concerning his scheme to regulate the Nile. In one version, told by the
- Ibn al-Jawzī (Muslim educator)
Ibn al-Jawzī was a jurist, theologian, historian, preacher, and teacher who became an important figure in the Baghdad establishment and a leading spokesman of traditionalist Islam. Ibn al-Jawzī received a traditional religious education, and, upon the completion of his studies, he chose a teaching
- Ibn al-Kalbī (Iraqi genealogist)
Arabian religion: Sources of modern knowledge: …al-aṣnām), by the Iraqi genealogist Ibn al-Kalbī (8th–9th century ce), and in “The Crown” (al-Iklīl), by the Yemeni encyclopaedist and geographer al-Hamdānī (9th–10th century ce), which describes the pre-Islamic antiquities of Yemen.
- Ibn al-Khaṭīb (Muslim writer)
Ibn Khaldūn: Education and diplomatic career: …prime minister, the brilliant writer Ibn al-Khaṭīb, was a good friend. Ibn Khaldūn was then 32 years old.
- Ibn al-Mudabbir (Egyptian official)
Egypt: The Ṭūlūnid dynasty (868–905): …of ʿāmil filled by one Ibn al-Mudabbir, who over a period of years had gained control of Egyptian finances, enriching himself in the process, and was therefore reluctant to acknowledge Aḥmad’s authority. A struggle for power soon broke out between the two, which ended four years later with the transfer…
- Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ (Muslim writer)
Arabic literature: The concept of adab: …who adopted the Arabic name Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ. He translated from the Persian a collection of animal fables about kingship, the Panchatantra (a work of Indian origin), which he titled in Arabic Kalīlah wa Dimnah (“Kalīlah and Dimnah”); its narrative method and its particular style were among its contributions to the…
- Ibn al-Muʿtazz (ʿAbbāsid caliph and poet)
Arabic literature: Hunt poetry: The caliph, poet, and critic Ibn al-Muʿtazz clearly reflects his personal interests and experience in his own contributions to the hunt poem:
- Ibn al-Nadīm (Muslim bookseller)
Islamic arts: Development of literary prose: … (“Index”), compiled by the bookseller Ibn al-Nadīm in 988, gave a full account of the Arabic literature extant in the 10th century. It covered all kinds of literature, from philology to alchemy, but most of these works unfortunately have been lost. In those years manuals of composition (inshāʾ) were written…
- Ibn al-Raqā (Jahwarid vizier)
Jahwarid dynasty: …authority to his own vizier, Ibn al-Raqā. When ʿAbd al-Malik, al-Rashīd’s jealous son, assassinated the vizier in 1058, his father rewarded him with virtually caliphal standing and authority in the state. Extremely unpopular, ʿAbd al-Malik and his father were handed over to the ʿAbbādids by the Cordobans themselves when the…
- Ibn al-Rūmī (Arab poet [9th-century])
Arabic literature: Elegy: …elegy of the 9th-century poet Ibn al-Rūmī on the fall of Basra to an army of enslaved labourers is a case in point:
- Ibn al-Zubayr (Companion of Muḥammad)
ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Zubayr was a leader of a rebellion against the Umayyad dynasty in the early Islamic period and the most prominent representative of the second generation of Muslim families in Mecca, who resented the Umayyad assumption of caliphal authority. As a youth, Ibn al-Zubayr went on many
- Ibn al-ʿArabī (Muslim mystic)
Ibn al-ʿArabī was a celebrated Muslim mystic-philosopher who gave the esoteric, mystical dimension of Islamic thought its first full-fledged philosophic expression. His major works are the monumental Al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyyah (“The Meccan Revelations”) and Fuṣūṣ al-ḥikam (1229; “The Bezels of
- Ibn al-ʿAwwām (Islamic author)
Ibn al-ʿAwwām was an agriculturist who wrote the Arabic treatise on agriculture, Kitāb al-filā-ḥah, the outstanding medieval work on the subject. The Spanish translation, published in the early 1800s, consists of 35 chapters dealing with agronomy, cattle and poultry raising, and beekeeping. It
- Ibn al-ʿIbrī (Syrian philosopher)
Bar Hebraeus was a medieval Syrian scholar noted for his encyclopaedic learning in science and philosophy and for his enrichment of Syriac literature by the introduction of Arabic culture. Motivated toward scholarly pursuits by his father, a Jewish convert to Christianity, Bar Hebraeus emigrated to
- Ibn an-Nafīs (Muslim physician)
Ibn an-Nafīs was an Arab physician who first described the pulmonary circulation of the blood. In finding that the wall between the right and left ventricles of the heart is solid and without pores, he disputed Galen’s view that the blood passes directly from the right to the left side of the
- Ibn as-Sitrī (Arab calligrapher)
Ibn al-Bawwāb was an Arabic calligrapher of the ʿAbbāsid Age (750–1258) who reputedly invented the cursive rayḥānī and muḥaqqaq scripts. He refined several of the calligraphic styles invented a century earlier by Ibn Muqlah, including the naskhī and tawqī scripts, and collected and preserved for
- Ibn ash-Shāṭir (Islamic mathematician)
mathematics: Islamic mathematics to the 15th century: …the astrolabe of the Syrian Ibn al-Shāṭir (1305–75), a mathematical tool that could be used to solve all the standard problems of spherical astronomy in five different ways.
- Ibn Bābawayh (Muslim theologian)
Ibn Bābawayh was an Islamic theologian, author of one of the "Four Books" that are the basic authorities for the doctrine of Twelver (Ithnā ʿAshāri) Shīʿah. Little is known about Ibn Bābawayh’s life. According to legend he was born as the result of special prayers to the mahdī (the expected one).
- Ibn Babūyā (Muslim theologian)
Ibn Bābawayh was an Islamic theologian, author of one of the "Four Books" that are the basic authorities for the doctrine of Twelver (Ithnā ʿAshāri) Shīʿah. Little is known about Ibn Bābawayh’s life. According to legend he was born as the result of special prayers to the mahdī (the expected one).
- ibn Badis, ʿAbd al-Hamid (Algerian leader)
North Africa: Nationalist movements: …Arab Islamic nationalist movement of Sheik ʿAbd al-Hamid Ben Badis. After the war the French were on the defensive, conceding independence to Tunisia and Morocco in 1956 in order to concentrate their efforts on Algeria, where a full-scale rebellion led by the National Liberation Front (FLN) broke out in 1954.…
- Ibn Bājjah (Spanish Muslim philosopher)
Avempace was the earliest known representative in Spain of the Arabic Aristotelian–Neoplatonic philosophical tradition (see Arabic philosophy) and forerunner of the polymath scholar Ibn Ṭufayl and of the philosopher Averroës. Avempace’s chief philosophical tenets seem to have included belief in the
- Ibn Battuta (Muslim explorer and writer)
Ibn Battuta was the greatest medieval Muslim traveler and the author of one of the most famous travel books, the Riḥlah (Travels). His great work describes his extensive travels covering some 75,000 miles (120,000 km) in trips to almost all of the Muslim countries and as far as China and Sumatra
- ibn Daud, Abraham ben David Halevi (Jewish physician and historian)
Abraham ben David Halevi ibn Daud was a physician and historian who was the first Jewish philosopher to draw on Aristotle’s writings in a systematic fashion. He is probably more esteemed today for his history Sefer ha-kabbala (“Book of Tradition”) than for his major philosophic work, Sefer ha-emuna
- Ibn Dāʾūd (Muslim theologian)
Islamic arts: The new style: …expounded by the Ẓāhirī theologian Ibn Dāʾūd (died 910) in his poetic anthology Kitāb al-zahrah (The Book of the Flower). This theme was central to the ghazal poetry of the following centuries. Although at first completely secular, it was later taken over as a major concept in mystical love poetry.…
- Ibn Durayd (Arab philologist)
Ibn Durayd was an Arab philologist who wrote a large Arabic dictionary, Jamharat al-lughah (“Collection of Language”). Ibn Durayd traced his descent to an Arab tribe of Oman, and in 871, to avoid the Zanj (black African) slave rebellion, during which Basra was sacked, he moved to Oman. He stayed
- ibn Ezra, Abraham ben Meir (Spanish-Jewish scholar)
Abraham ben Meir ibn Ezra was a poet, grammarian, traveller, Neoplatonic philosopher, and astronomer, best known as a biblical exegete whose commentaries contributed to the Golden Age of Spanish Judaism. As a young man, he lived in Muslim Spain. Not much is known about his early life. He was on
- ibn Ezra, Moses (Spanish-Jewish poet)
Moses ibn Ezra was a Hebrew poet and critic, one of the finest poets of the golden age of Spanish Jewry (900–1200). He was one of the first Jewish poets to write secular verse; his surname, “ha-Sallaḥ” (Hebrew: Writer of Penitential Poems), however, was bestowed because of his penitential prayers
- Ibn Falaquera (Jewish philosopher)
Ibn Falaquera was a Spanish-born Jewish philosopher and translator who propagated a reconciliation between Jewish Orthodoxy and philosophy and defended Maimonides’ Guide of the Perplexed against the attacks of the traditionalists. His numerous works include Dialogue Between a Philosopher and a Man
- ibn Falaquera, Shemtob ben Joseph (Jewish philosopher)
Ibn Falaquera was a Spanish-born Jewish philosopher and translator who propagated a reconciliation between Jewish Orthodoxy and philosophy and defended Maimonides’ Guide of the Perplexed against the attacks of the traditionalists. His numerous works include Dialogue Between a Philosopher and a Man
- Ibn Faraj (Islāmic poet)
Spain: Literature: In the 10th century Ibn Faraj of Jaén deemed himself to possess sufficient background to compose the Kitāb al-Ḥadāʾiq (“Book of Orchards”)—the first anthology of Andalusian poets. This anthology was soon followed by one by the physician Ibn al-Kattānī.
- Ibn Gabirol (Jewish poet and philosopher)
Ibn Gabirol was one of the outstanding figures of the Hebrew school of religious and secular poetry during the Jewish Golden Age in Moorish Spain. He was also an important Neoplatonic philosopher. Born in Málaga about 1022, Ibn Gabirol received his higher education in Saragossa, where he joined the
- Ibn Hāniʾ (Islamic poet)
Arabic literature: Panegyric: The Andalusian poet Ibn Hāniʾ undoubtedly enraged the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad when he referred to the capture of Cairo by the Fāṭimid dynasty:
- Ibn Haukal (Arab geographer)
map: The Middle Ages: Ibn Haukal wrote a Book of Ways and Provinces illustrated with maps, and al-Idrīsī constructed a world map in 1154 for the Christian king Roger of Sicily, showing better information on Asian areas than had been available theretofore. In Baghdad astronomers used the compass long…
- Ibn Ḥayyān (Spanish Muslim historian)
Spain: Literature: …the preeminent Spanish historian is Ibn Ḥayyān of Córdoba (died 1076), whose mostly preserved Muqtabis is an anthology of historical texts collected from the works of his predecessors; however, he also wrote an original chronicle, the Matīn. Of human interest are the Memoirs of the king Zīrī ʿAbd Allāh, who…
- Ibn Ḥazm (Spanish Muslim scholar)
Ibn Ḥazm was a Muslim litterateur, historian, jurist, and theologian of Islamic Spain, famed for his literary productivity, breadth of learning, and mastery of the Arabic language. One of the leading exponents of the Ẓāhirī (Literalist) school of jurisprudence, he produced some 400 works, covering
- Ibn Hishām (Arab author)
Muhammad: Biographical sources: …which the best known is ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Hishām’s (died 833–834) Sīrat Muḥammad rasūl Allāh (“Life of Muhammad, the Messenger of God”). Ibn Isḥāq’s original book was not his own composition but rather a compilation of autonomous reports about specific events that took place during the life of Muhammad and…
- Ibn Ḥithlayn (Arab leader)
Ikhwān: …deposed Ibn Humayd, al-Dawish, and Ibn Hithlayn, the leaders of the revolt. A massacre of Najd merchants by Ibn Humayd in 1929, however, forced Ibn Saud to confront the rebellious Ikhwān militarily, and, in a major battle fought in March on the plain of Al-Sabalah (near Al-Arṭāwiyyah), Ibn Humayd was…