Albumazar

Muslim astrologer
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Also known as: Abū Maʿshar, Albumasar
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Albumasar, orAbū Maʿshar
Born:
Aug. 10, 787, Balkh, Khorāsān [now in Afghanistan]
Died:
March 9, 886, al-Wāsit, Iraq (aged 98)
Subjects Of Study:
astrology

Albumazar (born Aug. 10, 787, Balkh, Khorāsān [now in Afghanistan]—died March 9, 886, al-Wāsit, Iraq) was a leading astrologer of the Muslim world, who is known primarily for his theory that the world, created when the seven planets were in conjunction in the first degree of Aries, will come to an end at a like conjunction in the last degree of Pisces.

Albumazar’s reputation as an astrologer was immense, both among his contemporaries and in later times. He was the archetype of the knavish astrologer in the play Lo astrologo (1606) by the Italian philosopher and scientist Giambattista della Porta. This play was the basis for Albumazar by Thomas Tomkis, which was revived by the English poet John Dryden in 1668. Albumazar’s principal works include Kitāb al-Madkhal al-Kabīr ʿalā ʿilm aḥkām al-nujūm (“Great Introduction to the Science of Astrology”), Kitāb al-qirānāt (“Book of Conjunctions”), and Kitāb taḥāwīl sinī al-ʿālam (“Book of Revolutions of the World-Years”).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.