(Redirected from Armen Firman)
''Abbas Ibn Firnas', or ''Abbas Qasim Ibn Firnas' (latinized name 'Armen Firman') (
810 –
887 A.D.) (
Arabic: العباس بن فرناس) was a
Berber[1] polymath: a
chemist,
humanitarian,
inventor,
musician,
physician,
poet, and
technologist.
[Lynn Townsend White, Jr. (Spring, 1961). "Eilmer of Malmesbury, an Eleventh Century Aviator: A Case Study of Technological Innovation, Its Context and Tradition", ''Technology and Culture'' '2' (2), pp. 97-111.] He was born in Izn-Rand Onda,
al-Andalus (today's
Ronda,
Spain), and lived in the
Umayyad Caliphate of Córdoba in
al-Andalus, together with the
Iraqi contemporary musician
Ziryab. The name 'Abbas ibn Firnas' was later
Latinized as
Armen Firman.
In
852, under the new
Caliph 'Abd al-Rahman II, Ibn Firnas decided to fly off the
minaret of the
Mezquita mosque in
Córdoba using a huge winglike cloak to break his fall. He survived with minor injuries. This was considered to be the first
parachute.

Minaret of the Great Mosque, today - Córdoba, Spain
Like Ziryab, Ibn Firnas worked at a huge variety of enterprises. He was studied in chemistry,
physics, and
astronomy. He set up astronomical tables, wrote poetry, and designed a
water clock called Al-Maqata. He also devised means of manufacturing
glass from
sand, and he developed a chain of rings that could be used to display the motions of the planets and stars. He also developed a process for cutting rock crystal. Up to then, only the
Egyptians knew how to facet crystal. Thereafter Spain no longer needed to export
quartz to Egypt, but could finish it at home.
In
875 at an age of 65
years, Ibn Firnas built his own
hang glider, and launched himself from the Mount of the Bride (Jabal al-'arus) in the Rusafa Area, near
Córdoba. The flight was largely successful, and was widely observed by a crowd that he had invited. However, the landing was bad. He injured his back, and left critics saying he hadn't taken proper account of the way birds pull up into a
stall, and land on their tails. He'd provided neither a tail, nor means for such a maneuver. He died twelve years later.
:"Ibn Firnas was the first man in history to make a scientific attempt at flying."
—
Philip Hitti, ''
History of the Arabs''.
As westerners teach their children about
Lilienthal,
Santos-Dumont and the
Wright Brothers, the Islamic countries tell theirs about Ibn Firnas, a thousand years before the Wrights. The Libyans produced a postage stamp honoring him. The Iraqis built a statue in his memory on the way to
Baghdad International Airport, and the
Ibn Firnas Airport to the north of
Baghdad is named for him.
Ibn Firnas crater on the
Moon is also named in his honor.
:"Ibn Firnas was a polymath: a physician, a rather bad poet, the first to make
glass from
stones (
quartz?), a student of music, and inventor of some sort of
metronome."
—
Lynn Townsend White, Jr.
References
1. - « Ibn Firnas ('Abbâs) » by Ahmed Djebbar, ''Dictionnaire culturel des science'', by Collective under the direction of Nicolas Witkowski, Du Regard Editions, 2003, ISBN 2-84105-128-5.
- http://www.uh.edu/, 'Abbas Ibn Firnas by John H. Lienhard.
Bibliography
★ J. Vernet, 'Abbas Ibn Firnas. Dictionary of Scientific Biography (C.C. Gilespie, ed.) Vol. I, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1970-1980. pg. 5.
★ Salim T.S. Al-Hassani (ed.), Elisabeth Woodcock (au.), and Rabah Saoud (au.). 2006. '1001 Inventions. Muslum Heritage in Our World'. Manchester: Foundation for Science, Technology and Civilisation. See pages 308-13. (ISBN-13: 978-0-9555035-0-4)
See also
★ List of Arab scientists and scholars
★ History of hang gliding
External links
★ Zyriab on muslim heritage
★ [1]
★ [2]
★ Flight of the blackbird
★ http://www.mrc.org.uk/flyers.htm
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