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Al-Kashi

Al-Kashi

1380 CE1429 CE · Samarkand

Ghiyath al-Din Jamshid Mas'ud al-Kashi (c. 1380–1429) was one of the most accomplished mathematicians and astronomers of the medieval Islamic world. He was born in Kashan, a city in central Persia, around 1380 — the year is a traditional estimate, since no source records it directly. The first firmly dated event of his life is his observation of a lunar eclipse at Kashan in June 1406. He worked there in difficult, reportedly impoverished conditions, producing his early astronomical treatise Sullam al-sama' ("The Stairway of Heaven," 1407) and later the Khaqani Zij, a large set of astronomical tables.

Around 1420 al-Kashi was invited by the Timurid prince Ulugh Beg — himself a serious astronomer — to join the new madrasa (college) and observatory at Samarqand, in Transoxiana. There he became the institution's foremost mathematician and astronomer. In a treatise of 1424 he calculated 2π to nine sexagesimal (base-60) places, equivalent to sixteen decimal places — a precision unsurpassed for roughly 180 years. His Miftah al-Hisab ("Key to Arithmetic," 1427) is a landmark on decimal fractions and computational methods; a trigonometric relation he used is still called "al-Kashi's theorem" in France.

He died at Samarqand on 22 June 1429. Sources disagree on the cause: some later reports claim he was murdered, possibly on Ulugh Beg's orders, while others hold he died naturally. Ulugh Beg is reported to have praised him as a remarkable scientist who could solve the most difficult problems.

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Stop 1 of 21380–1420Born / Early Career

Kashan

What they did here

Al-Kashi was born in Kashan, central Persia, around 1380 (a traditional estimate; the exact year is not recorded). His earliest firmly dated activity is a lunar eclipse he observed there in June 1406, and his early works — the treatise Sullam al-sama' (1407) and the Khaqani Zij astronomical tables — date from his Kashan period.

See other sages who lived in Kashan

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