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File:Ibn Umayl The Silvery Water.jpg

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Summary

Author
An Islamic artist 739H/1339, probably in Baghdad
Description
English: Illustration from a transcript of Muhammed ibn Umail al-Tamimi’s book Al-mâ' al-waraqî (The Silvery Water), also called Senioris Zadith tabula chymica. In which Ibn Umail describes a statue of a sage holding the tablet of ancient alchemical knowledge. He writes that it stands in an Egyptian temple painted with murals of people pointing and eagles carrying bows. And that the temple is Sidr wa-Abu Sîr, the Prison of Yasuf, where Joseph learned how to interpret the dreams of the Pharoah (Koran: 12 Yusuf and Genesis: 41]. Many of the notes written around the tablet, called the Letter from the Sun to the Moon, are mathematical relationships between the hieroglyphs. But some of the notes are comments by the scribe: that the sun is the spirit (al-ruh) and the moon is the soul (al-nafs); and of the interlocking birds that the female is the spirit extracted from the male.
Date 1339
date QS:P571,+1339-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
institution QS:P195,Q170495
Accession number
Ahmet III 2075
Source/Photographer Transcript of The Silvery Water by Ibn Umayl at-Tamîmî

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Captions

A soul learns, through a dream, that he must listen to the eternal self

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

17 October 2010

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current03:53, 28 May 2013Thumbnail for version as of 03:53, 28 May 20131,642 × 1,193 (1.79 MB)KildwykeUser created page with UploadWizard

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