A
NOTE ON JUNDÍ SÁBÚR
The city
of Jundí Sábúr was founded by a Persian king, Shapur
I (A.D. 224–241).
Mani, the founder of Manichaeism, was put to death there in 276. The
first of the several events that led to the rise of the Academy of
Jundí Sábúr occurred in 545, when the Bishop of Edessa
enforced the decrees of the Council of Chalcedon against the
Nestorians in his diocese; some of them migrated to Persia. A further
purge of Nestorians occurred in 487, and in 489 the Emperor Zeno
finally closed the Edessa school. The Academy of Jundí
Sábúr, however, was not formally set going until after the
Greek schools of philosophy had been closed by the Emperor Justinian
in 528–29, during the reign of the Persian King Khusraw I
(531–578).
Dr. De
Lacy O'Leary, in his
How Greek Science Passed to the Arabs
(Routledge, 1949), says of Khusraw I: “He was a great
admirer of Graeco-Roman culture and especially desired to introduce
Greek science into his dominions. It was he who offered hospitality
to the philosophers who were turned adrift when Justinian closed the
schools of Athens, and provided for their safety and welfare when
they desired to return to Greece. He desired to have in Persia a
great Greek academy like that at Alexandria, and such an academy he
established in the city of Jundí-Shápúr. There the
Alexandrian curriculum was introduced and the same books of Galen
read and lectured upon as at Alexandria.” The Academy became
celebrated especially for its medical teaching; the other main
subjects studied there are said to have been astronomy (there are
records of an observatory) and mathematics.
These
various events are referred to by Dr. E. G. Browne in his
Arabian Medicine
(Cambridge University Press, 1962):
“The great development of the school
of Jundí-Shápúr was ... the unforeseen and unintended
result of that Byzantine intolerance which in the fifth century of
our era drove the Nestorians from their school at Edessa and forced
them to seek refuge in Persian territory. In the following century
the enlightened and wisdom-loving Khusraw Anusharwan, the protector
of the exiled Neo-Platonist philosophers, sent his physician Burzuya
to India, who, together
with the game of chess and the celebrated Book of Kalila and Dimna,
brought back Indian works on medicine and also, apparently, Indian
physicians to Persia. The school of Jundí-Shápúr was,
then, at the time of the prophet Muhammad's birth, at the
height of its glory. There converged Greek and Oriental learning, the
former transmitted in part directly through Greek scholars, but for
the most part through the industrious and assimilative Syrians,
who made up in diligence what they lacked in
originality.”
On the
later history of the school, Dr. O'Leary
writes: “When Baghdad was founded in 762, the Khalif and his
court became near neighbours of Jundí-Shápúr, and
before long court appointments with generous emoluments began
to draw Nestorian physicians and teachers from the academy, and in
this Harun ar-Rashid's minister Ja'far ibn Barmak was a leading
agent, doing all in his power to introduce Greek science amongst the
subjects of the Khalif, Arabs, and Persians.... Thus the Nestorian
heritage of Greek scholarship passed from Edessa and Nisibis, through
Jundí-Shápúr, to
Baghdad.”
Dr.
O'Leary quotes from E. Le Strange's
Lands of the Eastern Khalifate
(Cambridge, 1909):
“Eight leagues north-west of Tustar,
on the road to Dizful, lie the ruins now called Shahabad, which mark
the site of Junday Sabur or Jundí-Shápúr. Under the
Sassanians, Junday Sabur had been the capital of
Khuzistan.”
See also
the note on Jundí-Shápúr appended to
The Redemption of Thinking,
by Rudolf Steiner, translated and edited by Canon A. P. Shepherd and Mildred
Robertson Nicoll (Hodder and Stoughton, 1956).
Further
interesting references will be found in
The Legacy of Persia,
edited by A. J. Arberry (Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1953).
C. D.
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