Message from @E M P E R O R P Y R O M A N C ER
Discord ID: 668531861676621845
i see owner of server is always offline - mostly busy right ?
or he didn't care anymore
There’s like 200 niggas in this server
my server too lol
but kinda all so ''inactives'' i guess
Link
in DM
i'll sent u
but it's on partnership
i am partner with this server
@E M P E R O R P Y R O M A N C ER not because its dead lmao
Yeah sometimes servers
it's sometimes complicated to deal on
lmao i dont think this server is cringe
i think its still cool
taking some toxic shit and retards
it's all fine
@Dr. WaveZey the good thing is that i note this server is pretty old and lucky got not banned/deleted
i see it as 8chan but discord version no offence if u find this offensive
Nvm
cuz discord keep banning they for any silly ''report''
Not all
i remember other fascist server named ''Thule''
it had 600 members
and never was banned or something
It’s dead
u have link of it ?
fringes
Yup
They call it PINGSOC now
Ah interesting
@Fringes III the server looks still good out some retards
i got partner his server right now
Alright, in Astronomy: there were many scientists in the field of astronomy such as Averroes, ibn tufail, Nur ad-Din al-Bitruji, and Ibn al-Banna' al-Marrakushi All lived around the same time and focused their astronomical works on critiquing and revising Ptolemaic astronomy and the problem of the equant in his astronomical model Instead, they accepted Aristotle’s model and promoted the theory of homocentric spheres. Abu Ishaq Ibrahim al-Zarqali (d. 1087) had many influential astronomical successes, as shown by Copernicus's recognition of him in his On The Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres five centuries later. Along with other astronomers, he undertook extensive work to edit the Toledan Zij astronomical tables. He also accurately calculated the motion of the solar apogee to be 12.04 seconds per year, which is relatively close to today's calculation of 11.8 seconds per year.
in Agronomy: These advances were in part facilitated by technological innovations in irrigation systems. State organized, large-scale irrigation projects provided water to city baths, mosques, gardens, residential homes, and governing palaces, such as the al-Hambra and its gardens in Granada. One notable agriculturalist was Ibn al-'Awwam, who wrote the Book of Agriculture. This book contains 34 chapters about various aspects of agriculture and animal husbandry, including discussions of over 580 different types of plants and how to treat plant diseases.
In Medicine:Of particular note is al-Zahrawi, who is considered by many to be “probably the greatest physician in the entire history of Western Islam. Around the year 1000 he wrote a book with a comprehensive medical encyclopedia with the goal of summarizing all existing medical knowledge and eliminating the need for students and practitioners to rely on multiple medical texts.[67] The book is renowned for its chapter on surgery which included important illustrations of surgical instruments, as well as sections “on cauterization, on incisions, venesection and wounds, and on bone-setting."[68] For hundreds of years after its publication it was one of the most widely-used medical texts for students and medical practitioners and was translated into Hebrew, Latin, and Castilian Other important medical texts include al-Baytar’s Comprehensive Book on Simple Drugs and Foodstuffs—an encyclopedia with descriptions of the medical uses of over 1400 plants and other types of medicine—and ibn Habib’s Book of the Me The ibn Zuhr family played a very important role in the production of Andalusian medical knowledge, as they produced five generations of medical experts, particularly in the fields of dietary sciences and medicaments.[72] Abu Marwan ibn Zuhr (d. 1162) is particularly notable, as he wrote the Book of Moderation (Kitab al-Iqtisad)—a treatise on general therapy; the Book of Foods (Kitab al-Aghdhiya)—a manual on foods and regimen which contains guidelines for a healthy life; and the Kitab al-Taysir—a book written to act as a compendium to Ibn Rushd's Colliget. In Kitab al-Taysir he provides some of the earliest recorded evidence of the Scabies mite, which contributed to the scientific advancement of microbiology.
Food and Agriculture: A variety of foodstuffs, spices and crops were introduced to Spain and Sicily during Arab rule, via the commercial networks of the Islamic world. These include sugarcane,[89] rice,[90] cotton, alfalfa, oranges,[91] lemons,[92] apricots,[93] spinach,[94] eggplants,[95] carrots[96] and saffron.[97] The Arabs also continued extensive cultivation and production of olive oil (the Spanish words for 'oil' and 'olive' -- aceite and aceituna, respectively—are derived from the Arabic al-zait, meaning 'olive juice'),[98] and pomegranates (the heraldic symbol of Granada) from classical Greco-Roman times.
Arabic influence still lingers on in Spanish cuisine through these fruits, vegetables, spices and cooking and agricultural techniques.
us, it also had an important literary activity; one specialist of Al-Andalus' intellectual history, Maria Luisa Avila, says that "biographical dictionaries have recorded information about thousands of distinguished people in every period from al-Andalus, who were cultivators of knowledge, particularly in the legal-religious sciences as well as authors", and that "the exact number of scholars which appears in the biographical sources has not been established yet, but it surely exceeds six thousand." [84] It has been estimated that in the 10th century between 70,000 and 80,000 manuscripts were copied on a yearly basis in Cordoba alone
In the 11th century the Hindu–Arabic numeral system (base 10) reached Europe, via Al-Andalus through Spanish Muslims, the Moors, together with knowledge of astronomy and instruments like the astrolabe, first imported by Gerbert of Aurillac. For this reason, the numerals came to be known in Europe as Arabic numerals.
alright done