The House of Wisdom by Jim Al-Khalili (Author)
- Publisher: HISTORY
- Availability: In Stock
- SKU: 56658
- Number of Pages: 375
Rs.690.00
Rs.995.00
Tags: ancient knowledge preservation , Arabic philosophy , Arabic science , Baghdad history , Bayt al-Hikma , best books , Best Price , Best Selling Books , history of knowledge , history of science , house of wisdom book review , Islamic astronomy , Islamic chemistry , Islamic Golden Age , Islamic history book , Islamic mathematics , Islamic medicine , Islamic scholars achievements , Jim Al-Khalili , knowledge preservation , medieval Islamic world , medieval science , Muslim contributions , Muslim world history , Online Bookshop , Renaissance origins , science history books , science in Islam , scientific heritage , scientific revolution roots , The House of Wisdom , translation movement
📘 Title Name: The House of Wisdom: How Arabic Science Saved Ancient Knowledge and Gave Us the Renaissance
✍️ Author: Jim Al-Khalili
📦 Quality: A5 Matt Paper
🔹 Introduction:
The House of Wisdom by Jim Al-Khalili opens a bright window into the scientific brilliance of the Islamic Golden Age. It traces how Muslim scholars gathered, preserved, and expanded the world’s ancient knowledge — then sent it flowing back into Europe like a revived river of ideas. The book celebrates a civilization that nurtured science, philosophy, mathematics, and medicine at a time when much of the world had fallen silent.
🔑 Key Points:
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Shows how scholars of the Islamic Golden Age preserved Greek, Persian, and Indian knowledge.
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Explains groundbreaking Muslim contributions in mathematics, astronomy, chemistry, and medicine.
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Highlights Baghdad’s Bayt al-Hikma (House of Wisdom) as a global center of research and translation.
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Demonstrates how Islamic science influenced Europe and sparked the Renaissance.
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Written in a clear, engaging style suitable for students, history lovers, and science enthusiasts.
🕌 Conclusion:
Jim Al-Khalili’s The House of Wisdom is a tribute to the scholars who kept the torch of knowledge burning during the world’s darker centuries. It reminds readers that progress thrives where curiosity is protected — and that the Renaissance owes a quiet bow to the scientists and thinkers of the Islamic world.