Egypt too had her Arab school of astronomy, as she had had her Greek. A little later than Abul Wefa, Ebn Jounis drew up the famous Hakemite Tables of the sun, moon, and planets, under the patronage of the Caliph Hakem of Cairo.

At the western end of the Arab dominions there were centres of intellectual activity in Morocco and southern Spain. Cordova, the city of the marvellous mosque, had also, in the tenth century, an Academy, and a library which rivalled that of Baghdad; and here, in the midst of almost ceaseless public strife and agitation, in a strangely mingled atmosphere of cultured refinement unknown to the rest of Europe, and of ferocious barbarism, of tyranny and tolerance, heroic deeds of chivalry and treacherous intrigues, there lived and dreamed and worked men of science and philosophers, poets, and artists.

Arzachel c. 1080.

Averroës 1126-1198.

Al Betrugi c. 1150.

Abul Hazan c. 1200.

The best known of the Spanish Arabs whose names are connected with astronomy are Arzachel, who drew up the Tables of Toledo; Averroës, the great philosopher, author of De Substantia Orbis, and a commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics, who saw “a black spot on the sun” on the day he had predicted a transit of Mercury; and Al Betrugi (or Alpetragius) who wrote on the Spheres. There was also a certain Abul Hazan, a renowned geographer, who travelled across North Africa, and made a catalogue of 240 stars, including some not given by Ptolemy.

Of all the astronomical writings of the Arabs, one of those which became earliest and best known in Europe was the Elements of Astronomy and Chronology of Alfraganus. This was actually used by Dante as his favourite text-book, and he mentions it in the Convivio. I shall therefore give a short account of its contents, following the edition of Golius, printed in Arabic and Latin at Amsterdam in 1669.

In the first chapter Alfraganus gives an account of the calendars used by different nations—Arabs and Berbers, Syrians, Romans, Persians, and Egyptians. After this he plunges at once into a description of the Universe, as portrayed by Ptolemy, and follows his master so closely that his book is almost a much-abridged and simplified Almagest, with a few additions, and with all the mathematics left out.

It is accepted almost without dispute among learned men, says Alfraganus, that the sky is spherical, and rotates on two fixed poles, one north, one south. This is proved by the observed movements of the stars. Equally undisputed among the learned is the fact that Earth and water together form a globe, which is surrounded by air. The spherical form of Earth is proved by the fact that phenomena such as lunar eclipses and shooting stars are seen at a later hour by observers in the East, and by the changing height of stars above the horizon as one travels north or south. Earth is at the centre of the universe, and is but a point compared with the heavens.