DICTIONARY

(Total Entries : 197270)

Maṅka

Dictionary Definition: 

  • An Indian physician who was invited to Baghdad to treat Hārūn al-Rashīd. He was then appointed to a translation bureau for translating Sanskrit works.
  • Martin Levey, Ibn al-Wahshiya's Book of Poisons, Kitāb al-Sumûm: Studies in the History of Arabic Pharmacology II, Journal of the History of Medicine (Oct 1963), p. 373. He (Manka, Manīkya) translated a Kitâb al-Sumûm from Indian language into Persian (it was later translated again into Arabic).
  • He was ordered to translate the Book of Sarsad (here identified as Suśruta Samhitā). Guy Attewell, Islamic Medicines: Perspectives on the Greek Legacy in the History of Islamic Medical Traditions in West Asia, contained in: H. Selin, ed., Medicine across Cultures: History & Practice of Medicine in Non-Western Cultures, Kluwer Academic Publishers (2003), pp. 325-350, at p. 340.