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The following is a list of Persian scientists, engineers, and scholars who lived from antiquity up until the beginning of the modern age.
Razi or al-Razi is a name that was historically used to indicate a person coming from Ray, Iran.
Abū Ḥanīfa Aḥmad ibn Dāwūd Dīnawarī was an Islamic Golden Age polymath: astronomer, agriculturist, botanist, metallurgist, geographer, mathematician, and historian.
The name Tabari or al-Tabari means simply "from Tabaristan", an Iranian province corresponding to parts of modern Iranian province of Mazandaran.
Balkhi may refer to:
Shams al-Din is an Arabic personal name or title.
Al-Nawbakhti, is the Persian surname of several notable figures in Islamic, especially Shia Islamic, theology, philosophy and science. Several variations include Nawbakht, Nūbukht, Nibakht, Naybakht and Ibn Nawbakht. Many members of the Nawbakht family, or clan, distinguished themselves in the science of the stars and made decisive contributions to the development of the Twelver Shia faith at a time of confusion following the Minor Occultation of the 12th Imam.The clan's theological accomplishments include the formal integration of Mutazila rationalist doctrine into Twelver Shi'ism, explaining the Occultation and defending it against Shia doubters, developing the Imamate doctrine and to lay the groundwork for the authority of the Twelver scholars over their communities.
Marwazi or al-Marwazi is a nisba meaning "from Merv", a historical city in, near today's Mary in Turkmenistan. It may refer to:
Al-Andalusi is an Arabic-language surname common in North African countries that literally means “the Andalusian”, and it denotes an origin or ancestry from al-Andalus or from the modern-day region of Andalusia. Al-Andalusi may refer to:
Abdul Hamid Khosroshahi was an Iranian theologian, philosopher and Shafi'i jurist in the sixth and seventh centuries AH, equivalent to 12th and 13th centuries AD. He is called one of the disciples of Farid al-Din Damad and Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, and his important work in the field of logic is the summarized "logic of healing" and a glossary on the book Abu Ishaq al-Shirazi.