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  1. Muḥyī alMilla wa al‐Dīn Yaḥyā Abū ʿAbdallāh ibn Muḥammad ibn Abī al‐Shukr alMaghribī al‐Andalusī (Arabic: محيي الدين المغربي; c. 1220 – June 1283), referred to in sources as Muhyi l'din, was an astronomer, astrologer and mathematician of the Islamic Golden Age.

  2. Died. about 1283. Maragha, Iran. Summary. Muhyi l'din al-Maghribi was a Spanish-born Islamic astronomer who is most famous for his work on trigonometry. Biography. Muhyi l'din al-Maghribi was an eminent astronomer who was born in Spain, but who first worked in Damascus in Syria.

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  4. Muḥyī alMilla wa al‐Dīn Yaḥyā Abū ʿAbdallāh ibn Muḥammad ibn Abī al‐Shukr alMaghribī al‐Andalusī; (Arabic: محيي الدين المغربي ‎; died 1283 CE) was an Andalusī astronomer, astrologer and mathematician of the Islamic Golden Age. He belonged to the group of astronomers associated with the Maragheh ...

  5. Muhyi l'din al-Maghribi. 1220-1283? Arab astronomer and mathematician who calculated the approximate value for the sine of 1°. Born in Spain, al-Maghribi spent his most fruitful years working with al-Tusi at the observatory established by their patron, the Mongol conqueror Hulagu Khan, at the city of Maragheh in what is now Azerbaijan.

  6. 3 Muhyï al-Dïn's lunar measurements. In Talkhîs V, chapter 1, MuhyT al-DTn reviews the situations of lunar motions in lon gitude, in anomaly, and in latitude, their periods, and explains the reason why ancient astronomers used lunar eclipses for measuring them (a recapitulation of Almagest IV, 1-3).

  7. Muḥyī alMilla wa al‐Dīn Yaḥyā Abū ʿAbdallāh ibn Muḥammad ibn Abī al‐Shukr alMaghribī al‐Andalusī (Arabic: محيي الدين المغربي; June 1283), referred to in sources as Muhyi l'din, was an astronomer, astrologer and mathematician of the Islamic Golden Age.