Articles related to "Canon Of Medicine"Following the decline of the Greek and Roman civilizations, the next major advance in medical experimentation came from a Persian physician named Avicenna.
While Europe was entrenched in the Dark Ages, Muslims made historical contributions to art, architecture, medicine, astronomy, math, literature and other disciplines.
Avicenna, also know as Ib'n Sina, was an Arab physician who contributed greatly to the medicinal world; his published works included the use of plants in medicine.
As the Dark Ages swept across Europe, the use of medicinal plants and fragrant oils fell under the shackles of the Church. But in the East, aromatherapy survived.
This ancient universal remedy is often overlooked as a panacea, however it has therapeutic uses in treating asthma, bronchitis, eczema, acne, indigestion & heart disease.
Within the far-flung empire that grew out of the conquests of Islamic armies after the 7th century AD, art, science and scholarship reached brilliant heights.
Within the far-flung empire that grew out of the conquests of Islamic armies after the 7th century AD, art, science and scholarship reached brilliant heights
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