Medieval · 750 – 1258

Islamic Golden Age Astrology

Islamic Golden Age astrology · Beytü'l-Hikmet

What happened

Across the five centuries from 750 CE to the 1258 sack of Baghdad, astrologers of the Islamic world (Abu Ma'shar, Thabit ibn Qurra, Masha'allah, Al-Kindi, Al-Biruni) translated Greek + Persian + Indian sources into Arabic, synthesized them, and added significant new techniques. Bayt al-Hikmah (House of Wisdom, Baghdad) was the work's center. Innovations: solar return chart, profections (annual house cycle), firdaria (time-lord system), almuten and dispositor analyses. Avicenna's pre-printing-press medicine, Khalid ibn Yazid's alchemy, Al-Biruni's comparative work — astrology developed alongside science, philosophy, medicine. The astrological heritage of the European Renaissance comes through Latin translations of this period.

Why it matters

Astrology didn't go "lost" — it went "across a bridge." How Greek texts reached Europe ran through this period. The modern Hellenistic revival would be impossible without Arab preservation.


Themes

  • translation movement
  • mathematical astronomy
  • new techniques
  • east-west bridge