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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
1. Ibn Abi Sadiq was known in Khurasan as “the second Hippocrates” (Buqrāṭ al-ānī), due to his commentaries on Hippocrates’ Aphorism. Recent historians have doubted Ibn Abi Sadiq's direct association with Avicenna. See Richter-Bernburg, Lutz, “Ebn Abi Sadeq,” EIr 7: 663.Google Scholar
2. Depois, J., “urdjānī, Ismaᶜīl,” EI (2nd ed.) 2: 603Google Scholar; and Ali Akbar Sa'idi Sirjani, “Ḏakīra-ye Kvārazmšāhī,” EIr 6: 609.Google Scholar
3. See Frye, R. N., ed., The Cambridge History of Iran (Cambridge, 1975), 4: 606CrossRefGoogle Scholar, on the emergence of the New Persian language following the Arab conquest of Iran.
4. Boyle, J. A. ed., The Cambridge History of Iran (Cambridge, 1968), 5: 550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar