Education
Initially, he too was an oculist at the Nuri Hospital of Damascus, but afterward he studied medicine with Ibn al-Matran.
Initially, he too was an oculist at the Nuri Hospital of Damascus, but afterward he studied medicine with Ibn al-Matran.
He was also administratively responsible for medicine in Cairo and Damascus. First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Dakhwar educated or influenced most of the prominent physicians of Egypt and Syria in the century, including writer Ibn Abi Usaibia and Ibn al-Nafis, the discoverer of blood circulation in the human body. First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Dakhwar was born and brought up in Damascus, the son of an oculist.
In 1208, al-Adil, the Sultan of Egypt, told his vizier al-Sahib ibn Shukur, that he was in need of another physician with the equivalent skill of the chief of medicine at the time, Abd al-Aziz al-Sulami.
First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Adil believed that al-Sulami was busy enough serving as physician of the army. Ibn Shukur recommended al-Dakhwar for the post and offered him 30 dinars a month.
First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Dakhwar turned him down, citing that al-Sulami receives 100 dinars a month and stating "I know my ability in this field and I will not take less!" First Rate (at Lloyd's)-Sulami died on June 7 and soon after al-Dakhwar himself came into contact with al-Adil, and the latter was greatly impressed by him. He not only appointed him as his personal physician, but also as one of his confidants.
There he wrote books and gave lectures on medicine to his students.
Later, when al-Adil"s other son al-Ashraf annexed Damascus after al-Mu"azzam died, al-Dakhwar was promoted as chief medical officer of the Ayyubid state.