Al Zahrawi is one of the most famous scholars in the Golden Age of Islam. The golden age of Islam was when Muslim, Christian,
and Judaist scholars made great achievements in science, technology, and literature. It occurred from the years 800 A.D to 1100 A.D.
Sadly, the Muslims, or the main people who contributed to the golden age of Islam didn't get enough credit for their work. Instead,
the European scholars got credit for the work the Muslim scholars did. Predominantly, every Islamic scholar (from the Golden Age
Period) has no credit for the work they did. For example, one of the great figures of Muslim Spain was Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi,
"Islam’s greatest medieval surgeon." Sadly, he didn't get enough credit today, instead Ambroise Pare did. Ambroise Pare was a
surgeon that came 574 years after Al Zahrawi. He made some changes to Al Zahrawi’s beliefs, ideas, and books. Although, Pare
shouldn’t be called the “Father of Surgery” because he didn’t create something as big as Zahrawi’s “Al Tasrif”, or Zahrawi’s outlines
of the caustics of surgery, and Zahrawi discussed ideas. Basically, Al Zahrawi and Ambroise Pare had the same achievements; but t
they both came in different times.
and Judaist scholars made great achievements in science, technology, and literature. It occurred from the years 800 A.D to 1100 A.D.
Sadly, the Muslims, or the main people who contributed to the golden age of Islam didn't get enough credit for their work. Instead,
the European scholars got credit for the work the Muslim scholars did. Predominantly, every Islamic scholar (from the Golden Age
Period) has no credit for the work they did. For example, one of the great figures of Muslim Spain was Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi,
"Islam’s greatest medieval surgeon." Sadly, he didn't get enough credit today, instead Ambroise Pare did. Ambroise Pare was a
surgeon that came 574 years after Al Zahrawi. He made some changes to Al Zahrawi’s beliefs, ideas, and books. Although, Pare
shouldn’t be called the “Father of Surgery” because he didn’t create something as big as Zahrawi’s “Al Tasrif”, or Zahrawi’s outlines
of the caustics of surgery, and Zahrawi discussed ideas. Basically, Al Zahrawi and Ambroise Pare had the same achievements; but t
they both came in different times.