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  1. Biografía. Nació en Kazerun en octubre de 1236 en una familia con una tradición en el sufismo. Su padre, Zia 'al-Din Mas'ud Kazeruni era médico de profesión y también un sufí principal de la orden Kazeruni. Quṭb al-Din empezó a estudiar medicina con su padre, el cual practicaba y enseñaba medicina en el hospital Mozaffari de Shiraz .

    • قطب‌الدین شیرازی
    • Octubre de 1236, Kazerun (Irán)
    • 7 de febrero de 1311, Tabriz (Irán)
    • Sunismo
  2. He also wrote poetry but apparently did not leave a divan (a book of poems) Shirazi's Tomb in Tabriz, Charandab. Qutb al-Din was also a Sufi from a family of Sufis in Shiraz. He is famous for the commentary on Hikmat al-ishraq of Suhrawardi, the most influential work of Islamic Illuminist philosophy.

  3. Qotb al-Din Mahmoud b. Zia al-Din Mas'ud b. Mosleh Shirazi fue un erudito y poeta persa del siglo XIII que hizo contribuciones a la astronomía, las matemáticas, la medicina, la física, la teoría musical, la filosofía y el sufismo.

  4. QOṬB-AL-DIN ŠIRĀZI – Encyclopaedia Iranica. QOṬB -AL- DIN ŠIRĀZI, Maḥmud b. Żiāʾ -al- Din Masʿud b. Moṣleḥ, known also as ʿAllāma Širāzi, al-Šāreḥ al-ʿAllāma, and Mollā Qoṭb and nicknamed Abu’l-Ṯanāʾ, a Persian polymath, Sufi, and poet (b. Shiraz, October 1236; d. Tabriz, 7 February 1311; see Ebn Ḥajar, IV, p. 339; Qāšāni, p. 118).

  5. Quick Reference. (634–710 / 1236–1311) Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi received a philosophical education in which he worked with the outstanding thinkers of his time. He studied Ibn Sina with Nasir al-Din al-Tusi and ... From: al-Shirazi, Qutb al-Din in The Biographical Encyclopaedia of Islamic Philosophy ».

  6. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi. Born on 1236. Died on 1311. Qotb al-Din Mahmoud b. Zia al-Din Mas’ud b. Mosleh Shirazi; (1236–1311) (Persian: قطب‌الدین محمود بن ضیاالدین مسعود بن مصلح شیرازی ‎) was a 13th-century Iranian polymath and poet who made contributions to astronomy, mathematics, medicine, physics, music theory, philosophy and Sufism.

  7. Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi. 1236-1311. Persian mathematician, astronomer, and physician who devised a geometrical model for planetary longitudes that involved a minimum of rotating vectors. Al-Shirazi wrote on geometry, medicine, philosophy, theology, and optics.