List of pre-modern Arab scientists and scholars
This is a list of Arab scientists and scholars from the Muslim World, including Al-Andalus (Spain), who lived from antiquity up until the beginning of the modern age, consisting primarily of scholars during the Middle Ages. For a list of contemporary Arab scientists and engineers see List of modern Arab scientists and engineers

Arab scholars at an Abbasid library in Baghdad. Maqamat of al-Hariri Illustration, 1237.
Both the Arabic and Latin names are given. The following Arabic naming articles are not used for indexing:
- Al - the
 - Ibn, bin, banu - son of
 - abu, abi - father of, the one with
 
A
    
- Ali (601, Mecca – 661, Kufa ), Arabic grammarian, rhetoric, theologian, exegesis and mystic
 - Aisha (613, Mecca – 678, Medina), Islamic scholar, hadith narrator, her intellect and knowledge in various subjects, including poetry and medicine.
 - Avempace (1085, Zaragoza – 1138, Fez), philosopher, astronomer, physician
 - Amir Kulal (1278, Bukhara – 1370, Sokhar), Sufi mystic and scholar
 - Ammar al-Mawsili (10th century, b. Mosul), ophthalmologist and physician
 - Ali al-Uraidhi (7th century, b. Medina), Muslim scholar
 - Ali ibn Isa al-Kahhal (fl. 1010), physician and ophthalmologist
 - Ali al-Hadi (829, Medina – 868, Samarra), Islamic scholar
 - Ali ibn al-Madini (778, Basra – 849, Samarra), Islamic scholar and traditionalist
 - Ali ibn Ridwan (988, Giza – 1061, Baghdad), astronomer and geometer with Khalid Ben Abdulmelik
 - Ali al-Ridha (765, Medina – 818, Tus), Islamic scholar and theologian
 - Ahmad ibn Hanbal (780, Baghdad – 855, Baghdad), theologian, ascetic, and hadith traditionist
 - Ahmad al-Muhajir (873, Basra – 956, Al-Husaisa), scholar and teacher
 - Ahmad ibn Yusuf (835, Baghdad – 912, Cairo), mathematician
 - Ahmad ibn Abi Bakr al-Zuhri (767, Medina – 856), Maliki jurist
 - Apollodorus of Damascus (50, Damascus – 130), architect, engineer, and designer
 - Abd al-Salam ibn Mashish al-Alami (1140, Jabal Alam – 1227, Jabal Alam), religious scholar of Sufism
 - Abdullah ibn Umar (610, Mecca – 693, Mecca), Islamic scholar and hadith narrator
 - Abd Allah al-Qaysi (d. 885, b. Spain), Muslim jurist and theologian
 - Abd-Allah ibn Ibadh (d. 708, b. Basra), hadith narrator and theologian
 - Abd al-Hamid al-Katib (d. 756), founder of Arabic prose
 - Ibn Abbas (619, Mecca – 687, Ta'if), jurist and theologian
 - Abdullah ibn Alawi al-Haddad (1634, Tarim – 1720, Tarim), Sufi saint and jurist
 - Abd al-Ghani al-Maqdisi (1146, Jamma'in – 1203), Islamic scholar and a prominent hadith master
 - Abd al-Aziz Yemeni Tamimi (816, Yemen – 944, Yemen), Sufi saint and scholar
 - Abu al-Fazal Yemeni Tamimi (842, Hejaz – 1034, Baghdad), Sufi saint and mystic
 - Abu al-Aswad al-Du'ali (603–689, Basra), grammarian
 - Abu al-Hasan al-Ash'ari (874, Basra – 936, Baghdad), philosopher, Shafi'i scholar and theologian
 - Abu Bakr ibn al-Arabi (1076, Seville – 1148), Islamic scholar and judge of Maliki law
 - Abū Kāmil Shujāʿ ibn Aslam (850–930), mathematician
 - Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala' (689, Mecca – 770, Kufa) linguists and grammarian
 - Abu Bakr al-Aydarus (1447, Tarim – 1508, Aden), religious scholar of Sufism
 - Al-Ashraf Umar II (1242, Yemen – 1296, Yemen), astronomer and ruler of Yemen
 - Al-Akhfash al-Akbar (d. 793, b. Basra), Arab grammarian
 - Al-Awza'i (707, Baalbek – 774, Beirut), jurist and theologian
 - Al-Asma'i (739, Basra – 831, Basra), pioneer of zoology, botany and animal husbandry
 - Ibn Abi Asim (821, Basra – 900, Isfahan), scholar, famous or his work in the hadith science
 - Ibn al-'Awwam (12th century, b. Seville), agriculturist and botanist
 - Ibn al-Adim (1192, Aleppo – 1262, Egypt), biographer and historian
 - Ibn al-A'lam (d. 985, Baghdad), astronomer and astrologer
 - Ibn al-Athir (1160, Cizre – 1233, Mosul), historian and biographer
 - Ibn al-Abbar (1199, Valencia – 1260, Tunis), historian, poet, diplomat, theologian and scholar
 - Ibn al-Akfani (1286, Sinjar – 1348, Cairo), Arab encyclopedist and physician
 - Ibn 'Adlan (1187, Mosul – 1268, Cairo), cryptographer and poet
 - Ibn Arabi (1165, Murcia – 1240, Damascus), Islamic scholar and philosopher
 - Ibn Arabshah (1389, Damascus – 1450, Egypt), writer and traveller
 
B
    
- Bahāʾ al-dīn al-ʿĀmilī (1547, Baalbek – 1621, Isfahan), philosopher, architect, mathematician, astronomer
 - Bahlool (d. 807, b. Baghdad), judge and scholar
 - Abu Mansur al-Baghdadi (980, Baghdad – 1037, Esfarayen), mathematician
 - Abd al-Latif al-Baghdadi (1162, Baghdad – 1231, Baghdad), physician, historian, Egyptologist and traveler
 - Al-Baqillani (d. 1013, b. Basra), theologian, scholar, and Maliki lawyer
 - Al-Battani (850, Harran – 929, Samarra), astronomer and mathematician
 - Al-Baladhuri (820, Baghdad – 892, Baghdad), historian
 - Al-Buni (d. 1225), writer and mathematician
 - Al-Bakri (1014, Huelva – 1094, Cordoba), geographer and historian
 - Al-Baji (1156, Beja – 1231, Sidi Bou Said), Sufi mystic and scholar
 - Ibn al-Banna' al-Marrakushi (1256, Marrakesh – 1321), mathematician, astronomer, Islamic scholar, Sufi, and astrologer
 - Ibn al-Baitar (1197, Malaga – 1248, Damascus), pharmacist, botanist, physician
 - Ibn Bassal (b. 1085, Toledo), botanist and agronomist
 - Ibn Bassam (1058, Santarem – 1147), poet and historian
 - Ibn Butlan (1038, Baghdad – 1075), Arab Christian physician
 
C
    
- Cosmas (d. 287, Yumurtalik), Arab physician and saint
 - Calid (d. 704, Homs), Umayyad prince and alchemist
 - Callinicus (3rd century), historian, orator, rhetorician and sophist
 
D
    
- Damian (d. 287, Yumurtalik), Arab physician and saint
 - Dawud al-Antaki (b. Idlib – d. 1599, Mecca), physician and pharmacist
 - Dawud Tai (1344 – 1405), Islamic scholar and Sufi mystic
 - Diya al-Din al-Maqdisi (918, Damascus – 995), Hanbali Islamic scholar
 - Al-Damiri (1344, Cairo – 1405, Cairo), zoologist
 - Al-Dakhwar (1170, Damascus – 1230), physician
 - Al-Darimi (797, Samarkand – 869, Muscat), Islamic scholar and muhaddith
 - Al-Dimashqi (1256, Damascus – 1327, Safed), geographer
 - Al-Dimashqi, Abu al-Fadl (12th-century), writer and economist
 - Ibn al-Durayhim (1312 – 1359/62), cryptologist
 - Ibn Dihya (1150, Valencia – 1235, Cairo), scholar of Arabic language and Islamic studies,
 - Ibn Duraid (837, Basra – 934, Baghdad), geographer, genealogist, poet, and philologist
 - Ibn Daqiq al-'Id (1228, Yanbu – 1302), one of Islam's great scholars in the fundamentals of Islamic law and belief, and was an authority in the Shafi'i legal school
 
F
    
- Fatima al-Fihri (800, Kaioruan – 880), science patron and founder of the Al Quaraouiyine mosque
 - Fatima bint Musa (790 – 816), theologian and saint
 - Al-Farahidi (c. 718 – 791), writer and philologist, compiled the first dictionary of the Arabic language, the Kitab al-Ayn
 - Al-Fasi, Abu al-Mahasin (1530 – 1604), Sufi saint
 - Al-Farghani (d. 880), astronomer, known in Latin as Alfraganus
 - Ibn al-Furat (1334 – 1405), historian
 - Ibn al-Farid (c. 1181 – 1234), Arabic poet, writer, and philosopher
 - Ibn Fadlan (10th century), writer, traveler, member of an embassy of the Caliph of Baghdad to the Volga Bulgars
 
G
    
- Genethlius (3rd century), sophist and rhetorician from Petra
 - Al-Ghafiqi (d. 1165), 12th-century oculist
 - Al-Ghassani (1548–1610), physician
 
H
    
- Haly Abenragel (d. 1037), astrologer, best known for his Kitāb al-bāri' fi ahkām an-nujūm
 - Harbi al-Himyari (8th century), alchemist
 - Hasan al-Rammah (d. 1295), chemist and engineer
 - Hamdallah Mustawfi (1281–1349), geographer
 - Hunayn ibn Ishaq (809–873), Arab Christian scholar, physician, and scientist
 - Heliodorus (3rd century), sophist of Arab origin
 - Hisham ibn al-Kalbi (d. 819), historian
 - Hafsa bint Sirin (651–719), scholar of Islam
 - Harun ibn Musa (d. 786), scholar of the Arabic language and Islamic studies.
 - Harith al-Muhasibi (781–857), philosopher, theologian and Sufi scholar
 - Abu'l-Hasan al-Bayhaqi (1097–1169), astronomer and historian
 - Abu'l Abbas al-Hijazi (12th century), traveler, merchant and sailor
 - Abul Hasan Hankari (1018–1093), philosopher, theologian and jurist
 - Al-Hamdani (893–945), geographer, historian and astronomer
 - Al-Humaydī al-Azdi (1029–1095), historian
 - Al-Harith ibn Kalada (d. 634–35), physician
 - Al-Hilli (1250–1325), Twelver Shia theologian
 - Ibn 'Abd al-Hakam (803–871), Egyptian historian
 - Ibn al-Haj (1250–1336), scholar and theologian writer
 - Ibn al-Haytham (965–1040), physicist and mathematician
 - Ibn Hawqal (943–969), writer, geographer, and chronicler
 - Ibn Hubal (1122–1213), physician, scientist and author of a medical compendium
 - Ibn Hisham (d. 835), historian and biographer
 - Ibn Hajar al-Haytami (1503–1566), jurist and theologian
 
I
    
- Ibrāhīm al-Fazārī (d. 777), mathematician and astronomer
 - Ibrahim al-Nakhai (670–717), theologian, Islamic scholar
 - Ibrahim al-Nazzam (c. 775 – c. 845), Mu'tazilite theologian and poet
 - Iamblichus (c. 245 – c. 325), Neoplatonist philosopher, mystic and philosopher
 - Iamblichus (c. 165 – 180), novelist and rhetorician
 - Ismail Qureshi al Hashmi (1260–1349), Sufi scholar
 - Ismail al-Jazari (1136–1206), scholar, inventor, mechanical engineer, artisan, artist
 - Ibrahim ibn Adham (718–782), ascetic Sufi saint
 - Ismail ibn al-Ahmar (1324–1407), historian
 - Ishaq ibn Hunayn (c. 830 – c. 910/1), physician and translator
 - Izz al-Din ibn 'Abd al-Salam (1181–1262), theologian and jurist
 - Al-Idrisi (1099–1166), geographer and cartographer
 - Al-ʻIjliyyah, (10th-century), female maker of astrolabes
 - Ibn Abi Ishaq (d. 735), earliest known grammarian of the Arabic language
 - Ibn Ishaq (704–761), historian and hagiographer
 
J
    
- Ja'far al-Sadiq (702–765), theologian and alchemist
 - Jabir ibn Aflah (1100–1150), astronomer and mathematician who invented torquetum
 - Jabir ibn Hayyan (died c. 806–816), alchemist and polymath, pioneer of organic chemistry; may also have been Persian
 - Jābir ibn Zayd (8th century), theologian and jurist
 - Al-Jawaliqi (1074–1144), grammarian and philologist
 - Al-Jahiz (776–869), historian, biologist and author
 - Al-Jayyānī (989–1079), mathematician and author
 - Al-Jawbari (fl. 1222), alchemist and writer
 - Al-Jabali (d. 976), physician and mathematician from Al-Andalus
 - Al-Jubba'i (d. 915), Mu'tazili theologian and philosopher
 - Al-Jazari (1136–1206), inventor, engineer, artisan, mathematician
 - Al-Jarmi (d. 840), grammarian of Arabic Language
 - Ibn al-Jazzar (10th century), influential 10th-century physician and author
 - Ibn al-Jawzi (1116–1201), heresiographer, historian, hagiographer and philologist
 - Ibn Juzayy (d. 1357), historian, scholar and writer of poetry
 - Ibn Juljul (c. 944–c. 994), physician and pharmacologist
 - Ibn Jazla (11th century), physician and author of influential treatise on regimen
 - Ibn Jubayr (1145–1217), geographer, traveller and poet, known for his detailed travel journals
 
K
    
- Khalifah ibn Khayyat (777–854), Arab historian
 - Khwaja al-Ansari (1006–1088), Islamic scholar
 - Al-Khalili (1320–1380), astronomer who compiled extensive tables for astronomical use
 - Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi (1002–1071), Islamic scholar and historian
 - Al-Khayyat (c. 770–c. 835), astrologer and a student of Mashallah
 - Al-Kindi (c. 801–873), Arab philosopher, mathematician, astronomer, physician and geographer
 - Ibn al-Khabbaza (d. 1239), historian and poet
 - Ibn al-Kammad (d. 1195), astronomer
 - Ibn al-Kattani (951–1029), scholar, philosopher, physician, astrologer, man of letters, and poet
 - Ali ibn Khalaf (11th century), astronomer
 - Ibn al-Khatib (1313–1374), polymath, poet, writer, historian, philosopher, physician
 - Ibn Kathir (c. 1300–1373), influential Sunni scholar and historian
 - Ibn Khaldun (1332–1406), historian, sociologist, and philosopher
 
L
    
    
M
    
- Malik ibn Anas (711–795), theologian, and hadith traditionist
 - Maslama al-Majriti (950–1007), astronomer, chemist, mathematician, economist
 - Moulay Brahim (d. 1661 CE), Sufi saint
 - Mujir al-Din (1456–1522), qadi and historian
 - Mohammed al-Mahdi al-Fasi (1624–1698), mystic, biographer and historian
 - Mohammed al-Arbi al-Fasi (1580–1642), author
 - Mohammed ibn Qasim al-Tamimi (1140–1207), hadith scholar and biographer
 - Mohammed ibn Nasir (1603–1674), theologian, scholar and physician
 - Makhdoom Ali Mahimi (1372–1431), Muslim scholar and saint
 - Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj (815–875), Islamic scholar, theologian and famous hadith compiler
 - Mujahid ibn Jabr (645–722), Islamic scholar and jurist
 - Mohammed ibn al-Tayyib (1698–1756), linguist, historian and scholar of fikh and hadith
 - Muḥammad ibn Ibrāhīm al-Fazārī (d. 796 or 806), Muslim philosopher, mathematician and astronomer
 - Muhammad al-Baghdadi (d. 1037), mathematician
 - Muhammad Ibn Wasi' Al-Azdi (d. 751), Islamic scholar of hadith, judge and soldier
 - Muhammad al-Shaybani (749/50 – 805), father of Muslim international law
 - Muhammed ibn Umail al-Tamimi (900–960), Arab alchemist
 - Abu al-Majd ibn Abi al-Hakam (d. 1174), physician, musician and astrologer
 - Abu Mikhnaf (d. 774), historian
 - Abu Madyan (1126–1198), influential Andalusian mystic and a Sufi master
 - Al-Masudi (896–956), historian, geographer and philosopher, traveled to Spain, Russia, India, Sri Lanka and China, spent his last years in Syria and Egypt
 - Al-Maʿarri (973–1057), blind Arab philosopher, poet and writer
 - Al-Maqrizi (1364–1442), historian
 - Al-Maqdisi (946–991), medieval Arab geographer, author of Ahsan at-Taqasim fi Ma`rifat il-Aqalim (The Best Divisions for Knowledge of the Regions)
 - Al-Maziri (1061–1141 CE), jurist in the Maliki school
 - Al-Mubarrad (826–898), grammarian and linguist
 - Al-Mubashshir ibn Fatik (11th century), mathematician
 - Al-Musabbihi (977–1030), Fatimid historian
 - Ibn Khalaf al-Muradi (11th century) mechanical engineer and inventor
 - Ibn al-Majdi (1359–1447), mathematician and astronomer
 - Ibn Manzur (1233–1312), lexicographer and linguist
 - Ibn Malik (1203/1204 or 1204/1025 – 21 February 1274) grammarian
 - Ibn Mājid (1432–1500), navigator and poet
 - Ibn Maḍāʾ (1116–1196), mathematician and grammarian
 
N
    
- Niftawayh (858–935), grammarian
 - Nur ad-Din al-Bitruji (d. 1204), astronomer and philosopher; the Alpetragius crater on the Moon is named after him
 - Nadr ibn al-Harith (d. 624 CE), physician and practitioner
 - Nafi ibn al-Harith (d. 13 AH/634–35), physician
 - Abu Jaʿfar an-Nahhas (d. 338), grammarian
 - Al-Nawawi (1234–1277), hadith scholar
 - Al-Nuwayri (1279–1333), historian and encyclopedist
 - Ibn al-Nafis (1213–1288), physician and author, the first to describe pulmonary circulation, compiled a medical encyclopedia and wrote numerous works on other subjects
 - Ibn al-Nadim (d. 995), bibliophile of Baghdad and compiler of the Arabic encyclopedic catalogue known as 'Kitāb al-Fihrist'
 
Q
    
- Qadi Ayyad (1083–1149), biographer and historian
 - Qatāda ibn Di'āma (d. 735/736), traditionalist, hadith, tafsir, Arabic poetry and genealogy
 - Qasim ibn Muhammad ibn Abu Bakr (660/62–728/30), Islamic scholar
 - Abū al-Ḥasan al-Qalaṣādī (1412–1486), mathematician from Al-Andalus specializing in Islamic inheritance jurisprudence
 - Al-Qabisi (d. 967), astrologer and mathematician
 - Al-Qadi al-Nu'man (d. 974), official historian of the Fatimid caliphs
 - Al-Qalqashandi (1355/56–1418), writer and mathematician
 - Al-Qushayri (986–1074), theologian and philosopher
 - Al-Qastallani (1448–1517), jurist and theologian
 - Al-Qifti (1172–1248), historian
 - Al-Qurtubi (1233–1286), muhaddith and faqih
 - Ibn al-Qūṭiyya (d. 977), Andalusian historian
 - Ibn al-Quff (1233–1286), physician
 - Ibn al-Qasim (750–806), jurist in the Maliki school
 - Ibn al-Qalanisi (c. 1071–1160), chronicler and historian
 - Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya (1292–1350), theologian, and spiritual writer
 - Ibn Qudamah (1147–1223), theologian
 
R
    
- Rabia of Basra (714–801), philosopher and Sufi mystic
 - Rashidun al-Suri (1177–1241), physician and botanist
 - Raja ibn Haywah (7th century), architect, jurist and Arabic calligraphist
 - Rufaida Al-Aslamia (b. 620), physician
 - Al-Ruhawi (9th century), physician
 - Ibn Abi Ramtha (7th century), physician
 - Ibn al‐Raqqam (1250–1315), astronomer, mathematician and physician
 - Ibn Rajab (1335–1392/93), Islamic scholar
 
S
    
- Sahnun (776–854), Islamic scholar and Maliki jurist
 - Said al-Andalusi (1029–1070), astronomer, historian and philosopher
 - Said ibn al-Musayyib (642–715 CE), jurist and theologian
 - Sa'id ibn Aws al-Ansari (d. 830), linguist
 - Shihab al-Umari (1300–1349), historian
 - Sayf ibn Umar (1428–1497), historian
 - Sufyan al-Thawri (716–778), Islamic scholar and jurist
 - Sa'id ibn Jubayr (665–714), theologian and jurist
 - Sufyan ibn `Uyaynah (725–814), religious scholar and theologian
 - Sidi Mahrez (951–1022), scholar, jurist and Qadi
 - Sibt al-Maridini (1423–1506), astronomer and mathematician
 - Sulaiman al-Mahri (1480–1550), geographer
 - Abu al-Salt (c. 1068–1134), astronomer, physician and alchemist
 - Abu Amr al-Shaybani ((d. 821/28), lexicographer and collector of Arabic poetry
 - Abu Saeed Mubarak Makhzoomi (1013–1119), theologian
 - Al-Shafi‘i (767–820 CE), Islamic scholar
 - Al-Sakhawi (1428–1497), hadith scholar and historian
 - Al-Shaykh Al-Mufid (c. 948–1022 CE), Twelver Shia theologian
 - Al-Shatibi (1320–1388), Islamic legal scholar
 - Al-Suwaydi (1204–1292), physician
 - Al-Shifa' bint Abdullah (7th century), healer, wise woman and practiced folk-medicine
 - Al-Sayyid al-Tanukhi (951–1022), Druze theologian and commentator
 - Al-Suhayli (1114–1185), grammarian and scholar of law.
 - Al-Ṣaidanānī (10th century), astronomer
 - Ibn al-Shatir (1304–1375), astronomer, mathematician, engineer and inventor, worked at the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, Syria, developed an original astronomical model
 - Ibn al-Saffar (d. 1035), astronomer
 - Ibn al-Samh (979–1035), mathematician and astronomer
 - Ibn Sa'id al-Maghribi (1213–1286), geographer
 - Ibn Sab'in (d. 1271), last philosopher of the Andalus
 - Ibn Sidah (c.1007–1066), grammarian and lexicographer
 - Ibn Sirin (d. 729), mystic, psychologist and interpreter of dreams
 - Ibn Sa'd (784–845), scholar and Arabian biographer
 - Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri (670–741), historian
 - Ibn Sayyid al-Nās, Abu Bakr (1200–1261), Medieval theologian
 - Ibn Sayyid al-Nās, Fath al-Din (1272–1334), Medieval theologian
 
T
    
- Taqi al-Din Muhammad ibn Ma'ruf (1526–1585), physician, mathematician, clockmaker and astronomer
 - Taqi al-Din al-Subki (1284 CE–1355 CE), scholar, jurist and judge
 - Taj al-Din al-Subki (1327/28–1370), historian and jurist
 - Taqi al-Din Muhammad al-Fasi (1373–1429), historian, scholar, hafith, faqih and Maliki qadi
 - Theodore Abu Qurrah (750–825), theologian and bishop
 - Thābit ibn Qurra (826–902), mathematician, physician, astronomer, and translator
 - Al-Tabarani (873–970), Islamic scholar
 - Al-Tughrai (c. 1061–1122), physician and alchemist
 - Al-Tahawi (843–933), jurist and a hadith scholar
 - Al-Tighnari (1073–1118), agronomist, botanist, biologist
 - Al-Tamimi (10th-century), physician from Palestine
 - Al-Tawhīdī (923–1023), philosopher and thinker
 - Ibn Taymiyyah (d. 1328), theologian and logician
 - Ibn al-Tiqtaqa (d. 1310), historian
 - Ibn Tawus (1193–1266), astrologer
 - Ibn Tufail (1105–1185), Andalusian writer, novelist, Islamic philosopher, Islamic theologian, physician, astronomer, vizier, and court official
 - Ibn al-Thahabi (d. 1033), physician and author of the first known alphabetical encyclopedia of medicine
 
U
    
- Usama ibn Munqidh (1095–1188), Arab historian, politician, and diplomat
 - Urwah ibn Zubayr (7th century), historian and jurist
 - Umm al-Darda (7th century), jurist and theologian
 - Umm Darda al-Sughra (7th century), jurist and scholar of Islam
 - Umm Farwah (8th century), hadith narrator and saint
 - Al-Uqlidisi (920–980), wrote two works on arithmetic, may have anticipated the invention of decimals
 - Al-Urḍī (d. 1266), astronomer
 - Ibn Abi Usaibia (1203–1270), physician and historian, wrote Uyun al-Anba fi Tabaqat al-Atibba (Lives of the Physicians)
 - Ibn Uthal (7th century), physician
 - Ibn Umail, (10th century), alchemist and mystic
 
W
    
- Waddah al-Yaman (d. 709), poet, famous for his erotic and romantic poems
 - Wasil ibn Ata (700–748), theologian and founder of the Mutazilite school of Islamic thought
 - Al-Warraq (889–994), scholar and critic of religions
 - Al-Wafa'i (1408–1471), astronomer
 - Ibn al-Wafid (997–1074), pharmacologist and physician
 - Ibn al-Wardi (1292–1342), historian
 - Ibn Wahb (743–813 CE), jurist of Maliki school
 - Ibn Wahshiyya (10th century), Arab alchemist and agriculturalist
 
Y
    
- Yahya ibn Aktham (d. 857), jurist
 - Yaʿīsh al-Umawī (1400–1489), mathematician, wrote works on mensuration and arithmetic
 - Yusuf al-Mu'taman ibn Hud (11th century), mathematician
 - Abu Yusuf (735–798), Islamic scholar
 - Ibn Yunus (c. 950–1009), mathematician and astronomer
 
Z
    
- Zayn al-Din al-Amidi (d. 1312 AD), Islamic scholar and inventor
 - Zethos (3rd-century), neoplatonist and disciple of Plotinus
 - Zakariya al-Qazwini (d. 1283), physician, astronomer, geographer, and proto-science fiction writer
 - Zakariyya al-Ansari (c. 1420–1520), Islamic scholar and mystic
 - Zayn al-Abidin (659–713), Muslim scholar and Twelver Imam
 - Al-Zahrawi (936–1013), Islam's greatest medieval surgeon, wrote comprehensive medical texts combining Middle-Eastern, Indian and Greco-Roman classical teachings, shaped European surgical procedures until the Renaissance, considered the "father of surgery", wrote Al-Tasrif, a thirty-volume collection of medical practice
 - Al-Zubayr ibn Bakkar (788–870), historian and genealogist
 - Al-Zarqali (1028–1087), mathematician, influential astronomer, and instrument maker, contributed to the famous Tables of Toledo
 - Ibn Zuhr (1091–1161), prominent physician of the Medieval Islamic period
 - Ibn Zafar al Siqilli (1104–1172), Arab-Sicilian philosopher and polymath
 
Notes
    
See also
    
    
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