MUSLIM SCHOLAR. 1
Akshamsaddin (Muhammad Shams al-Din bin
Hamzah,Turkish Akşemseddin) (1389, Damascus – 16 February 1459,
Göynük, Bolu), was an influential Ottoman Sunni Muslim scholar,
Akshamsaddin was not only a Sufi but
also a müderris (professor), medical scholar, and poet. His real name was
Shamseddin Muhammad, He was also called Wali Al-Din Hamzah.
He was born in Damascus in 1390. His ancestry
from his paternal side dates back to the first caliph Abu Bakr whose ancestry
is traced back to Quraysh. He's nicknamed "Spiritual Conqueror of
Constantinople".
fig:
1 Akshamsaddin
He studied in Aleppo and travelled to
Anatolia, when he arrived in kavak in 799AH his father died when he was seven
years old. He memorized the Quran when he was a child. Along with the
religious sciences, he also received medical education.
When he was appointed as a müderris,
this training did not satisfy him in paving the way for a spiritual quest.
Thus, he became attached to Hacı Bayram-ı Veli, one of the most famous Sufis of
the period. He became his caliph as one of his chief students. With the sign of
his teacher, he first settled in Beypazarı, in central Ankara province, and
then in Göynük in Bolu province, and engaged in dervish lodge activities.
Akshamsaddin was also engaged in
studies in medicine and pharmacy. He visited the Ottoman palace in western
Edirne province thanks to both his teacher Hacı Bayram-ı Veli’s relations with
Sultan Murad and his medical knowledge.
On his first visit, Akshamsaddin
treated Süleyman Pasha, one of the chief judges of Murad II. He healed him in a
way that palace doctors could not predict. On his next visit, he healed the
daughter of Sultan Mehmed II.
He taught The Noble Quran, The
Prophetic Sunnah, Jurisprudence, Mathematics, Astronomy, History, Arabic,
Persian and Turkish languages to Mehmed II the conqueror.
He supported the preparations for the
conquest of Istanbul (Constantinople). Against those who tried to discourage
the sultan, he said, "First of all, Sultan Mehmed II will conquer
Constantinople."
Fig: 2 Sultan Mehmed II conquest of
Constantinople.
Due to the stress brought on by the delay of the
conquest in the last days of the war, the sultan became flurried. So, he often
sent news to Akshamsaddin, from whom he requested moral support, in addition to
wanting to know when the conquest would take place.
Finally, he sent his vizier, Ahmed Pasha, saying,
“Ask the sheikh, is there any hope of conquering the castle and defeating the
enemy?” The answer was, “If so many Muslims and veterans from Prophet
Muhammad’s ummah come together and aim for the castle of heretic, I hope the
castle will be conquered.”
fig:3 Hagia Sophia Mos que.
On the morning of May 29, Sultan Mehmed II toed the mark, and the walls of the city were entered. He was the first person to deliver the Friday sermon in Hagia Sophia Mosque after the conquest. Zeyrek Mosque was allocated to Akshamsaddin after the conquest. Today, the area continues to live up to its name as the Akshamsaddin neighbourhood.
fig:4 Zeyrek Mosque.
Akshamsaddin also found the lost tomb of Hazarat
Abu Ayyub al-Ansari (r.a), one of the famous companions of Prophet Muhammad (s.a.w),
who had hosted him in Medina. When the spot he found was excavated, a stone
plate with the name was unearthed. Later, a large complex was built there by
Sultan Mehmed II.

Reportedly, when the sultan grew happy after the
conquest, he said about his situation: “The relief that you see in me is not
just because of the conquest of this castle. I am glad that an evliya like
Akshamsaddin has lived in my time.”
After getting acquainted with him, Sultan Mehmed II
often met with Akshamsaddin for his support. They held significant
conversations during and after the conquest. When Mehmed II asked to become one
of his disciples, Akshamsaddin refused the request of the young sultan. When he
insisted several times, Akshamsaddin explained: “Sultan! There is a kind of
relish in Sufism. If you embrace it, the sultanate will have no value in your
eyes and you will neglect the affairs of the state and the nation because of
the taste you find in it. That way, justice will disappear. It is more
important that you ensure justice and trust in the country than embrace a cult.
If these matters fall into the hands of the incompetent, you will be disobeying
the command of Allah, as he commands to give the task to those who are
competent. It is more important that you establish justice on earth than
embrace a cult. The purpose of adopting a cult is to achieve justice.”
There are many other narrations related to the conquest
of Istanbul and Sultan Mehmed II. After working as a müderris at Zeyrek Mosque
for a while, he returned to Göynük where he died.
The sultan got very excited about his admiration for Akshamsaddin. One
day, he told Mahmud Pasha, “My respect for Lala Akshamsaddin is eternal. My
hands tremble with excitement when I am with him.
Works
Ø Risalat
an-Nuriya.
Ø Khall-e
Mushkilat.
Ø Maqamat-e
Awliya.
Ø Kitab ut-Tib.
Ø Maddat ul-Hayat.
The works of Akshamsaddin are also a source of reference. He wrote books
in Arabic and Turkish about Sufism and medicine. He tells about the
description, purpose, positions and conditions of Sufism. His two works on medicine and pharmacy are
“Maddet'ül-Hayât” (Material of Life) and “Kitab-ı Tıbb” (Book of Medicine). He
is the one who discovered a Microorganisms before the Antonie Philips van Leeuwenhoek.
He
suggested that all diseases, like plants and animals, have invisible seeds,
that is, he pointed to germs at a time when the microscope was not yet
invented. “Major diseases have seeds and roots according to their varieties,
like grass seed and grass-root. Indeed, some of the hereditary diseases that
pass from father and mother, such as epilepsy, podagra and leprosy, sometimes
reappear seven years after the disease is seen. The seeds of the diseases that
are caused by food and drink come out and grow quickly,” Akshamsaddin says in
his “Maddet'ül-Hayât.” “Maddet'ül-Hayât” is an important resource not only for
diseases but also for botany and pharmacy. Akshamsaddin made the composition of
a miraculous drug, good for diseases in 30 of the books' chapters. He also tell’s
about the extraction of juice, essence and oil of certain substances to be used
in pharmaceutical production. After explaining his methods of extraction and
distillation, Akshamsaddin briefly talks about how these can be used on certain
diseases. Apart from these, Akshamsaddin mentions healing stones, antidotes,
types of fabric beneficial to the body, the people of Lot and their
destruction, practical solutions to common health problems and issues to be
considered according to the seasons.
Akshamsaddin's life is notable for the conquest of
Istanbul and his relations with Sultan Mehmed II, as well as for his places in
the history of medicine and Sufism. His words are also exemplary for today.
Akshamsaddin appointed his eldest son as a caliph to replace him. The branch of
the Bayrami sect carried out by Akshamsaddin was called “Şemsiyye” in reference
to his name.
Before he died in 1459, he gave all his possessions to the service of those who came to his dervish lodge, leaving very few things behind. He told his seven sons, “We come naked, we go naked. We go from one realm to the other, what do we have between the two?"
Akshamsaddin was also a poet and he says in one of
his poems, “O Şems, drink the poison of separation (death) to be reunited with
the beloved / For who wants a blooming rose will endure the torment of its
thorns."
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