Category
page 1Medieval Iranian pharmacologists
Avicenna
Ibn Sina ( – 22 June 1037), commonly known in the West as Avicenna ( ), was a preeminent philosopher and physician of the Muslim world. He was a seminal figure of the Islamic Golden Age, serving in the courts of various Iranian rulers, and was influential to medieval European medical and Scholastic thought.

Al-Biruni
Abu Bakr al-Razi
Persian polymath, physician, chemist and philosopher (854-925)
Attar of Nishapur
Persian Sufi poet (c. 1145 – c. 1221)
Ibn Masawayh
thumb|De consolatione medicinarum, 1475
'Ali ibn al-'Abbas al-Majusi
10th century Persian physician and psychologist
Zayn al-Din Gorgani
Persian physician
Muvaffak
Persian physician
Shapur ibn Sahl
Persian physician
Tunakabuni
thumb|right|Qajar Iran|Qajar-era copy of Tonekaboni's ''Tuhfat al-mu'minin, given as [[waqf'' to the town of Tabas Gilaki (now Tabas) by Amir 'Ali Naqi Khan, son of Mohammad Hasan Khan. Waqf dedication dated August–September 1824, copied before 1819-20]]
Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Harawi
Persian physician
Zayn-e-Attar
thumb|right|Manuscript of Ali ibn al-Hasan Zayn al-Din 'Attar Ansari Shirazi's ''Ikhtiyarat Badi'i. Copy created in Timurid Empire|Timurid Iran, dated 29 July 1444
Haji Zayn Attar ( 1329–1403) was a 14th-century Persian physician. He is best known as the author of the Persian language pharmacopoeia Ekhtiyarat i Badi i''.