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The First Human To Fly Was A Muslim

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alizahid

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The First Human To Fly Was A Muslim


By Sadhique A.M.I.

How many of us know that the first flight by a human being, the first manned Rocket flight and the first recorded Parachute jump were accomplished by Muslims?

265 years before the Wright Brothers flew, a Turkic Muslim by the name Hezarfen Ahmat Celebi made a successful flight of almost 1.5 Km and became the first ever human being to fly on his own.

This amazing and important piece of information has been totally blacked out in history. Last year (2004) was celebrated as the centenary year of man's flight, but not a single word was spoken about this foremost aviation achievement, let alone the false claim of the Wright brothers' flight being the man's first ever flight.


Man First Flew Successfully In 1638; Not In 1903

Hezarfen Ahmet Celebi (1609-1640) was a Turkish scientist, who lived during the reign of Ottoman Sultan Murat IV and incurably interested in aviation. He had been experimenting with glider flights for sometimes. (Gliders are aerodynamic wings attached to a frame to which the pilot clings onto. In practice gliders are engineless airplanes. Large gliders with fuselages as large the ones in conventional aircraft were used during World War II to land airborne troops). He kept his faith in man's ability to fly and tried several designs of wings. Despite peoples' ridicules, he kept his attempts alive. One day in the year 1638, in front of the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire Murat IV and a huge crowd of onlookers, he succeeded in flying. He flew from the gigantic Galata Tower in one shore of the Bosphorous straight (On the European of Istanbul) to the other shore on the other side of Istanbul, the distance being 1.5 Km. He had a successful landing, which makes it to be the first-ever controlled, sustained and successful flight by a human being.

The famous Turkish traveller and historian of the time, Evliya Celebi, in his book Seyahatname (A book of travel) recorded this extraordinary feat. He was an eyewitness to the event. Recordings of this achievement abound in Turkish chronicles and folklores, but precious little to be found in the Western world. This ill treatment or Blackout of a major historical fact is more in line with the West's preoccupation with belittling and denying Muslims' huge contributions towards the advancement of human civilisation. Still history is being written and read, hailing the Wright brothers' flight in 1903 as the "first flight by the mankind". In fact the Wright brother's flight was a historic achievement - no doubt about that. But unfortunately it was not the first flight by Man. Rather it should be categorized as the "First Mechanised Flight" by man. Any way it should be noted that this flight by the Wright brothers opened the way for the mass aviation we experience today.

Sultan Murad, being impressed by this accomplishment, gave Hezarfen a reward of 1000 gold coins befitting the adventurer's name. The word Hezarfen means the "Expert in 1000 sciences" in Turkish. But the consequences of the adventure to the adventurer are not that rosy. It is believed that, upon listening to ill advice from envious sources, the Sultan exiled this rare and triumphant scientist to far off Algeria. To honour the first aviator in human history and one of her proud son, Turkey has published a few stamps on suitable occasions. But only a minor airport has been named after him, whereas the main airport has been named after the more earthly Mustapha Kamal "Ataturk". May be the misty West looking eyes of the secular Turkish administration found Hezarfen Ahmet Celebi not secular enough.


Previous Attempts By Muslim Adventurers In Flying

In 875, A Muslim scientist from the then Muslim Spain. Abbas Ibnu Firnaz, flew from a mountain with a glider, which he innovated through various studies and several attempts. He invited the people of Cordoba to witness his attempt. By all accounts, he succeeded in flying through some distance, but he didn't make a soft landing. He broke his back, the injury which was to hurt him throughout his life. Due to this injury he couldn't correct the failure, which he blamed his oversight in designing the tail. He was a brilliant scientist who produced glass from sand, devised a chain of rings to simulate the motions of celestial bodies and invented a clock. He died in 888 reportedly of his back injury.

23 years before him, another Spanish Muslim scientist, Armen Firmann tried to fly from a tower in Cordoba with wing shaped cloaks attached to his garments. He survived with minor injuries thanks to the air trapped in his "wings". But ultimately he qualifies to be the first human to use "Parachutes".


First Manned Rocket Flight Was Achieved By A Muslim As Well

A friend of Hezarfen Ahmet Celebi, by the name Lagari Hasan Celebi is the first man to fly on a Rocket. This information may seem amazing, but it is true.

May be with a desire to equalize his friend's astounding act or just as another adventure, Lagari Hasan Celebi made a conical shaped cage and filled it with gun powder. On the day of the wedding of Sultan Murat IV's daughter, he climbed into the cone and fired, before an astonished crowd of spectators. He reportedly flew a few hundred feet and fell into the sea (The Bosphorous Straight). But rather strangely he also met the same fate as that of his friend. He may have been rewarded handsomely, but was exiled to Algeria, probably alleged with suspicions over witchcraft.
 
In absence of any concrete details being available, its really hard to accept or deny it. No one really knows this as fact ..... it has become sort of legend in Turkey -- passed on from generation to generation.
 
I thought it was icarus and daedalus..
 
dang didn't know that but in terms of "powered flight" the wright brothers capped on that but i guess gliding counts as flying too
 
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May be with a desire to equalize his friend's astounding act or just as another adventure, Lagari Hasan Celebi made a conical shaped cage and filled it with gun powder. On the day of the wedding of Sultan Murat IV's daughter, he climbed into the cone and fired, before an astonished crowd of spectators. He reportedly flew a few hundred feet and fell into the sea (The Bosphorous Straight). But rather strangely he also met the same fate as that of his friend. He may have been rewarded handsomely, but was exiled to Algeria, probably alleged with suspicions over witchcraft.

So some guy built a rocket powerful enough not only to lift a rocket with a cage but to lift a full grown man and propel him several hundred feet into the air, all this while using gun powder. If that is not ridiculous we are also supposed to believe that the rocket was so perfectly engineered and balanced that it did not veer off course even with a considerable amount of weight from the human occupying the cage.
 
Well, if we just need to WRITE and CLAIM, and not provide any credible link then..

First man to fly was my great great great great great great grand father in 2nd century, and he was a catholic!
 
Kindly post the link to your information.


Hezârfen Ahmed Çelebi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hezarfen Ahmet Celebi

Hezarfen Ahmet Çelebi - Scientist - - mymerhaba.com

http://www.istanbul-pedia.com/turki...fen-ahmet-celebi-first-man-to-attempt-to-fly/

images


images


---------- Post added at 03:29 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:29 PM ----------

dang didn't know that but in terms of "powered flight" the wright brothers capped on that but i guess gliding counts as flying too

First flying machine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

---------- Post added at 03:30 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:29 PM ----------

Well, if we just need to WRITE and CLAIM, and not provide any credible link then..

First man to fly was my great great great great great great grand father in 2nd century, and he was a catholic!

Abbas Ibn Firnas - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
gliding != flying

wright brothers had powered flight

Lagâri Hasan Çelebi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

---------- Post added at 03:33 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:33 PM ----------

So some guy built a rocket powerful enough not only to lift a rocket with a cage but to lift a full grown man and propel him several hundred feet into the air, all this while using gun powder. If that is not ridiculous we are also supposed to believe that the rocket was so perfectly engineered and balanced that it did not veer off course even with a considerable amount of weight from the human occupying the cage.

Lagâri Hasan Çelebi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ Winter, Frank H. (1992). "Who First Flew in a Rocket?", Journal of the British Interplanetary Society 45 (July 1992), p. 275-80
^ Harding, John (2006), Flying's strangest moments: extraordinary but true stories from over one thousand years of aviation history, Robson Publishing, p. 5, ISBN 1861059345
 
dang didn't know that but in terms of "powered flight" the wright brothers capped on that but i guess gliding counts as flying too

nope. it isnt just gliding. was the person able to control where he went? this is yet another very important part. controlled flight. else there were hot air balloons for a long time.
 
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