Early life and works Ali Kuşçu was born in 1403 in the city of
Samarkand, in present-day
Uzbekistan. His full name at birth was
Ala al-Dīn Ali ibn Muhammed al-Qushji. The last name
Qushji derived from the Turkish term
kuşçu—"falconer"—due to the fact that Ali's father Muhammad was the royal
falconer of
Ulugh Beg. or
Persian. He attended the courses of
Qazi zadeh Rumi,
Ghiyāth al-Dīn Jamshīd Kāshānī and
Muin al-Dīn Kashi. He moved to
Kerman, Iran (
Persia), where he conducted some research on storms in the
Oman sea. He completed
Hall-e Eshkal-i Ghammar (
Explanations of the Periods of the Moon) and
Sharh-e Tajrid in Kirman. He moved to Herat and taught
Molla Cami about astronomy (1423). After professing in Herat for a while, he returned to Samarkand. There he presented his work on the Moon to Ulugh Beg, who found it so fascinating that he read the entire work while standing up. Ulugh Beg assigned him to
Ulugh Beg Observatory, which was called Samarkand Observatory at that time. Qushji worked there until Ulugh Beg was assassinated. After Ulugh Beg's death, Ali Kuşçu went to Herat,
Tashkent, and finally
Tabriz where, around 1470, the
Ak Koyunlu ruler
Uzun Hasan sent him as a delegate to the Ottoman Sultan
Mehmed II. At that time
Husayn Bayqarah had come to reign in Herat but Qushji preferred Constantinople over Herat because of Sultan Mehmed's attitude toward scientists and intellectuals.
Constantinople era When he came to Constantinople (present-day
Istanbul), his grandson Ghutb al-Dīn Muhammed had a son
Mirim Çelebi who would be a great mathematician and astronomer in the future. Ali Kuşçu composed "risalah dar hay’at" in
Persian for
Mehmed II at Constantinople in 1470. Also he wrote "Sharh e resalye Fathiyeh", "resalye Mohammadiye" in Constantinople, which are in
Arabic on the topic of mathematics. He then finished "Sharh e tejrid" on
Nasir al-Din al-Tusi's "Tejrid al-kalam". That work is called "Sharh e Jadid" in scientific community. ==Contributions to astronomy==