Ibn Khaldun
Arab sociologist, philosopher, and historian Ibn Khaldun lived from 27 May 1332 to 17 March 1406. He was the original creator of the proto-disciplines, which were the first kinds of discipline. He was regarded as the founding father of contemporary sociology and was born in Egypt in early 1332. Ibn Khaldun was raised in a prosperous family. He had many excellent professors, but he also enjoyed self-education. Despite being wealthy, he struggled greatly as a child and lost both of his parents while he was just a teenager.
Khaldun was regarded as one of the most distinguished Middle Ages intellectuals by Niccol Machiavelli of the Renaissance and other European scholars of the nineteenth century due to the importance of his writings. Outstanding successes in his political career were the result of his intelligence and diligence. Khaldun's brilliance at age 20 would give him a head start in his political career.
He would rely on his trustworthy conscience to determine the truth while maintaining high moral standards and ethical principles. He would put everything towards getting whatever was ethically wrong either changed or removed. His colleagues, notably Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani, would attack him even though most people would commend him for his knowledge and morality. Islamic classical scholar and polymath Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani. Khaldun would be charged with lacking historical knowledge, using the wrong title, being disorganized, and writing in a manner like the prolific Arab author Al-Jahiz. Despite the claims that he was an idiot and had copied well-known authors, Khaldun is nonetheless acclaimed for his humor, intellect, and skill with words.
Born in: 1332