Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Central Asian polymath al-Biruni and his eleventh-century book the India. Born in around 973 in the central Asian region of Chorasmia, al-Biruni became an itinerant scholar of immense learning, a master of mathematics, medicine, astronomy and many languages. He corresponded with the age's greatest scientist, Avicenna, and made significant contributions to many fields of knowledge. In 1017 al-Biruni became a member of the court of the ruler Mahmud of Ghazna. Over the course of the next thirteen years he wrote the India, a comprehensive account of Hindu culture which was the first book about India by a Muslim scholar. It contains detailed information about Hindu religion, science and everyday life which have caused some to call it the first work of anthropology. With: James Montgomery Professor of Classical Arabic at the University of Cambridge Hugh Kennedy Professor of Arabic in the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London Amira Bennison Senior Lecturer in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at the University of Cambridge Producer: Thomas Morris.