Abà « ḤÃÂtim al-MuáºÂaffar al-IsfazÃÂrë (; fl. late 11th or early 12th century) was an Islamic mathematician, astronomer and engineer from Khurasan. According to the historian and geographer Ibn al-Athir and the polymath Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi, he worked in the Seljuq observatory of Isfahan. The Persian writer Nezami Aruzi met him in Balkh in (in present-day Afghanistan) in 1112 or 1113.
Al-IsfazÃÂrë was a contemporary of the Persian polymath Umar al-Khayyam and the Persian astronomer Al-Khazini. Al-IsfazÃÂrë's main surviving work, (Guiding the Possessors of Learning in the Art of the Steelyard), sets out the theory of the steelyard balance with unequal arms. His other surviving works include a summary of Euclid's Elements, a text on geometrical measurements, and a treatise in Persian on meteorology.
Al-IsfazÃÂrë's corpus of mechanics is composed of two sets of texts, which have been published as (Text of Al-Muzaffar Al-Isfazar in the words Al-Taql and Al-Hail) by the Al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation.