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Al-Kisa'i

Al-Kisā’ī (الكسائي) Abū al-Ḥasan ‘Alī ibn Ḥamzah ibn ‘Abd Allāh ibn ‘Uthman (أبو الحسن على بن حمزة بن عبد الله بن عثمان), called Bahman ibn Fīrūz (بهمن بن فيروز),[2] surnamed Abū ‘Abd Allāh (أبو عبد الله), and Abū al-Ḥasan ‘Alī ibn Hamzah of al-Kūfah ( d. ca. 804 or 812) was preceptor to the sons of caliph Hārūn al-Rashīd and one of the ‘Seven Readers’ (seven canonical Qira'at)[3] or ‘authorized’ Qur’ānic reader.[4][n 1][5][6] He founded the Kufi school of Arabic grammar, the rival philology school to the Basri school founded by Sibawayh.

Al-Kisā’ī (الكسائي)
Born
Died804
Other namesAbū al-Ḥasan ‘Alī ibn Ḥamzah ibn ‘Abd Allāh ibn ‘Uthman, (أبو الحسن على بن حمزة بن عبد الله بن عثمان); Bahman ibn Fīrūz (بهمن بن فيروز); Abū ‘Abd Allāh (أبو عبد الله).
Academic background
InfluencesAl-Ru’āsī, Al-Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Farahidi, Yunus ibn Habib, et al.[1]
Academic work
EraAbbāsid Caliphate
School or traditionGrammarians of Kufa
Main interestsphilology, Arabic language, Bedouin poetry, idioms Quran
InfluencedHisham ibn Muawiyah and Al-Farrā'

Life Edit

A Persian[2][3] born in al-Kūfah, he learned grammar from al-Ru’āsī [n 2] and a group of other scholars. It is said that al-Kisā’ī took this moniker from the particular kind of mantle he wore called a kisā’. [n 3]

Al-Kisā’ī entered the court of the Abbāsid caliph Hārūn al-Rashīd at Baghdād as tutor to the two princes, al-Ma’mūn and al-Amīn. His early biographer Al-Nadim relates Abū al-Ṭayyib's written account that Al-Rashīd held him in highest esteem. [6] When the caliph moved the court to al-Rayy as the capital of Khurāsān, al-Kisā’ī moved there but subsequently became ill and died. During his illness al-Rashīd paid him regular visits and deeply mourned his death. It seems he died in 804 (189 AH) on the day that the hanīfah official of Al-Rashīd, Muḥammad al-Shaybānī[n 4][7] also died. It is also said he shared his date of death with the judge Abū Yūsuf in 812 (197 AH).[8] When al-Kisā’ī died al-Farrā' was elected to teach in his stead, according to the account of Ibn al-Kūfī.[n 5][9]

Rival Schools Edit

A famous anecdote relates a grammatical contest in Baghdad between the leaders of the two rival schools, with al-Kisā’ī representative of Al-Kufah, and Sibawayh of the Baṣrans. The debate was organized by the Abbasid vizier Yahya ibn Khalid,[10] and became known as al-Mas'ala al-Zunburīyah (The Question of the Hornet). At issue was the Arabic phrase: كنتُ أظن أن العقربَ أشد لسعة من الزنبور فإذا هو هي\هو إياها I always thought that the scorpion is more painful than the hornet in its sting, and so it is (lit. translation).[11] At issue was the correct declension of the last word in the sentence. Sibawayh proposed:[12]

... fa-'ida huwa hiya (فإذا هو هي), literally ... sure-enough he she

meaning "so he (the scorpion, masc.) is she (the most painful one, fem.)"; In Arabic syntax the predicative copula of the verb 'to be' or is has no direct analogue, and instead employs nominal inflexion. Al-Kisa'i argued the correct form is:

... fa-'ida huwa 'iyyaha(فإذا هو إياها), literally ... sure-enough he her

meaning "he is her".[n 6]

In Sibawayh's theoretical argument the accusative form can never be the predicate. However, when al-Kisa'i was supported in his assertion by four Bedouin -Desert Arab, whom he had supposedly bribed-[11][13] that the correct form was huwa 'iyyaha, his argument won the debate. Such was Sibawayh's bitterness in defeat, he left the court[12] to return to his country where he died sometime later at a young age. Al-Kisa'i was accosted by one of Sibawayh's students after the fact and asked 100 grammatical questions, being proved wrong by the student each time. Upon being told the news about Sibawayh's death, al-Kisa'i approached the Caliph Harun al-Rashid and requested that he be punished for having a share in "killing Sibawayh."[14]

Legacy Edit

Hishām ibn Mu'āwīyah[n 7] and Yaḥya al-Farrā' were two notable students. The primary transmitters of his recitation method were Abū al-Ḥārith ibn Khālid al-Layth (d.845)[16][17] and Al-Duri [n 8] [n 9]

Al-Naqqāsh[n 10] wrote Al-Kitāb al-Kisā’ī.[21]and Bakkār[n 11] wrote The Reading of al- Kisā’ī.[21]

Works[8] Edit

Among his books there were:

  • Kitāb Ma'ānī al-Qur'an (كتاب معانى القرآن) 'The Meaning of the Qur’an';
  • Kitāb Mukhtasar al-Nahw (كتاب مختصر النحو) 'Abridgment of Grammar';
  • Kitāb al-Qirā'āt (كتاب القراءات) '[Qur’ānic] Readings';
  • Kitāb al'Adad (كتاب العدد) 'Numbers';
  • Kitāb al-Nawādir al-Kabīr (كتاب النوادر الكبير) 'Book of Great Anecdotes'; [n 12]
  • Kitāb al-Nawādir al-Awsat(كتاب النوادر الاوسطِ) 'Book of Medium Anecdotes';
  • Kitāb al-Nawādir al-Asghir (كتاب النوادر الاصغر) 'Book of Small Anecdotes';
  • Kitāb al-Maqtu' wa-Mawsulahu (كتاب مقطوع القرآن وموصوله) 'Terminations and Connections in the Qur’ān';
  • Kitāb Ikhtilāf al-'Adad (كتاب اختلاف العدد) 'Disagreement or Discrepancies of Numbers';[23][24]
  • Kitāb al-Hija (كتاب الهجاء) 'Spelling';
  • Kitāb al-Masādir (كتاب المصادر) 'Nouns';
  • Kitāb Ash'ār al-Mu'āyāh wa-Tarā'iqiha (كتاب اشعار المعاياة وطرائقها) 'Poems of Contention and Their Forms';
  • Kitāb al-Hā'āt al-Makani biha fi al-Qur'an (كتاب الهاءات المكنى بها في القرآن) 'Forms of Surnames in the Qur’an';
  • Kitāb al-Huruf (كتاب الحروف) 'Letters'.

Al-Kisā’ī composed ten leaves of poetry.[25]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Of the seven canonical transmitters, Ibn Amir ad-Dimashqi was the oldest and al-Kisa'i was the youngest.
  2. ^ Abū Ja'far Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Abī Sārah al-Nīlī al-Ru’āsī (fl. time of Hārūn al-Rashīd), wrote first book on grammar. See Yāqūt Irshād VI (6), 480; Nadīm (al-), 76, 141-2, 145, 1084.
  3. ^ Probably a short cloak as distinct from a ḥulal or ‘cloak’. Cloaks and mantles differentiated regional styles. see Khallikān, II, 238; Nadīm (al-) 144, n10
  4. ^ Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan al-Shaybānī, Abū ‘Abd Allāh of Wāsiṭ, a judge under Hārūn al-Rashīd who died at Al-Rayy in 804. Enc. Islām IV, 271.
  5. ^ Abū al-Ḥasan ‘Alī ibn Muḥammad ibn ‘Ubayd ibn al-Zubayr al-Asadī ibn al-Kūfī (ca. 868-960) was a scholar and calligrapher. See Khatib al-Baghdādī XII, § 81, 6489; Yāqūt Irshād, VI (5), 326; Nadīm (al-), pp. 6, 145, 151-8, 162, 173-4, 192, 864, 1033.
  6. ^ The difference has been compared to that in English between, for example, It is she and It is her, still a point of contention today.
  7. ^ Hishām ibn Mu'āwīyah al-Darīr (d.824) a grammarian and Qur'ānic reciter of Kufa who was blind. See Ibn Khallikan [15]
  8. ^ Abū ‘Umar ‘Umar Hafṣ ibn al-‘Aziz ibn Suhbān Al-Durī (d.861) from Baghdad was a popular teacher at Samarra.[18][19]
  9. ^ Al-Duri was a transmitter for the method of Abu 'Amr ibn al-'Ala', the namesake of another one of the seven canonical recitations.[4][20]
  10. ^ Al-Naqqāsh, ‘Alī ibn Murrah, surnamed Abū al-Ḥasan, one of the people of Baghdād, the author also of Kitāb al-Ḥamzah’ and ‘The Eight Readers in Addition to the Seven,’ after Khalaf ibn Hishām al-Bazzār.
  11. ^ Bakkār ibn Aḥmad ibn Bakkār, surnamed Abū ‘Īsā (d. 963), a Qur’ānic reader in Baghdād, author of The Reading of Ḥamzah.
  12. ^ For list of authors of books of this title See Nadīm (al-), Al-Fihrist, p. 191.[22]

References Edit

  1. ^ Sībawayh, ʻAmr ibn ʻUthmān (1988), Hārūn, ʻAbd al-Salām Muḥammad (ed.), Al-Kitāb Kitāb Sībawayh Abī Bishr ʻAmr ibn ʻUthmān ibn Qanbar, vol. Introduction (3rd ed.), Cairo: Maktabat al-Khānjī, pp. 9–11
  2. ^ a b Frye, R.N., ed. (1975). The Cambridge history of Iran (Repr. ed.). London: Cambridge U.P. p. 467. ISBN 978-0-521-20093-6. Of these four were Persians: Asim b. Abi'l-Najiid, whom Ibn al-Nadim lists among the mawali, Nafi', whom the same source considers as having originated in Isfahan, Ibn al-Kathir and Kisa'i, whose full name, 'Ali b. Hamza b. 'Abd- Allah b. Bahman b. Firuz, reveals his Persian origin.
  3. ^ a b Donzel, E. J. van (1 January 1994). Islamic Desk Reference. BRILL. p. 218. ISBN 90-04-09738-4. al-Kisai *, Abu l-Hasan*: well-known Arab philologist and "reader" of the Quran*, of Persian origin; ca. 737805. He is said to have stayed for some time among the Bedouins in order to become fully conversant in Arabic. He is the real founder of the grammatical school of Kufa. His discussion with Sibawayhi, the prominent grammarian of the school of Basra, has become famous.
  4. ^ a b Muhammad Ghoniem and MSM Saifullah, The Ten Readers & Their Transmitters. (c) Islamic Awareness. Updated January 8, 2002; accessed April 11, 2016.
  5. ^ Shady Nasser, Canonization, pg. 38.
  6. ^ a b Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 143.
  7. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 504.
  8. ^ a b Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 144.
  9. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 158.
  10. ^ Touati, Houari; Cochrane, Lydia G. (2010). Islam and Travel in the Middle Ages. University of Chicago Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-226-80877-2.
  11. ^ a b Kees Versteegh, The Arabic Linguistic Tradition, pg. 64. Part of the Landmarks in Linguistic Thought series, vol. 3. London: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 9780415157575
  12. ^ a b M.G. Carter, Sibawayhi, pg. 13. London: I.B. Tauris, 2004. ISBN 1850436711
  13. ^ Franz Rosenthal, A History of Muslim Historiography, pg. 245. Leiden: Brill Archive, 1952.
  14. ^ al-Qāsim Ibn-ʻAlī al- Ḥarīrī, The Assemblies of Al Ḥarîri: 1: containing the first 26 assemblies, vol. 1, pg. 499. Trns. Thomas Chenery. Williams and Norgate, 1867.
  15. ^ Khallikān (Ibn) 1868, p. 612, vol.III.
  16. ^ Flügel 1871, p. 30, n.3.
  17. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, pp. 69, 1035.
  18. ^ Khallikān (Ibn) 1843, p. 401, n.1, I.
  19. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 79-82.
  20. ^ Shady Hekmat Nasser, Ibn Mujahid and the Canonization of the Seven Readings, p. 129. Taken from The Transmission of the Variant Readings of the Qur'an: The Problem of Tawaatur and the Emergence of Shawaadhdh. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2012. ISBN 9789004240810
  21. ^ a b Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 84.
  22. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 191.
  23. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 79.
  24. ^ Flügel 1872, p. 686, vol.II.
  25. ^ Nadīm (al-) 1970, p. 361, 365.

Bibliography Edit

kisa, confused, with, kisai, marvazi, kisā, الكسائي, abū, Ḥasan, alī, Ḥamzah, allāh, uthman, أبو, الحسن, على, بن, حمزة, بن, عبد, الله, بن, عثمان, called, bahman, fīrūz, بهمن, بن, فيروز, surnamed, abū, allāh, أبو, عبد, الله, abū, Ḥasan, alī, hamzah, kūfah, prec. Not to be confused with Kisai Marvazi Al Kisa i الكسائي Abu al Ḥasan Ali ibn Ḥamzah ibn Abd Allah ibn Uthman أبو الحسن على بن حمزة بن عبد الله بن عثمان called Bahman ibn Firuz بهمن بن فيروز 2 surnamed Abu Abd Allah أبو عبد الله and Abu al Ḥasan Ali ibn Hamzah of al Kufah d ca 804 or 812 was preceptor to the sons of caliph Harun al Rashid and one of the Seven Readers seven canonical Qira at 3 or authorized Qur anic reader 4 n 1 5 6 He founded the Kufi school of Arabic grammar the rival philology school to the Basri school founded by Sibawayh Al Kisa i الكسائي BornAl Kufah IraqDied804Al Rayy IranOther namesAbu al Ḥasan Ali ibn Ḥamzah ibn Abd Allah ibn Uthman أبو الحسن على بن حمزة بن عبد الله بن عثمان Bahman ibn Firuz بهمن بن فيروز Abu Abd Allah أبو عبد الله Academic backgroundInfluencesAl Ru asi Al Khalil ibn Ahmad al Farahidi Yunus ibn Habib et al 1 Academic workEraAbbasid CaliphateSchool or traditionGrammarians of KufaMain interestsphilology Arabic language Bedouin poetry idioms QuranInfluencedHisham ibn Muawiyah and Al Farra Contents 1 Life 1 1 Rival Schools 2 Legacy 3 Works 8 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 BibliographyLife EditA Persian 2 3 born in al Kufah he learned grammar from al Ru asi n 2 and a group of other scholars It is said that al Kisa i took this moniker from the particular kind of mantle he wore called a kisa n 3 Al Kisa i entered the court of the Abbasid caliph Harun al Rashid at Baghdad as tutor to the two princes al Ma mun and al Amin His early biographer Al Nadim relates Abu al Ṭayyib s written account that Al Rashid held him in highest esteem 6 When the caliph moved the court to al Rayy as the capital of Khurasan al Kisa i moved there but subsequently became ill and died During his illness al Rashid paid him regular visits and deeply mourned his death It seems he died in 804 189 AH on the day that the hanifah official of Al Rashid Muḥammad al Shaybani n 4 7 also died It is also said he shared his date of death with the judge Abu Yusuf in 812 197 AH 8 When al Kisa i died al Farra was elected to teach in his stead according to the account of Ibn al Kufi n 5 9 Rival Schools Edit A famous anecdote relates a grammatical contest in Baghdad between the leaders of the two rival schools with al Kisa i representative of Al Kufah and Sibawayh of the Baṣrans The debate was organized by the Abbasid vizier Yahya ibn Khalid 10 and became known as al Mas ala al Zunburiyah The Question of the Hornet At issue was the Arabic phrase كنت أظن أن العقرب أشد لسعة من الزنبور فإذا هو هي هو إياها I always thought that the scorpion is more painful than the hornet in its sting and so it is lit translation 11 At issue was the correct declension of the last word in the sentence Sibawayh proposed 12 fa ida huwa hiya فإذا هو هي literally sure enough he shemeaning so he the scorpion masc is she the most painful one fem In Arabic syntax the predicative copula of the verb to be or is has no direct analogue and instead employs nominal inflexion Al Kisa i argued the correct form is fa ida huwa iyyaha فإذا هو إياها literally sure enough he hermeaning he is her n 6 In Sibawayh s theoretical argument the accusative form can never be the predicate However when al Kisa i was supported in his assertion by four Bedouin Desert Arab whom he had supposedly bribed 11 13 that the correct form was huwa iyyaha his argument won the debate Such was Sibawayh s bitterness in defeat he left the court 12 to return to his country where he died sometime later at a young age Al Kisa i was accosted by one of Sibawayh s students after the fact and asked 100 grammatical questions being proved wrong by the student each time Upon being told the news about Sibawayh s death al Kisa i approached the Caliph Harun al Rashid and requested that he be punished for having a share in killing Sibawayh 14 Legacy EditHisham ibn Mu awiyah n 7 and Yaḥya al Farra were two notable students The primary transmitters of his recitation method were Abu al Ḥarith ibn Khalid al Layth d 845 16 17 and Al Duri n 8 n 9 Al Naqqash n 10 wrote Al Kitab al Kisa i 21 and Bakkar n 11 wrote The Reading of al Kisa i 21 Works 8 EditAmong his books there were Kitab Ma ani al Qur an كتاب معانى القرآن The Meaning of the Qur an Kitab Mukhtasar al Nahw كتاب مختصر النحو Abridgment of Grammar Kitab al Qira at كتاب القراءات Qur anic Readings Kitab al Adad كتاب العدد Numbers Kitab al Nawadir al Kabir كتاب النوادر الكبير Book of Great Anecdotes n 12 Kitab al Nawadir al Awsat كتاب النوادر الاوسط Book of Medium Anecdotes Kitab al Nawadir al Asghir كتاب النوادر الاصغر Book of Small Anecdotes Kitab al Maqtu wa Mawsulahu كتاب مقطوع القرآن وموصوله Terminations and Connections in the Qur an Kitab Ikhtilaf al Adad كتاب اختلاف العدد Disagreement or Discrepancies of Numbers 23 24 Kitab al Hija كتاب الهجاء Spelling Kitab al Masadir كتاب المصادر Nouns Kitab Ash ar al Mu ayah wa Tara iqiha كتاب اشعار المعاياة وطرائقها Poems of Contention and Their Forms Kitab al Ha at al Makani biha fi al Qur an كتاب الهاءات المكنى بها في القرآن Forms of Surnames in the Qur an Kitab al Huruf كتاب الحروف Letters Al Kisa i composed ten leaves of poetry 25 See also EditList of Arab scientists and scholars Encyclopaedia Britannica OnlineNotes Edit Of the seven canonical transmitters Ibn Amir ad Dimashqi was the oldest and al Kisa i was the youngest Abu Ja far Muḥammad ibn al Ḥasan ibn Abi Sarah al Nili al Ru asi fl time of Harun al Rashid wrote first book on grammar See Yaqut Irshad VI 6 480 Nadim al 76 141 2 145 1084 Probably a short cloak as distinct from a ḥulal or cloak Cloaks and mantles differentiated regional styles see Khallikan II 238 Nadim al 144 n10 Muḥammad ibn al Ḥasan al Shaybani Abu Abd Allah of Wasiṭ a judge under Harun al Rashid who died at Al Rayy in 804 Enc Islam IV 271 Abu al Ḥasan Ali ibn Muḥammad ibn Ubayd ibn al Zubayr al Asadi ibn al Kufi ca 868 960 was a scholar and calligrapher See Khatib al Baghdadi XII 81 6489 Yaqut Irshad VI 5 326 Nadim al pp 6 145 151 8 162 173 4 192 864 1033 The difference has been compared to that in English between for example It is she and It is her still a point of contention today Hisham ibn Mu awiyah al Darir d 824 a grammarian and Qur anic reciter of Kufa who was blind See Ibn Khallikan 15 Abu Umar Umar Hafṣ ibn al Aziz ibn Suhban Al Duri d 861 from Baghdad was a popular teacher at Samarra 18 19 Al Duri was a transmitter for the method of Abu Amr ibn al Ala the namesake of another one of the seven canonical recitations 4 20 Al Naqqash Ali ibn Murrah surnamed Abu al Ḥasan one of the people of Baghdad the author also of Kitab al Ḥamzah and The Eight Readers in Addition to the Seven after Khalaf ibn Hisham al Bazzar Bakkar ibn Aḥmad ibn Bakkar surnamed Abu isa d 963 a Qur anic reader in Baghdad author of The Reading of Ḥamzah For list of authors of books of this title See Nadim al Al Fihrist p 191 22 References Edit Sibawayh ʻAmr ibn ʻUthman 1988 Harun ʻAbd al Salam Muḥammad ed Al Kitab Kitab Sibawayh Abi Bishr ʻAmr ibn ʻUthman ibn Qanbar vol Introduction 3rd ed Cairo Maktabat al Khanji pp 9 11 a b Frye R N ed 1975 The Cambridge history of Iran Repr ed London Cambridge U P p 467 ISBN 978 0 521 20093 6 Of these four were Persians Asim b Abi l Najiid whom Ibn al Nadim lists among the mawali Nafi whom the same source considers as having originated in Isfahan Ibn al Kathir and Kisa i whose full name Ali b Hamza b Abd Allah b Bahman b Firuz reveals his Persian origin a b Donzel E J van 1 January 1994 Islamic Desk Reference BRILL p 218 ISBN 90 04 09738 4 al Kisai Abu l Hasan well known Arab philologist and reader of the Quran of Persian origin ca 737805 He is said to have stayed for some time among the Bedouins in order to become fully conversant in Arabic He is the real founder of the grammatical school of Kufa His discussion with Sibawayhi the prominent grammarian of the school of Basra has become famous a b Muhammad Ghoniem and MSM Saifullah The Ten Readers amp Their Transmitters c Islamic Awareness Updated January 8 2002 accessed April 11 2016 Shady Nasser Canonization pg 38 a b Nadim al 1970 p 143 Nadim al 1970 p 504 a b Nadim al 1970 p 144 Nadim al 1970 p 158 Touati Houari Cochrane Lydia G 2010 Islam and Travel in the Middle Ages University of Chicago Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 226 80877 2 a b Kees Versteegh The Arabic Linguistic Tradition pg 64 Part of the Landmarks in Linguistic Thought series vol 3 London Routledge 1997 ISBN 9780415157575 a b M G Carter Sibawayhi pg 13 London I B Tauris 2004 ISBN 1850436711 Franz Rosenthal A History of Muslim Historiography pg 245 Leiden Brill Archive 1952 al Qasim Ibn ʻAli al Ḥariri The Assemblies of Al Ḥariri 1 containing the first 26 assemblies vol 1 pg 499 Trns Thomas Chenery Williams and Norgate 1867 Khallikan Ibn 1868 p 612 vol III Flugel 1871 p 30 n 3 Nadim al 1970 pp 69 1035 Khallikan Ibn 1843 p 401 n 1 I Nadim al 1970 p 79 82 Shady Hekmat Nasser Ibn Mujahid and the Canonization of the Seven Readings p 129 Taken from The Transmission of the Variant Readings of the Qur an The Problem of Tawaatur and the Emergence of Shawaadhdh Leiden Brill Publishers 2012 ISBN 9789004240810 a b Nadim al 1970 p 84 Nadim al 1970 p 191 Nadim al 1970 p 79 Flugel 1872 p 686 vol II Nadim al 1970 p 361 365 Bibliography EditFlugel Gustav Leberecht 1871 J Roediger A Mueller eds Al Fihrist in Arabic and German Vol 1 Leipzig F C W Vogel p 21 Flugel Gustav Leberecht 1872 J Roediger A Mueller eds Al Fihrist in Arabic Vol 2 Leipzig F C W Vogel Khallikan Ibn Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad 1843 Ibn Khallikan s Biographical Dictionary translation of Wafayat al A yan wa Anba Vol I Translated by MacGuckin de Slane London Oriental Translation Fund of Britain and Ireland p 401 n 1 Khallikan Ibn Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad 1843b Ibn Khallikan s Biographical Dictionary translation of Wafayat al A yan wa Anba Vol II Translated by MacGuckin de Slane London Oriental Translation Fund of Britain and Ireland pp 237 9 Khallikan Ibn Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad 1868 Ibn Khallikan s Biographical Dictionary translation of Wafayat al A yan wa Anba Abna al Zaman Vol III Translated by McGuckin de Slane William London W H Allen Nadim al Abu al Faraj Muḥammad ibn Isḥaq Abu Ya qub al Warraq 1970 Dodge Bayard ed The Fihrist of al Nadim a tenth century survey of Muslim culture New York amp London Columbia University Press pp 79 84 112 143 144 158 191 361 365 504 Mas udi al Abu al Ḥasan Ali ibn al Ḥusayn 1871 Kitab Muruj al Dhahab wa Ma adin al Jawhar Les Prairies d or in Arabic and French Vol VI Translated by Meynard C Barbier de Courteille Pavet de Paris Imprimerie nationale pp 302 319 Suyuṭi Jalal al Din Abd Al Raḥman 1909 Khanji Muḥammad Amin ed Bughyat al Wu at fi Ṭabaqat al Lughawiyin wa al Nuḥah in Arabic Vol 2 Cairo Sa adah Press pp 162 4 Zubaydi Muḥammad ibn al Ḥasan 1984 Ibrahim Muḥammad ed Ṭabaqat al Naḥwiyin wa al Lughawiyin in Arabic 2 ed Cairo Dar al Ma arif pp 127 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Kisa 27i amp oldid 1167027637, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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