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Barbad

Barbad (Persian: باربد; fl. late 6th – early 7th century CE) was a Persian poet-musician, lutenist, music theorist and composer of Sasanian music. He served as chief minstrel-poet under the Shahanshah Khosrow II (r. 590–628). A barbat player, he was the most distinguished Persian musician of his time and is regarded among the major figures in the history of Persian music.

Detail of Barbad playing the barbat for Khosrow II. Imaginary painting by Muhammad-Mukim, 1664

Despite scarce biographical information, Barbad's historicity is generally secure. He was highly regarded in the court of Khosrow, and interacted with other musicians, such as Sarkash. Although he is traditionally credited with numerous innovations in Persian music theory and practice, the attributions remain tentative since they are ascribed centuries after his death. Practically all Barbad's music or poetry is lost, except a single poem fragment and the titles of a few compositions.

No Sasanian sources discuss Barbad, suggesting his reputation was preserved through oral tradition, until at least the earliest written account by the poet Khaled ibn Fayyaz (d. c. 718). Barbad appears frequently in later Persian literature, most famously in Ferdowsi's Shahnameh. The content and abundance of such references demonstrate his unique influence, inspiring musicians such as Ishaq al-Mawsili. Often described as the "founder of Persian music", Barbad remains a celebrated figure in modern-day Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan.

Name edit

 
Bahram Gur and Courtiers Entertained by Barbad the Musician (Barbad bottom right). From a manuscript of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh, second half 17th century.[1]

Posthumous sources refer to the Sasanian musician with little consistency. Persian sources record "Barbād" while Arabic scholars use Fahl(a)bad, Bahl(a)bad, Fahl(a)wad, Fahr(a)bad, Bahr(a)bad and Bārbad/ḏ.[2] Modern sources most often use "Barbad",[n 1] a spelling that Danish orientalist Arthur Christensen first asserted to be correct.[2] However, the German orientalist Theodor Nöldeke suggested that spellings from Arabic commentators such as "Fahl(a)bad" were really an arabicization of his actual name, probably Pahrbad/Pahlbad. Nöldeke furthered that "Bārbad" was a mistake in the interpretation of ambiguous Pahlavi characters.[2] The Iranologist Ahmad Tafazzoli agreed with Nöldeke, citing a Sasanian seal which includes the name "Pahrbad/Pahlbad" and the earliest mention of the Sasanian musician, which uses a spelling—"Bahrbad/Bahlbad"—that suggests the name had been arabicized.[2]

Background edit

The music of Iran/Persia stretches to at least the depictions of arched harps from 3300–3100 BCE,[3] though not until the period of the Sasanian Empire in 224–651 CE is substantial information available.[4] This influx of Sasanian records suggests a prominent musical culture in the Empire,[5] especially in the areas dominated by Zoroastrianism.[4] Many Sasanian Shahanshahs were ardent supporters of music, including the founder of the empire Ardashir I and Bahram V.[4] Khosrow II (r. 590–628) was the most outstanding patron, his reign being regarded as a golden age of Persian music.[4] Musicians in Khosrow's service include Āzādvar-e Changi,[n 2] Bāmshād, the harpist Nagisa (Nakisa), Ramtin, Sarkash (also Sargis or Sarkas)[n 3] and Barbad,[8] who was by-far the most famous.[7] These musicians were usually active as minstrels, which were performers who worked as both court poets and musicians;[9] in the Sasanian Empire there was little distinction between poetry and music.[10]

Though many Middle Persian (Pahlavi) texts of the Sasanian Empire survive, only one—Khusraw qubadan va ridak—includes commentary on music, though neither it or any other Sasanian sources discuss Barbad.[11] Barbad's reputation must have been transmitted through oral tradition,[12] until at least the earliest source: an Arabic poem by Khaled ibn Fayyaz (d. c. 718).[13][n 4] In later ancient Arabic and Persian sources Barbad is the most discussed Sasanian musician, though he is rarely included in writings dedicated solely to music.[14] A rare exception to this is a brief mention in Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Muhammad Nishābūrī's music treatise Rasaleh-i musiqi-i.[15] Ancient sources in general give little biographical information and most of what is available is shrouded in mythological anecdotes.[16] Tales from the poet Ferdowsi's Shahnameh, written during the late 10th century, include the most celebrated accounts of Barbad.[17] Other important sources included Ferdowsi's contemporary, the poet al-Tha'alibi in his Ghurar al-saya, as well as Khosrow and Shirin and Haft Peykar from the poet Nezami Ganjavi's Khamsa of Nizami from the late 12th century.[18][4] Despite this plethora of stories depicting him in a legendary context, scholars generally consider Barbad a wholly historical person.[4][19]

Life and career edit

Early life edit

 
An illustration from a manuscript of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh, depicting Barbad (top left) hidden in the trees playing for Khosrow (bottom right).[20]

There are contradictory ancient accounts as to the location of Barbad's birthplace. Older sources record the city of Merv in northeastern Khorasan,[21][n 5] while later works give Jahrom,[n 6] a small city south of Shiraz in Pars.[16] Tafazzoli postulated that the writers who recorded Jahrom were referencing a line of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh that says Barbad traveled from Jarom to the capital in Ctesiphon when Khosrow was murdered;[16] the modern historian Mehrdad Kia records only Merv.[21]

Ferdowsi and al-Tha'alibi both relay a story that Barbad was a gifted young musician who sought a place as a court minstrel under Khosrow II but the jealous chief court minstrel Sarkash[n 3] supposedly prevented this.[22] As such, Barbad hid in the royal garden by dressing in all green.[21] When Khosrow walked by Barbad sang three songs with his lute: Dād-āfrīd ("created by god"), Peykār-e gord ("battle of the hero" or "splendor of Farkar") and Sabz dar sabz ("green in the green").[22] Khosrow was immediately impressed and ordered that Barbad be appointed chief minstrel,[22][23][n 7] a position known as the shah-i ramishgaran.[9][n 8] In Nizami's Khosrow and Shirin, Khosrow II is said to have had a dream where his grandfather Khosrow I prophesied that he would have a "have a minstrel called Barbad whose art could make even poison taste delicious".[25]

Stories with Khosrow edit

Since his appointment at court, Barbad was Khosrow's favorite musician, and many stories exist about this prestige.[6] His relationship with Khosrow was reportedly such that other members of the court would seek his assistance in mediating conflicts between them and the Shahanshah.[26] A story in Nizami's Khosrow and Shirin, tells of Khosrow and Shirin as previously together, but forced to separate for political reasons; Khosrow marries someone else, but is soon reminded of Shirin.[27] The two later met and arranged for the Nagisa to sing of Shirin's love for Khosrow, while Barbad sung of Khosrow's love for Shirin.[24] The duet reconciled the couple and was recorded by Nizami in 263 couplets.[24] The idea of setting music to poetry in order to represent the emotions of characters was unprecedented in Persian music.[24] According to the 10th-century historian Ibn al-Faqih al-Hamadani's Kitab al-buldan,[28] Khosrow's wife Shirin asked Barbad to remind Khosrow of his promise to build her a castle. To do so, he sung a song and was rewarded with an estate near Isfahan for him and his family.[26] According to the Seljuk scholar Nizam al-Mulk, Barbad visited a courtier who had been imprisoned by Khosrow and upon being scolded by the Shahanshah, a "witty remark" was enough to resolve the situation.[26]

 
Barbad (left) playing music for Khosrow II

In the literary scholar Abu al-Faraj al-Isfahani's Kitab al-Aghani, a jealous rival musician once untuned the strings of Barbad's lute during a royal banquet. Upon returning to perform, Barbad began to play; royal rules forbade the tuning instruments in the Shahanshah's presence, but Barbad's skill was such that he could adapt to the untuned strings and play the pieces regardless.[29] Al-Isfahani attributed this story to Ishaq al-Mawsili (776–856)—a renowned minstrel under Harun al-Rashid—who purportedly relayed the story to friends.[28]

Among the most popular legends about Barbad involves Khosrow's beloved horse Shabdiz. In this story, Khosrow declared that when Shabdiz died, anyone who announced the news would be executed.[23] Upon Shabdiz's death, no members of the court wished to risk conveying the news.[26] To resolve the issue, Barbad sang a sad song, and Khosrow, understanding the purpose of the song, stated "Shabdiz is dead"; Barbad responded "Yes and it is your majesty who announced it", thereby preventing any possibility of death.[23] This story was relayed earliest by the poet Khaled ibn Fayyaz (d. c. 718),[n 4] with later accounts by al-Tha'alibi and the 13th-century writer Zakariya al-Qazwini.[26] Many similar ancient stories originated in Iran, Turkey and Central Asia that pertain to musicians using music to express the death of a ruler's horse, as to avoid the ruler's wrath against the announcer.[30] Various pieces for the Khwarazm dutar, Kyrgyz komuz and Kazakh dombra relay equivalent stories.[30] Tafazzoli asserts that the story demonstrates Barbad's unique influence on Khosrow,[26] while musicologist Lloyd Miller suggest that this and similar stories suggest that music and musicians in general exerted a significant influence on their political leaders.[31]

Death edit

Like his birthplace, there are conflicting accounts surrounding the final years of Barbad's life. According to Ferdowsi, upon the murder of Khosrow by Kavad II, Barbad rushed from Jahrom to the capital of Ctesiphon.[32] After arriving he sang elegies,[32] cut off his fingers and burned his instruments out of respect.[32][9] Al-Tha'alibi's account holds that Sarkash,[n 3] who had remained at the court since being ousted from the chief minstrel position, poisoned Barbad.[32] The 9th-century geographer Ibn Khordadbeh's Kitāb al-lahw wa-l-malahi, however, records the opposite, stating that Barbad poisoned Sarkash but was spared from Khosrow's punishment by way of a "witty remark".[32] The 9th-century scholar Ibn Qutaybah's ‘Uyūn al-Akhbār and the 10th-century poet Ibn Abd Rabbih's al-ʿIqd al-Farīd state that Barbad was killed by a different musician, variously recorded as Yošt, Rabūst, Rošk and Zīwešt.[32]

Music and poetry edit

 
1539 illustration, Barbad in the middle with a barbat, attributed to Mirza Ali [fa].[33][34]

Barbad was active as a poet-musician,[35] lutenist, music theorist and composer.[36] His compositions included panegyrics, elegies and verses.[37] These were performed by himself at festivals such as Nowruz and Mehregan, as well as state banquets and victory celebrations.[37] While none of the compositions are extant, the names have survived for some, and they suggest a wide variety in the topics he musically engaged with.[6] The ethnomusicologist Hormoz Farhat has tentatively sorted them into different groupings: epic forms based on historical events, kin-i Iraj (lit.'the Vengeance of Iraj'), kin-i siavash (lit.'the Vengeance of Siavash'), and Taxt-i Ardashir (lit.'the Throne of Ardashir'); songs connected to the Sasanian royal court, Bagh-i shirin (lit.'the garden of Shirin'), Bagh-i Shahryar (lit.'the Sovereign's Garden'), and haft Ganj (lit.'the seven treasures'); and "compositions of a descriptive nature", roshan charagh (lit.'bright lights').[6] According to both scholars Ibn al-Faqih and the 13th-century geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi, Barbad wrote Bag-e nakjiran (lit.'garden of the game') for workers who had recently finished the gardens of Qasr-e Shirin.[37]

A single poem by Barbad survives, though in a quoted state from the Kitab al-lahw wa al-malahi by Ibn Khordadbeh.[13] The work is a 3-hemistich panegyric in Middle Persian, but with an Arabic script;[37] none of its music is extant.[13] The poem is as follows:

Ceasar resembles the moon and Khaqan the sun,
[but] my lord is like the rich clouds,
whenever he wants he hides the moon or the sun.

— Barbad, in the Kitab al-lahw wa al-malahi by Ibn Khordadbeh[38]

Christensen suggested in 1936 that the text Khvarshēdh ī rōshan (lit.'The shining sun') is from a poem that was written and performed by Barbad himself or another poet-musician of his time.[4] The text is found in a group of Manichaean manuscripts in Turpan, Xinjiang, China and is written in Middle Persian, which Barbad would have used.[4] It has four 11-syllable lines and its title recalls the Sasanian melody Arāyishn ī khvarshēdh (lit.'The beauty of the sun').[4]

The shining sun, the beaming full moon
Resplendent and beaming behind the trunk of a tree;
The eager birds strut about it full of joy,
The doves and the colorful peacocks strut about.

— Khvarshēdh ī rōshan (lit.'The shining sun'), attri. unknown Sasanian musician, possibly Barbad[4]

Barbad is traditionally regarded as the inventor of numerous aspects of Persian music theory and practice. Al-Tha'alibi first credited him with creating an organized modal system of seven "Royal modes" (al-ṭoruq al-molukiya) [fa],[39] known variously as xosrovani (Persian: سرود خسروانى),[6] Haft Ḵosravāni,[39] or khosravani.[8][7] This attribution is later repeated by scholars such as al-Masudi[37] and Qutb al-Din al-Shirazi.[4] From these royal modes, Barbad created 30 "derivative modes" (lahn) [fa], and 360 melodies (dastan).[8][7][n 9] The structure of seven, 30 and 360 variations corresponds to the number of days, weeks and months of the Zoroastrian calendar.[4][n 10] Farhat notes that the exact reason for this is not known,[40] though according to the 14th-century poet Hamdallah Mustawfi's Tarikh-i guzida, Barbad sang one of the 360 melodies each day for the Shahanshah.[37] Al-Tha'alibi recorded that the seven royal modes were still in use during his lifetime,[39] from 961 to 1039.[41] Further information on the nature of these subjects, theories or compositions has not survived.[6] In her analysis of the historical and literary sources concerning Barbad, musicologist Firoozeh Khazrai stated that "until a new independent source on the subject comes to light, many of these attributions should be regarded as authorial inventions".[19] She noted that many of the attributions to Barbad date centuries after his death and the 30 modes in particular are first connected to Barbad by Nizami, who lived in the 12th century.[12] In addition, in his divan (collection of poems), the 11th-century poet Manuchehri names a few of the modes that Nizami mentioned but does not associate them with Barbad, even though he references the Sasanian musician elsewhere.[42]

Reputation edit

 
Relief of Barbad in the Sangtarashan cave of Jahrom, Iran

Barbad's lute was the four-stringed barbat.[43][44] It had been popular in his time, but no traces of the instrument survive and it was eventually substituted for the oud.[45] The musicologists Jean During and Zia Mirabdolbaghi note that despite the instrument's gradual disuse, "the term barbat survived for centuries, through classical poetry, as a symbol of the golden age of the Persian musical tradition, served by artists such as Bārbad."[45] Later sources regularly praise Barbad and some offer him the epitaph as the "founder of Persian music".[4] He is regarded as the most significant musician of his time,[6] being among the major figures in the history of Iranian/Persian music.[46] In Sharh bar Kitāb al-adwar, the 14th-century writer al-Sharif al-Jurjani—whom the work is attributed to—says:

"Among the ancient musicians, there were those who never played the same melody twice in presence of the king. Such was Barbad, who lived during the time of [Khosrow II]. He took care to study his audience well. He paid attention to the disposition of his listeners' souls, and then he would improvise words and a melody suited to the occasion and corresponding perfectly to each person's desire. His fame spread throughout the world, and [Khosrow] boasted about the fact that neither the kings of the past, nor those of his time, possessed such an artist."

— al-Jurjani (attri.), Sharh bar Kitāb al-adwar[8][n 11]

The preponderance and frequent transmission of stories involving Barbad attest to his popularity long after his death.[47][28] In modern-day Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan, Barbad continues to be a celebrated figure.[47] In 1989 and 1990 the cultural establishment of the Tajik government encouraged their people to find pride in Barbad's achievements; the panegyrics given for Barbad are part of a larger effort by the Tajik government to pass off the "achievements of pre-Islamic Iranian civilization" as Tajik ones.[48] The largest musical hall of Dushanbe, Tajikistan, is named "Kokhi Borbad" after Barbad.[47]

Musicologist Firoozeh Khazrai sums up Barbad's legacy as such:

"From the sources and nature of the things attributed to Barbad, we can conclude that Barbad survived in an oral popular culture that immortalized him by continually retelling old stories about him, and the legendary power of his music, and by spinning out new ones. While all these stories mythologize Barbad without telling us any solid information about the actual nature of his music, they underscore the unparalleled authority of the minstrel and the powerful grip he and his music continued to exercise on the imagination of the people in the post-Sasanian era."

— Firoozeh Khazrai[28]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Virtually all sources in this article use the form "Barbad"—albeit sometimes differing in use of the transliterated diacritic marking over the "a" (e.g. "Bārbad")—see Curtis (2003, pp. 137–138), Kia (2016, p. 151), Miller (2012, p. 6) and Tafazzoli (1988, § para. 1) for instance.
  2. ^ Āzādvar-e Changi is also known as simply Āzād.[6]
  3. ^ a b c There is much contradiction in modern sources over the musicians Nagisa (Nakisa) and Sarkash (also Sargis or Sarkas). Some sources, such as During (1991a, p. 39) and Farhat (2004, p. 3) present them as separate individuals, listing them both as among the musicians of Khosrow's court. Other sources, such as Lawergren (2001, §5 "Sassanian period, 224–651 CE") and Farhat (2001, §1 "History") suggest the two are the same person: "harpist Sarkash (also called Nakisā)",[4] and "Nakisa or Sarkash".[7] Matters are made more confusing by the fact that Hormoz Farhat presented the two musicians differently.
  4. ^ a b See Khazrai (2016, p. 168) for an English translation of Fayyaz's poem
  5. ^ Older sources that give Merv as Barbad's birthplace include Ibn Khordadbeh's Kitāb al-lahw wa-l-malahi, Hamdallah Mustawfi's Nuzhat al-Qulub, al-Tha'alibi's Ghurar al-saya, as well as accounts by al-Jahiz and Istakhri.[16]
  6. ^ Later sources that give Jahrom as Barbad's birthplace include the Farhang-e Jahangiri by Jamal al-Din Hosayn Enju Shirazi and an account by Fakhr al-Din al-Razi.[16]
  7. ^ The purported story on Barbad's accession to the chief court minstrel post exists in slightly different variants depending on its source. See Khazrai (2016, p. 169–170) for a discussion on the differences between the accounts of Ferdowsi and al-Tha'alibi. See modern retellings from unspecified sources in Curtis (2003, pp. 137–138), Kia (2016, p. 151), Miller (2012, p. 6) and Tafazzoli (1988, § para. 3)
  8. ^ The minstrel title alone may be referred to as rāmeshgar, gosān, or khunyāgar.[24] "Poet-minstrel" is khunyagaran.[11]
  9. ^ See Farmer (1926) for a list of all the purported 30 modes.
  10. ^ Scholar Bo Lawergren notes that having 360 to match the days of a year ignores the five intercalary days.[4]
  11. ^ Recorded by Rodolphe d'Erlanger (1938).[8]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Brooklyn Museum.
  2. ^ a b c d Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 1.
  3. ^ Lawergren 2001, §1 "Introduction", §2 "3rd millennium BCE".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Lawergren 2001, §5 "Sassanian period, 224–651 CE".
  5. ^ Farhat 2012, "Historic Retrospective".
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Farhat 2004, p. 3.
  7. ^ a b c d Farhat 2001, §1 "History".
  8. ^ a b c d e During 1991a, p. 39.
  9. ^ a b c Curtis 2003, p. 138.
  10. ^ During 1991b, p. 154.
  11. ^ a b Khazrai 2016, p. 165.
  12. ^ a b Khazrai 2016, pp. 170–171.
  13. ^ a b c Khazrai 2016, p. 166.
  14. ^ Lucas 2019, p. 59.
  15. ^ Lucas 2019, pp. 59, 244.
  16. ^ a b c d e Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 2.
  17. ^ Khazrai 2016, p. 169.
  18. ^ Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 1–7.
  19. ^ a b Khazrai 2016, p. 171.
  20. ^ Kia 2016, p. 152.
  21. ^ a b c Kia 2016, p. 151.
  22. ^ a b c Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 3.
  23. ^ a b c Miller 2012, p. 6.
  24. ^ a b c d Khazrai 2016, p. 164.
  25. ^ Curtis 2003, p. 142.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 4.
  27. ^ Curtis 2003, pp. 143–144.
  28. ^ a b c d Khazrai 2016, p. 167.
  29. ^ Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 5.
  30. ^ a b Blum 2001b, §2 "Musicians".
  31. ^ Miller 2012, p. 19.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 7.
  33. ^ Curtis 2003, p. 137.
  34. ^ Blum 2001a, p. 834.
  35. ^ Khazrai 2016, p. 163.
  36. ^ Grove 2001.
  37. ^ a b c d e f Tafazzoli 1988, § para. 6.
  38. ^ Tafazzoli 1974, p. 338.
  39. ^ a b c Youssefzadeh 2012.
  40. ^ Farhat 2001, §5 "Sassanian period, 224–651 CE".
  41. ^ Orfali 2009, p. 273.
  42. ^ Khazrai 2016, p. 170.
  43. ^ Blum 2001b, §4 "Instruments".
  44. ^ Farhat 2012, "Instruments".
  45. ^ a b During & Mirabdolbaghi 1991a, p. 106.
  46. ^ Nettl 2012.
  47. ^ a b c Kia 2016, p. 153.
  48. ^ Manz 1998, p. 137.
  49. ^ LA County Museum of Art.

Sources edit

Books
  • Curtis, Vesta Sarkhosh (2003). "Persian Myths". World of Myths. Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-70607-1.
  • During, Jean; Mirabdolbaghi, Zia, eds. (1991). The Art of Persian Music. Washington D.C.: Mage Publishers. ISBN 978-0-934211-22-2.
  • Farhat, Hormoz (2004). The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-54206-7.
  • Khazrai, Firoozeh (2016) [2000]. "Music in Khusraw Va Shirin". In Talattof, Kamran; Clinton, Jerome W. (eds.). The Poetry of Nizami Ganjavi: Knowledge, Love, and Rhetoric. London: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-09836-8.
  • Kia, Mehrdad (2016). The Persian Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia. Empires of the World. Vol. 2. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-61069-391-2.
  • Lucas, Ann E. (2019). Music of a Thousand Years: A New History of Persian Musical Traditions. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-97203-2. JSTOR j.ctv1f884pp.
  • Manz, Beatrice F., ed. (1998) [1994]. Central Asia In Historical Perspective. The John M. Olin Critical Issue Series. Boulder: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-3638-1.
  • Miller, Lloyd (2012). Music and Song in Persia: The Art of Avaz. Abingdon-on-Thames: Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-136-81487-7.
  • Tafazzoli, A. (1974). "Some Middle-Persian Quotations in Classical Arabic and Persian Texts". In Gignoux, Ph.; Tafazzoli, A. (eds.). Mémorial Jean de Menasce. Tehran and Liège: Imprimerie Orientaliste Louvain. pp. 337–349. OCLC 469830825.
Articles
Web
  • "Bahram Gur and Courtiers Entertained by Barbad the Musician, Page from a manuscript of the Shahnama of Firdawsi (d. 1020)". Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  • "King Khusraw Parviz Listening to Barbad the Concealed Musician, Page from a Manuscript of the Shahnama (Book of Kings) of Firdawsi". Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Retrieved 23 July 2021.

Further reading edit

  • Boyce, Mary (1957). "The Parthian Gōsān and Iranian Minstrel Tradition". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 89 (1–2). Cambridge University Press: 10–45. doi:10.1017/S0035869X0010735X. JSTOR 25201987. S2CID 161761104.
  • Browne, Edward G. (January 1899). "The Sources of Dawlatshāh; With Some Remarks on the Materials Available for a Literary History of Persia, and an Excursus on Bārbad and Rūdagī". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Cambridge University Press: 37–69. JSTOR 25208066.
  • Christensen, Arthur (1918). "Some Notes on Persian Melody-Names of the Sasanian Period". In Gatha Society (ed.). Dastur Hoshang Memorial Volume: Being Papers on Iranian Subjects. Bombay: Fort Printing Press. OCLC 500234890.
  • Key, Alexander (August 2018). "Translation of Poetry from Persian to Arabic: ʿAbd al-Qāhir al-Jurjānī and Others". Journal of Abbasid Studies. 5 (1–2): 146–176. doi:10.1163/22142371-12340037. S2CID 201011701.
  • Tafazzoli, Ahmad (1988). "Bārbad yā Pahlbad". In Afsar, Iraj; Esfahanian, Karim (eds.). Namvara-ye Doktor Mahmud Afsar. Vol. IV. Tehran: Bonyadie Mowqufat-e Afsar. pp. 2222–2235.

External links edit

"Barbad and Nakisā", a song inspired by Barbad performed by the Tanbur player Nur ʿAli Elāhi on Encyclopædia Iranica

barbad, persian, باربد, late, early, century, persian, poet, musician, lutenist, music, theorist, composer, sasanian, music, served, chief, minstrel, poet, under, shahanshah, khosrow, barbat, player, most, distinguished, persian, musician, time, regarded, amon. Barbad Persian باربد fl late 6th early 7th century CE was a Persian poet musician lutenist music theorist and composer of Sasanian music He served as chief minstrel poet under the Shahanshah Khosrow II r 590 628 A barbat player he was the most distinguished Persian musician of his time and is regarded among the major figures in the history of Persian music Detail of Barbad playing the barbat for Khosrow II Imaginary painting by Muhammad Mukim 1664 Despite scarce biographical information Barbad s historicity is generally secure He was highly regarded in the court of Khosrow and interacted with other musicians such as Sarkash Although he is traditionally credited with numerous innovations in Persian music theory and practice the attributions remain tentative since they are ascribed centuries after his death Practically all Barbad s music or poetry is lost except a single poem fragment and the titles of a few compositions No Sasanian sources discuss Barbad suggesting his reputation was preserved through oral tradition until at least the earliest written account by the poet Khaled ibn Fayyaz d c 718 Barbad appears frequently in later Persian literature most famously in Ferdowsi s Shahnameh The content and abundance of such references demonstrate his unique influence inspiring musicians such as Ishaq al Mawsili Often described as the founder of Persian music Barbad remains a celebrated figure in modern day Iran Afghanistan and Tajikistan Contents 1 Name 2 Background 3 Life and career 3 1 Early life 3 2 Stories with Khosrow 3 3 Death 4 Music and poetry 5 Reputation 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 6 3 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksName edit nbsp Bahram Gur and Courtiers Entertained by Barbad the Musician Barbad bottom right From a manuscript of Ferdowsi s Shahnameh second half 17th century 1 Posthumous sources refer to the Sasanian musician with little consistency Persian sources record Barbad while Arabic scholars use Fahl a bad Bahl a bad Fahl a wad Fahr a bad Bahr a bad and Barbad ḏ 2 Modern sources most often use Barbad n 1 a spelling that Danish orientalist Arthur Christensen first asserted to be correct 2 However the German orientalist Theodor Noldeke suggested that spellings from Arabic commentators such as Fahl a bad were really an arabicization of his actual name probably Pahrbad Pahlbad Noldeke furthered that Barbad was a mistake in the interpretation of ambiguous Pahlavi characters 2 The Iranologist Ahmad Tafazzoli agreed with Noldeke citing a Sasanian seal which includes the name Pahrbad Pahlbad and the earliest mention of the Sasanian musician which uses a spelling Bahrbad Bahlbad that suggests the name had been arabicized 2 Background editThe music of Iran Persia stretches to at least the depictions of arched harps from 3300 3100 BCE 3 though not until the period of the Sasanian Empire in 224 651 CE is substantial information available 4 This influx of Sasanian records suggests a prominent musical culture in the Empire 5 especially in the areas dominated by Zoroastrianism 4 Many Sasanian Shahanshahs were ardent supporters of music including the founder of the empire Ardashir I and Bahram V 4 Khosrow II r 590 628 was the most outstanding patron his reign being regarded as a golden age of Persian music 4 Musicians in Khosrow s service include Azadvar e Changi n 2 Bamshad the harpist Nagisa Nakisa Ramtin Sarkash also Sargis or Sarkas n 3 and Barbad 8 who was by far the most famous 7 These musicians were usually active as minstrels which were performers who worked as both court poets and musicians 9 in the Sasanian Empire there was little distinction between poetry and music 10 Though many Middle Persian Pahlavi texts of the Sasanian Empire survive only one Khusraw qubadan va ridak includes commentary on music though neither it or any other Sasanian sources discuss Barbad 11 Barbad s reputation must have been transmitted through oral tradition 12 until at least the earliest source an Arabic poem by Khaled ibn Fayyaz d c 718 13 n 4 In later ancient Arabic and Persian sources Barbad is the most discussed Sasanian musician though he is rarely included in writings dedicated solely to music 14 A rare exception to this is a brief mention in Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Muhammad Nishaburi s music treatise Rasaleh i musiqi i 15 Ancient sources in general give little biographical information and most of what is available is shrouded in mythological anecdotes 16 Tales from the poet Ferdowsi s Shahnameh written during the late 10th century include the most celebrated accounts of Barbad 17 Other important sources included Ferdowsi s contemporary the poet al Tha alibi in his Ghurar al saya as well as Khosrow and Shirin and Haft Peykar from the poet Nezami Ganjavi s Khamsa of Nizami from the late 12th century 18 4 Despite this plethora of stories depicting him in a legendary context scholars generally consider Barbad a wholly historical person 4 19 Life and career editEarly life edit nbsp An illustration from a manuscript of Ferdowsi s Shahnameh depicting Barbad top left hidden in the trees playing for Khosrow bottom right 20 There are contradictory ancient accounts as to the location of Barbad s birthplace Older sources record the city of Merv in northeastern Khorasan 21 n 5 while later works give Jahrom n 6 a small city south of Shiraz in Pars 16 Tafazzoli postulated that the writers who recorded Jahrom were referencing a line of Ferdowsi s Shahnameh that says Barbad traveled from Jarom to the capital in Ctesiphon when Khosrow was murdered 16 the modern historian Mehrdad Kia records only Merv 21 Ferdowsi and al Tha alibi both relay a story that Barbad was a gifted young musician who sought a place as a court minstrel under Khosrow II but the jealous chief court minstrel Sarkash n 3 supposedly prevented this 22 As such Barbad hid in the royal garden by dressing in all green 21 When Khosrow walked by Barbad sang three songs with his lute Dad afrid created by god Peykar e gord battle of the hero or splendor of Farkar and Sabz dar sabz green in the green 22 Khosrow was immediately impressed and ordered that Barbad be appointed chief minstrel 22 23 n 7 a position known as the shah i ramishgaran 9 n 8 In Nizami s Khosrow and Shirin Khosrow II is said to have had a dream where his grandfather Khosrow I prophesied that he would have a have a minstrel called Barbad whose art could make even poison taste delicious 25 Stories with Khosrow edit Since his appointment at court Barbad was Khosrow s favorite musician and many stories exist about this prestige 6 His relationship with Khosrow was reportedly such that other members of the court would seek his assistance in mediating conflicts between them and the Shahanshah 26 A story in Nizami s Khosrow and Shirin tells of Khosrow and Shirin as previously together but forced to separate for political reasons Khosrow marries someone else but is soon reminded of Shirin 27 The two later met and arranged for the Nagisa to sing of Shirin s love for Khosrow while Barbad sung of Khosrow s love for Shirin 24 The duet reconciled the couple and was recorded by Nizami in 263 couplets 24 The idea of setting music to poetry in order to represent the emotions of characters was unprecedented in Persian music 24 According to the 10th century historian Ibn al Faqih al Hamadani s Kitab al buldan 28 Khosrow s wife Shirin asked Barbad to remind Khosrow of his promise to build her a castle To do so he sung a song and was rewarded with an estate near Isfahan for him and his family 26 According to the Seljuk scholar Nizam al Mulk Barbad visited a courtier who had been imprisoned by Khosrow and upon being scolded by the Shahanshah a witty remark was enough to resolve the situation 26 nbsp Barbad left playing music for Khosrow II In the literary scholar Abu al Faraj al Isfahani s Kitab al Aghani a jealous rival musician once untuned the strings of Barbad s lute during a royal banquet Upon returning to perform Barbad began to play royal rules forbade the tuning instruments in the Shahanshah s presence but Barbad s skill was such that he could adapt to the untuned strings and play the pieces regardless 29 Al Isfahani attributed this story to Ishaq al Mawsili 776 856 a renowned minstrel under Harun al Rashid who purportedly relayed the story to friends 28 Among the most popular legends about Barbad involves Khosrow s beloved horse Shabdiz In this story Khosrow declared that when Shabdiz died anyone who announced the news would be executed 23 Upon Shabdiz s death no members of the court wished to risk conveying the news 26 To resolve the issue Barbad sang a sad song and Khosrow understanding the purpose of the song stated Shabdiz is dead Barbad responded Yes and it is your majesty who announced it thereby preventing any possibility of death 23 This story was relayed earliest by the poet Khaled ibn Fayyaz d c 718 n 4 with later accounts by al Tha alibi and the 13th century writer Zakariya al Qazwini 26 Many similar ancient stories originated in Iran Turkey and Central Asia that pertain to musicians using music to express the death of a ruler s horse as to avoid the ruler s wrath against the announcer 30 Various pieces for the Khwarazm dutar Kyrgyz komuz and Kazakh dombra relay equivalent stories 30 Tafazzoli asserts that the story demonstrates Barbad s unique influence on Khosrow 26 while musicologist Lloyd Miller suggest that this and similar stories suggest that music and musicians in general exerted a significant influence on their political leaders 31 Death edit Like his birthplace there are conflicting accounts surrounding the final years of Barbad s life According to Ferdowsi upon the murder of Khosrow by Kavad II Barbad rushed from Jahrom to the capital of Ctesiphon 32 After arriving he sang elegies 32 cut off his fingers and burned his instruments out of respect 32 9 Al Tha alibi s account holds that Sarkash n 3 who had remained at the court since being ousted from the chief minstrel position poisoned Barbad 32 The 9th century geographer Ibn Khordadbeh s Kitab al lahw wa l malahi however records the opposite stating that Barbad poisoned Sarkash but was spared from Khosrow s punishment by way of a witty remark 32 The 9th century scholar Ibn Qutaybah s Uyun al Akhbar and the 10th century poet Ibn Abd Rabbih s al ʿIqd al Farid state that Barbad was killed by a different musician variously recorded as Yost Rabust Rosk and Ziwest 32 Music and poetry edit nbsp 1539 illustration Barbad in the middle with a barbat attributed to Mirza Ali fa 33 34 Barbad was active as a poet musician 35 lutenist music theorist and composer 36 His compositions included panegyrics elegies and verses 37 These were performed by himself at festivals such as Nowruz and Mehregan as well as state banquets and victory celebrations 37 While none of the compositions are extant the names have survived for some and they suggest a wide variety in the topics he musically engaged with 6 The ethnomusicologist Hormoz Farhat has tentatively sorted them into different groupings epic forms based on historical events kin i Iraj lit the Vengeance of Iraj kin i siavash lit the Vengeance of Siavash and Taxt i Ardashir lit the Throne of Ardashir songs connected to the Sasanian royal court Bagh i shirin lit the garden of Shirin Bagh i Shahryar lit the Sovereign s Garden and haft Ganj lit the seven treasures and compositions of a descriptive nature roshan charagh lit bright lights 6 According to both scholars Ibn al Faqih and the 13th century geographer Yaqut al Hamawi Barbad wrote Bag e nakjiran lit garden of the game for workers who had recently finished the gardens of Qasr e Shirin 37 A single poem by Barbad survives though in a quoted state from the Kitab al lahw wa al malahi by Ibn Khordadbeh 13 The work is a 3 hemistich panegyric in Middle Persian but with an Arabic script 37 none of its music is extant 13 The poem is as follows Ceasar resembles the moon and Khaqan the sun but my lord is like the rich clouds whenever he wants he hides the moon or the sun Barbad in the Kitab al lahw wa al malahi by Ibn Khordadbeh 38 Christensen suggested in 1936 that the text Khvarshedh i rōshan lit The shining sun is from a poem that was written and performed by Barbad himself or another poet musician of his time 4 The text is found in a group of Manichaean manuscripts in Turpan Xinjiang China and is written in Middle Persian which Barbad would have used 4 It has four 11 syllable lines and its title recalls the Sasanian melody Arayishn i khvarshedh lit The beauty of the sun 4 The shining sun the beaming full moon Resplendent and beaming behind the trunk of a tree The eager birds strut about it full of joy The doves and the colorful peacocks strut about Khvarshedh i rōshan lit The shining sun attri unknown Sasanian musician possibly Barbad 4 Barbad is traditionally regarded as the inventor of numerous aspects of Persian music theory and practice Al Tha alibi first credited him with creating an organized modal system of seven Royal modes al ṭoruq al molukiya fa 39 known variously as xosrovani Persian سرود خسروانى 6 Haft Ḵosravani 39 or khosravani 8 7 This attribution is later repeated by scholars such as al Masudi 37 and Qutb al Din al Shirazi 4 From these royal modes Barbad created 30 derivative modes lahn fa and 360 melodies dastan 8 7 n 9 The structure of seven 30 and 360 variations corresponds to the number of days weeks and months of the Zoroastrian calendar 4 n 10 Farhat notes that the exact reason for this is not known 40 though according to the 14th century poet Hamdallah Mustawfi s Tarikh i guzida Barbad sang one of the 360 melodies each day for the Shahanshah 37 Al Tha alibi recorded that the seven royal modes were still in use during his lifetime 39 from 961 to 1039 41 Further information on the nature of these subjects theories or compositions has not survived 6 In her analysis of the historical and literary sources concerning Barbad musicologist Firoozeh Khazrai stated that until a new independent source on the subject comes to light many of these attributions should be regarded as authorial inventions 19 She noted that many of the attributions to Barbad date centuries after his death and the 30 modes in particular are first connected to Barbad by Nizami who lived in the 12th century 12 In addition in his divan collection of poems the 11th century poet Manuchehri names a few of the modes that Nizami mentioned but does not associate them with Barbad even though he references the Sasanian musician elsewhere 42 Reputation edit nbsp Relief of Barbad in the Sangtarashan cave of Jahrom Iran Barbad s lute was the four stringed barbat 43 44 It had been popular in his time but no traces of the instrument survive and it was eventually substituted for the oud 45 The musicologists Jean During and Zia Mirabdolbaghi note that despite the instrument s gradual disuse the term barbat survived for centuries through classical poetry as a symbol of the golden age of the Persian musical tradition served by artists such as Barbad 45 Later sources regularly praise Barbad and some offer him the epitaph as the founder of Persian music 4 He is regarded as the most significant musician of his time 6 being among the major figures in the history of Iranian Persian music 46 In Sharh bar Kitab al adwar the 14th century writer al Sharif al Jurjani whom the work is attributed to says Among the ancient musicians there were those who never played the same melody twice in presence of the king Such was Barbad who lived during the time of Khosrow II He took care to study his audience well He paid attention to the disposition of his listeners souls and then he would improvise words and a melody suited to the occasion and corresponding perfectly to each person s desire His fame spread throughout the world and Khosrow boasted about the fact that neither the kings of the past nor those of his time possessed such an artist al Jurjani attri Sharh bar Kitab al adwar 8 n 11 The preponderance and frequent transmission of stories involving Barbad attest to his popularity long after his death 47 28 In modern day Iran Afghanistan and Tajikistan Barbad continues to be a celebrated figure 47 In 1989 and 1990 the cultural establishment of the Tajik government encouraged their people to find pride in Barbad s achievements the panegyrics given for Barbad are part of a larger effort by the Tajik government to pass off the achievements of pre Islamic Iranian civilization as Tajik ones 48 The largest musical hall of Dushanbe Tajikistan is named Kokhi Borbad after Barbad 47 Musicologist Firoozeh Khazrai sums up Barbad s legacy as such From the sources and nature of the things attributed to Barbad we can conclude that Barbad survived in an oral popular culture that immortalized him by continually retelling old stories about him and the legendary power of his music and by spinning out new ones While all these stories mythologize Barbad without telling us any solid information about the actual nature of his music they underscore the unparalleled authority of the minstrel and the powerful grip he and his music continued to exercise on the imagination of the people in the post Sasanian era Firoozeh Khazrai 28 nbsp Illustration from the Shahnameh with Barbad in a tree in the top right The work is kept at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art 49 nbsp 1535 painting of Barbad pictured in the tree attributed to Mirza Ali fa References editNotes edit Virtually all sources in this article use the form Barbad albeit sometimes differing in use of the transliterated diacritic marking over the a e g Barbad see Curtis 2003 pp 137 138 Kia 2016 p 151 Miller 2012 p 6 and Tafazzoli 1988 para 1 for instance Azadvar e Changi is also known as simply Azad 6 a b c There is much contradiction in modern sources over the musicians Nagisa Nakisa and Sarkash also Sargis or Sarkas Some sources such as During 1991a p 39 and Farhat 2004 p 3 present them as separate individuals listing them both as among the musicians of Khosrow s court Other sources such as Lawergren 2001 5 Sassanian period 224 651 CE and Farhat 2001 1 History suggest the two are the same person harpist Sarkash also called Nakisa 4 and Nakisa or Sarkash 7 Matters are made more confusing by the fact that Hormoz Farhat presented the two musicians differently a b See Khazrai 2016 p 168 for an English translation of Fayyaz s poem Older sources that give Merv as Barbad s birthplace include Ibn Khordadbeh s Kitab al lahw wa l malahi Hamdallah Mustawfi s Nuzhat al Qulub al Tha alibi s Ghurar al saya as well as accounts by al Jahiz and Istakhri 16 Later sources that give Jahrom as Barbad s birthplace include the Farhang e Jahangiri by Jamal al Din Hosayn Enju Shirazi and an account by Fakhr al Din al Razi 16 The purported story on Barbad s accession to the chief court minstrel post exists in slightly different variants depending on its source See Khazrai 2016 p 169 170 for a discussion on the differences between the accounts of Ferdowsi and al Tha alibi See modern retellings from unspecified sources in Curtis 2003 pp 137 138 Kia 2016 p 151 Miller 2012 p 6 and Tafazzoli 1988 para 3 The minstrel title alone may be referred to as rameshgar gosan or khunyagar 24 Poet minstrel is khunyagaran 11 See Farmer 1926 for a list of all the purported 30 modes Scholar Bo Lawergren notes that having 360 to match the days of a year ignores the five intercalary days 4 Recorded by Rodolphe d Erlanger 1938 8 Citations edit Brooklyn Museum a b c d Tafazzoli 1988 para 1 Lawergren 2001 1 Introduction 2 3rd millennium BCE a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Lawergren 2001 5 Sassanian period 224 651 CE Farhat 2012 Historic Retrospective a b c d e f g Farhat 2004 p 3 a b c d Farhat 2001 1 History a b c d e During 1991a p 39 a b c Curtis 2003 p 138 During 1991b p 154 a b Khazrai 2016 p 165 a b Khazrai 2016 pp 170 171 a b c Khazrai 2016 p 166 Lucas 2019 p 59 Lucas 2019 pp 59 244 a b c d e Tafazzoli 1988 para 2 Khazrai 2016 p 169 Tafazzoli 1988 para 1 7 a b Khazrai 2016 p 171 Kia 2016 p 152 a b c Kia 2016 p 151 a b c Tafazzoli 1988 para 3 a b c Miller 2012 p 6 a b c d Khazrai 2016 p 164 Curtis 2003 p 142 a b c d e f Tafazzoli 1988 para 4 Curtis 2003 pp 143 144 a b c d Khazrai 2016 p 167 Tafazzoli 1988 para 5 a b Blum 2001b 2 Musicians Miller 2012 p 19 a b c d e f Tafazzoli 1988 para 7 Curtis 2003 p 137 Blum 2001a p 834 Khazrai 2016 p 163 Grove 2001 a b c d e f Tafazzoli 1988 para 6 Tafazzoli 1974 p 338 a b c Youssefzadeh 2012 Farhat 2001 5 Sassanian period 224 651 CE Orfali 2009 p 273 Khazrai 2016 p 170 Blum 2001b 4 Instruments Farhat 2012 Instruments a b During amp Mirabdolbaghi 1991a p 106 Nettl 2012 a b c Kia 2016 p 153 Manz 1998 p 137 LA County Museum of Art Sources edit Books Curtis Vesta Sarkhosh 2003 Persian Myths World of Myths Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70607 1 During Jean Mirabdolbaghi Zia eds 1991 The Art of Persian Music Washington D C Mage Publishers ISBN 978 0 934211 22 2 During Jean 1991a Historical Survey In During amp Mirabdolbaghi 1991 pp 31 56 During Jean 1991b Poetry and Music In During amp Mirabdolbaghi 1991 pp 153 166 During Jean Mirabdolbaghi Zia 1991a The Instruments of Yesterday and Today In During amp Mirabdolbaghi 1991 pp 99 152 Farhat Hormoz 2004 The Dastgah Concept in Persian Music Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54206 7 Khazrai Firoozeh 2016 2000 Music in Khusraw Va Shirin In Talattof Kamran Clinton Jerome W eds The Poetry of Nizami Ganjavi Knowledge Love and Rhetoric London Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 09836 8 Kia Mehrdad 2016 The Persian Empire A Historical Encyclopedia Empires of the World Vol 2 Santa Barbara ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 61069 391 2 Lucas Ann E 2019 Music of a Thousand Years A New History of Persian Musical Traditions Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 97203 2 JSTOR j ctv1f884pp Manz Beatrice F ed 1998 1994 Central Asia In Historical Perspective The John M Olin Critical Issue Series Boulder Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 3638 1 Miller Lloyd 2012 Music and Song in Persia The Art of Avaz Abingdon on Thames Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 136 81487 7 Tafazzoli A 1974 Some Middle Persian Quotations in Classical Arabic and Persian Texts In Gignoux Ph Tafazzoli A eds Memorial Jean de Menasce Tehran and Liege Imprimerie Orientaliste Louvain pp 337 349 OCLC 469830825 Articles Blum Stephen 2001a Iran An Introduction In Danielson Virginia Reynolds Dwight Marcus Scott eds The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music The Middle East New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 8240 6042 8 Blum Stephen 2001b Central Asia Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 05284 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Farhat Hormoz 2012 An Introduction to Persian Music PDF Catalogue of the Festival of Oriental Music Durham University of Durham Farmer Henry George January 1926 The Old Persian Musical Modes The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 93 95 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00055593 JSTOR 25220900 S2CID 163387136 Lawergren Bo Farhat Hormoz Blum Stephen 2001 Iran Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 13895 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Lawergren Bo I Pre Islamic In Lawergren Farhat amp Blum 2001 Farhat Hormoz II Classical traditions In Lawergren Farhat amp Blum 2001 Nettl Bruno 2012 2006 Iran xi Music Encyclopaedia Iranica Leiden Brill Publishers Orfali Bilal 2009 The Works of Abu Manṣur al Tha alibi 350 429 961 1039 Journal of Arabic Literature 40 3 Leiden Brill Publishers 273 318 doi 10 1163 008523709X12554960674539 JSTOR 20720591 Tafazzoli A 1988 Barbad Encyclopaedia Iranica Leiden Brill Publishers Youssefzadeh Ameneh 2012 2002 Haft Ḵosravani Encyclopaedia Iranica Leiden Brill Publishers Barbad Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 01979 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Web Bahram Gur and Courtiers Entertained by Barbad the Musician Page from a manuscript of the Shahnama of Firdawsi d 1020 Brooklyn Museum Retrieved 4 January 2021 King Khusraw Parviz Listening to Barbad the Concealed Musician Page from a Manuscript of the Shahnama Book of Kings of Firdawsi Los Angeles County Museum of Art Retrieved 23 July 2021 Further reading editBoyce Mary 1957 The Parthian Gōsan and Iranian Minstrel Tradition Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 89 1 2 Cambridge University Press 10 45 doi 10 1017 S0035869X0010735X JSTOR 25201987 S2CID 161761104 Browne Edward G January 1899 The Sources of Dawlatshah With Some Remarks on the Materials Available for a Literary History of Persia and an Excursus on Barbad and Rudagi The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland Cambridge University Press 37 69 JSTOR 25208066 Christensen Arthur 1918 Some Notes on Persian Melody Names of the Sasanian Period In Gatha Society ed Dastur Hoshang Memorial Volume Being Papers on Iranian Subjects Bombay Fort Printing Press OCLC 500234890 Key Alexander August 2018 Translation of Poetry from Persian to Arabic ʿAbd al Qahir al Jurjani and Others Journal of Abbasid Studies 5 1 2 146 176 doi 10 1163 22142371 12340037 S2CID 201011701 Tafazzoli Ahmad 1988 Barbad ya Pahlbad In Afsar Iraj Esfahanian Karim eds Namvara ye Doktor Mahmud Afsar Vol IV Tehran Bonyadie Mowqufat e Afsar pp 2222 2235 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Barbad Barbad and Nakisa a song inspired by Barbad performed by the Tanbur player Nur ʿAli Elahi on Encyclopaedia Iranica Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Music nbsp Iran Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Barbad amp oldid 1222655888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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