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Mufaddaliyat

The Mufaddaliyyat (Arabic: المفضليات / ALA-LC: al-Mufaḍḍaliyāt), meaning "The Examination of al-Mufaḍḍal", is an anthology of ancient Arabic poems which derives its name from its author Mufaḍḍal al-Ḍabbī,[1][2] who compiled it some time between 762 and his death in 784 CE.[3] It contains 126 poems, some complete odes, others fragmentary. They are all of the Golden Age of Arabic poetry (500—650) and are considered to be the best choices of poems from that period by different authors.[4] There are 68 authors, two of whom were Christian.[5] The oldest poems in the collection date from about 500 CE. The collection is a valuable source concerning pre-Islamic Arab life.

The Mufaḍḍaliyāt is one of five canonical primary sources of early Arabic poetry. The four others are Mu'allaqat, Hamasah, Jamharat Ash'ar al-Arab and the Asma'iyyat.[6][7]

The Collection

The collection contains 126 long and short pieces of verse in its present form.[5][8] This number is included in the recension of al-Anbari, who received the text from Abu 'Ikrima of Dabba, who read it with Ibn al-A‘rābī, al-Mufaḍḍal's stepson and inheritor of the tradition.[2] We know from the Fihrist of Ibn al-Nadim (d. ca. 988 AD) that the original book, as transmitted by Ibn al-A‘rābī, contained 128 pieces and began with the poet Ta’abbaṭa Sharran Thābit ibn Jābir;[2] this number agrees with the Vienna manuscript, which includes an additional poem, poems annotated by al-Anbari, al-Muraqqish the Elder, etc., and a poem by al-Harith ibn Hilliza. The Fihrist states (p. 68) that some scholars included more and others fewer poems, while the order of the poems in the several recensions differed. It is noticeable that this traditional text, and the accompanying scholia, as represented by al-Anbari's recension, derive from al-Mufaddal's fellow philolgists of the Kufan school. Sources from the rival school of Basra claimed however that al-Mufaddal's original dīwān ('collection') was a much smaller volume of poems. In his commentary (Berlin MS), Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Marzuqi gives the number of original poems as thirty, or eighty in a clearer passage,[A]; and mentions too, that al-Asma'i and his Basran grammarians, augmented this to a hundred and twenty. This tradition, ascribed by al-Marzuqi and his teacher Abu Ali al-Farisi to Abu 'Ikrima of Dabba, who al-Anbari represented as the transmitter of the integral text from Ibn al-A'rabi, gets no mention by al-Anbari, and it would seem improbable as the two schools of Basrah and Kufah were in sharp competition. Ibn al-A'rabi in particular was in the habit of censuring al-Asma'i's interpretations of the ancient poems. It is scarcely likely that he would have accepted his rivals' additions to the work of his stepfather, and handed them on to Abu 'Ikrima with his annotations.

The collection is a record of the highest importance of the thought and poetic art of Pre-Islamic Arabia in the immediate period before the appearance of the Prophet Muhammad. The great majority belonged to the days of Jahiliyyah ('Ignorance')—no more than five or six of the 126 poems appear to have been by Islamic era poets—and though a number of Jahiliyyah-born poets had adopted Islam (e.g. Mutammim ibn Nuwayrah, Rabi'a ibn Maqrum, Abda ibn at-Tabib and Abu Dhu'ayb), their work bears few marks of the new faith. While ancient themes of virtue; hospitality to the guest and the poor, extravagance of wealth, valour in battle, tribal loyalty, are praised yet other practices forbidden in Islam—Wine, gambling (the game of maisir), etc.,—are all celebrated by poets professing adherence to the faith. Neither the old idolatry nor the new spirituality are themes. Mufaḍḍal al-Ḍabbī gathers works by 68 poets in 126 pieces. Little of these poets, known as al-Muqillun, survives, unlike those poets whose diwans have ensured their enduring fame. Yet many pieces selected by al-Mufaddal are celebrated. Several, such as 'Alqama ibn 'Abada's two long poems (Nos. 119 and 120), Mutammim ibn Nuwayrah's three odes (Nos. 9, 67, 68), Salama ibn Jandal splendid poem (No. 22), al-Shanfara's beautiful nasib (opening theme, or prologue) (No. 20), and Abd-Yaghuth's death-song (No. 30), reach a high degree of excellence. The last of the series, a long elegy (No. 126) by Abu Dhu'ayb al-Hudhail on the death of his sons is one of the most admired; almost every verse of this poem is cited in illustration of some phrase or meaning of a word in the national Arabic lexicons. Al-Harith ibn Hilliza is the only poet included also in the Mu'allaqat. Although diwans (poetry collections) by early poets survive; e.g., Bishr ibn Abi Khazim, al-Hadira, Amir ibn al-Tufail, 'Alqama ibn 'Abada, al-Muthaqqib, Ta'abbata Sharran and Abu Dhu'ayb), it is unclear how many were compiled before al-Mufaddal's anthology of forty-eight pre-Islamic and twenty Islamic-era poets.[2]

The uncle and nephew, called al-Muraqqish, were two poets of the Bakr bin Wa'il tribe and are perhaps the most ancient in the collection. The elder Muraqqish was the great-uncle of Tarafa of Bakr, the author of the Mu'allaqat, and took part in the long warfare between the sister tribes of Bakr and Taghlib, called the "War of Basus", which began about the end of the 5th century CE. Al-Mufaḍḍal includes ten of his pieces (Nos. 45–54), interesting chiefly from an antiquarian point of view. No. 54 in particular appears very archaic and the compiler probably gathered all the available work of this ancient author, based on his antiquity. Of the younger Muraqqish, uncle of Tarafa, there are five pieces (Nos. 55–59). The only other authors of whom more than three poems are cited are Bishr ibn Abi Khazim of Asad (Nos. 96–99) and Rabi'a ibn Maqrum of Dabba (Nos. 38, 39, 43 and 113).

The Mufaddaliyat, as an anthology of complete qasidas (odes), differs from the Hamasah, which comprises passages selected for brilliance, with the prosaic edited. Many poems in the Mufaddaliyat are fragments or incomplete, and even the longest have many lacunae. Mufaḍḍal al-Ḍabbī evidently strove to preserve the oral heritage in the poetic material memorized by the rawis. He selects the best from oral-literary tradition and more comprehensively preserves material representative and characteristic of his age, unlike that appearing in the Hamasah by the brilliant Abu Tammam.

Al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt Editions

  • Die Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, ed. H. Thorbecke. 1. Heft (Leipzig 1885). Heinrich Thorbecke based this edition on the text of the Berlin Codex, He began this work in 1885 but had only completed the first fasciculus, with forty-two poems, when he died.
  • al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt Vol.I text, with short commentary from al-Anbari (Constantinople 1891).
  • al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, ed., Abū Bakr b. ʿU. Dag̲h̲istānī (Cairo 1324/1906).; complete text, with short glosses from al-Anbari's commentary; based generally on the Cairo codex (See above), with references to Thorbecke's scholarly edition in the first half of the work.
  • The Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, an anthology of ancient Arabic odes (Oxford 1921), ed. C.J. Lyall; complete edition of al-Anbārī's text and commentary; poems translated by Charles James Lyall: i, Arabic text; ii, Translation and notes (Oxford 1918); iii, Indexes to the Arabic text, compiled by A. A. Bevan (London 1924), paralleled by his Arabic-language edition: Dīwān al-Mufaḍḍaliyāt: wa-hiya nukhbah min qaṣāʼid al-shuʻarāʼ al-muqallīn fī al-Jāhilīyah wa-awāʼil al-Islām, ed. by Kārlūs Yaʻqūb Lāyil (Bayrūt: Maṭbaʻat al-Ābāʼ al-Yasūʻiyyīn, 1920).
  • al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, ed., Ahmad Mohammad Shakir; Abdassalam Mohammad Hârun, Cairo, Dar al-Ma`ârif 1942.
  • S̲h̲arḥ Ik̲h̲tiyārāt al-Muf, ed. F. Ḳabāwā, i-ii (Damascus 1388-91/1968-71); containing 59 poems and commentary by al-Tibrīzī.
  • S̲h̲arḥ al-Mufaḍḍaliyyāt, ed. A.M. al-Bid̲j̲āwī, i-iii (Cairo 1977).

See also

References

  1. ^ Maria Hofner, The Library of Enno Littman 1875-1958, pg. 280. Leiden: Brill Archive, 1959.
  2. ^ a b c d Encyclopedia of Arabic Literature, vol. 2, pg. 537. Eds. Julie Scott Meisami and Paul Starkey. London: Taylor & Francis, 1998. ISBN 9780415185721
  3. ^ "The Earliest Demon Lover: The Tayf al-Khayal in Al-Mufaddaliyat" by John Seybold. Reorientations: Arabic and Persian Poetry, pg. 180. Ed. Suzanne Pinckney Stetkevych. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994. ISBN 9780253354938
  4. ^ Ramzi Baalbaki, The Arabic Lexicographical Tradition: From the 2nd/8th to the 12th/18th Century, pg. 89. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2014. ISBN 9789004274013
  5. ^ a b First Encyclopaedia of Islam, vol. 6, pg. 625. Eds. Martijn Theodoor Houtsma, R. Bassett and Thomas Walker Arnold.Leiden: Brill Publishers: 1993. ISBN 90-04-09796-1
  6. ^ Wen-chin Ouyang, Literary Criticism in Medieval Arabic-Islamic Culture: The Making of a Tradition, pg. 65. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1997. ISBN 9780748608973
  7. ^ Shady Nasser, The Transmission of the Variant Readings of the Qurʾān: The Problem of Tawātur and the Emergence of Shawādhdh, pg. 210. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2012. ISBN 9789004241794
  8. ^ Kirsten Eksell, "Genre in Early Arabic Poetry." Taken from Literary History: Towards a Global Perspective, vol. 2, pg. 158. Eds. Anders Pettersson, Gunilla Lindberg-Wada, Margareta Petersson and Stefan Helgesson. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2006. ISBN 9783110894110

Sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLyall, Charles James (1911). "Mofaḍḍalīyāt". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 644–645.

Notes

  1. ^ In the dhail or supplement to the Amali of al-Qali.

External links

  • at Forgotten Books

mufaddaliyat, mufaddaliyyat, arabic, المفضليات, mufaḍḍaliyāt, meaning, examination, mufaḍḍal, anthology, ancient, arabic, poems, which, derives, name, from, author, mufaḍḍal, Ḍabbī, compiled, some, time, between, death, contains, poems, some, complete, odes, o. The Mufaddaliyyat Arabic المفضليات ALA LC al Mufaḍḍaliyat meaning The Examination of al Mufaḍḍal is an anthology of ancient Arabic poems which derives its name from its author Mufaḍḍal al Ḍabbi 1 2 who compiled it some time between 762 and his death in 784 CE 3 It contains 126 poems some complete odes others fragmentary They are all of the Golden Age of Arabic poetry 500 650 and are considered to be the best choices of poems from that period by different authors 4 There are 68 authors two of whom were Christian 5 The oldest poems in the collection date from about 500 CE The collection is a valuable source concerning pre Islamic Arab life The Mufaḍḍaliyat is one of five canonical primary sources of early Arabic poetry The four others are Mu allaqat Hamasah Jamharat Ash ar al Arab and the Asma iyyat 6 7 Contents 1 The Collection 2 Al Mufaḍḍaliyyat Editions 3 See also 4 References 5 Sources 6 Notes 7 External linksThe Collection EditThe collection contains 126 long and short pieces of verse in its present form 5 8 This number is included in the recension of al Anbari who received the text from Abu Ikrima of Dabba who read it with Ibn al A rabi al Mufaḍḍal s stepson and inheritor of the tradition 2 We know from the Fihrist of Ibn al Nadim d ca 988 AD that the original book as transmitted by Ibn al A rabi contained 128 pieces and began with the poet Ta abbaṭa Sharran Thabit ibn Jabir 2 this number agrees with the Vienna manuscript which includes an additional poem poems annotated by al Anbari al Muraqqish the Elder etc and a poem by al Harith ibn Hilliza The Fihrist states p 68 that some scholars included more and others fewer poems while the order of the poems in the several recensions differed It is noticeable that this traditional text and the accompanying scholia as represented by al Anbari s recension derive from al Mufaddal s fellow philolgists of the Kufan school Sources from the rival school of Basra claimed however that al Mufaddal s original diwan collection was a much smaller volume of poems In his commentary Berlin MS Ahmad ibn Muhammad al Marzuqi gives the number of original poems as thirty or eighty in a clearer passage A and mentions too that al Asma i and his Basran grammarians augmented this to a hundred and twenty This tradition ascribed by al Marzuqi and his teacher Abu Ali al Farisi to Abu Ikrima of Dabba who al Anbari represented as the transmitter of the integral text from Ibn al A rabi gets no mention by al Anbari and it would seem improbable as the two schools of Basrah and Kufah were in sharp competition Ibn al A rabi in particular was in the habit of censuring al Asma i s interpretations of the ancient poems It is scarcely likely that he would have accepted his rivals additions to the work of his stepfather and handed them on to Abu Ikrima with his annotations The collection is a record of the highest importance of the thought and poetic art of Pre Islamic Arabia in the immediate period before the appearance of the Prophet Muhammad The great majority belonged to the days of Jahiliyyah Ignorance no more than five or six of the 126 poems appear to have been by Islamic era poets and though a number of Jahiliyyah born poets had adopted Islam e g Mutammim ibn Nuwayrah Rabi a ibn Maqrum Abda ibn at Tabib and Abu Dhu ayb their work bears few marks of the new faith While ancient themes of virtue hospitality to the guest and the poor extravagance of wealth valour in battle tribal loyalty are praised yet other practices forbidden in Islam Wine gambling the game of maisir etc are all celebrated by poets professing adherence to the faith Neither the old idolatry nor the new spirituality are themes Mufaḍḍal al Ḍabbi gathers works by 68 poets in 126 pieces Little of these poets known as al Muqillun survives unlike those poets whose diwans have ensured their enduring fame Yet many pieces selected by al Mufaddal are celebrated Several such as Alqama ibn Abada s two long poems Nos 119 and 120 Mutammim ibn Nuwayrah s three odes Nos 9 67 68 Salama ibn Jandal splendid poem No 22 al Shanfara s beautiful nasib opening theme or prologue No 20 and Abd Yaghuth s death song No 30 reach a high degree of excellence The last of the series a long elegy No 126 by Abu Dhu ayb al Hudhail on the death of his sons is one of the most admired almost every verse of this poem is cited in illustration of some phrase or meaning of a word in the national Arabic lexicons Al Harith ibn Hilliza is the only poet included also in the Mu allaqat Although diwans poetry collections by early poets survive e g Bishr ibn Abi Khazim al Hadira Amir ibn al Tufail Alqama ibn Abada al Muthaqqib Ta abbata Sharran and Abu Dhu ayb it is unclear how many were compiled before al Mufaddal s anthology of forty eight pre Islamic and twenty Islamic era poets 2 The uncle and nephew called al Muraqqish were two poets of the Bakr bin Wa il tribe and are perhaps the most ancient in the collection The elder Muraqqish was the great uncle of Tarafa of Bakr the author of the Mu allaqat and took part in the long warfare between the sister tribes of Bakr and Taghlib called the War of Basus which began about the end of the 5th century CE Al Mufaḍḍal includes ten of his pieces Nos 45 54 interesting chiefly from an antiquarian point of view No 54 in particular appears very archaic and the compiler probably gathered all the available work of this ancient author based on his antiquity Of the younger Muraqqish uncle of Tarafa there are five pieces Nos 55 59 The only other authors of whom more than three poems are cited are Bishr ibn Abi Khazim of Asad Nos 96 99 and Rabi a ibn Maqrum of Dabba Nos 38 39 43 and 113 The Mufaddaliyat as an anthology of complete qasidas odes differs from the Hamasah which comprises passages selected for brilliance with the prosaic edited Many poems in the Mufaddaliyat are fragments or incomplete and even the longest have many lacunae Mufaḍḍal al Ḍabbi evidently strove to preserve the oral heritage in the poetic material memorized by the rawis He selects the best from oral literary tradition and more comprehensively preserves material representative and characteristic of his age unlike that appearing in the Hamasah by the brilliant Abu Tammam Al Mufaḍḍaliyyat Editions EditDie Mufaḍḍaliyyat ed H Thorbecke 1 Heft Leipzig 1885 Heinrich Thorbecke based this edition on the text of the Berlin Codex He began this work in 1885 but had only completed the first fasciculus with forty two poems when he died al Mufaḍḍaliyyat Vol I text with short commentary from al Anbari Constantinople 1891 al Mufaḍḍaliyyat ed Abu Bakr b ʿU Dag h istani Cairo 1324 1906 complete text with short glosses from al Anbari s commentary based generally on the Cairo codex See above with references to Thorbecke s scholarly edition in the first half of the work The Mufaḍḍaliyyat an anthology of ancient Arabic odes Oxford 1921 ed C J Lyall complete edition of al Anbari s text and commentary poems translated by Charles James Lyall i Arabic text ii Translation and notes Oxford 1918 iii Indexes to the Arabic text compiled by A A Bevan London 1924 paralleled by his Arabic language edition Diwan al Mufaḍḍaliyat wa hiya nukhbah min qaṣaʼid al shuʻaraʼ al muqallin fi al Jahiliyah wa awaʼil al Islam ed by Karlus Yaʻqub Layil Bayrut Maṭbaʻat al Abaʼ al Yasuʻiyyin 1920 al Mufaḍḍaliyyat ed Ahmad Mohammad Shakir Abdassalam Mohammad Harun Cairo Dar al Ma arif 1942 S h arḥ Ik h tiyarat al Muf ed F Ḳabawa i ii Damascus 1388 91 1968 71 containing 59 poems and commentary by al Tibrizi S h arḥ al Mufaḍḍaliyyat ed A M al Bid j awi i iii Cairo 1977 See also EditHamasah Kitab al Aghani Mu allaqatReferences Edit Maria Hofner The Library of Enno Littman 1875 1958 pg 280 Leiden Brill Archive 1959 a b c d Encyclopedia of Arabic Literature vol 2 pg 537 Eds Julie Scott Meisami and Paul Starkey London Taylor amp Francis 1998 ISBN 9780415185721 The Earliest Demon Lover The Tayf al Khayal in Al Mufaddaliyat by John Seybold Reorientations Arabic and Persian Poetry pg 180 Ed Suzanne Pinckney Stetkevych Bloomington Indiana University Press 1994 ISBN 9780253354938 Ramzi Baalbaki The Arabic Lexicographical Tradition From the 2nd 8th to the 12th 18th Century pg 89 Leiden Brill Publishers 2014 ISBN 9789004274013 a b First Encyclopaedia of Islam vol 6 pg 625 Eds Martijn Theodoor Houtsma R Bassett and Thomas Walker Arnold Leiden Brill Publishers 1993 ISBN 90 04 09796 1 Wen chin Ouyang Literary Criticism in Medieval Arabic Islamic Culture The Making of a Tradition pg 65 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1997 ISBN 9780748608973 Shady Nasser The Transmission of the Variant Readings of the Qurʾan The Problem of Tawatur and the Emergence of Shawadhdh pg 210 Leiden Brill Publishers 2012 ISBN 9789004241794 Kirsten Eksell Genre in Early Arabic Poetry Taken from Literary History Towards a Global Perspective vol 2 pg 158 Eds Anders Pettersson Gunilla Lindberg Wada Margareta Petersson and Stefan Helgesson Berlin Walter de Gruyter 2006 ISBN 9783110894110Sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Lyall Charles James 1911 Mofaḍḍaliyat In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 644 645 Notes Edit In the dhail or supplement to the Amali of al Qali External links EditThe Mufaddaliyat at Forgotten Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mufaddaliyat amp oldid 1121539635, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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