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Al-Tha'alibi

Abū Manṣūr ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Muḥammad ibn Ismāʿīl al-Thaʿālibī (أبو منصور الثعالبي، عبد الملك بن محمد بن إسماعيل) (961–1038), was a writer famous for his anthologies and collections of epigrams. As a writer of prose and verse in his own right, distinction between his and the work of others is sometimes lacking, as was the practice of writers of the time.[1]

Chess game between Tha'ālibī and Bakhazari (1896), by Ludwig Deutsch (1855–1935)

Life edit

Al-Thaʿālibī was born in Nishapur and was based there throughout his life.[2] Of Arab ethnicity,[3] his nickname means 'furrier' or 'tailor who works with fox fur', and medieval biographers speculated that this was his job or his father's, but there is no convincing evidence for either proposition. The only hint as to al-Thaʿālibī's education is that claim that he was taught by Abū Bakr al-Khwārizmi (who was certainly a source for al-Thaʿālibī's poetry anthologies). Likewise, despite his great proess, there are only hints that al-Thaʿālibī was himself a teacher. Al-Thaʿālibī travelled widely beyond Nishapur, however: autobiographical information scattered in his works shows that he spent time in Bukhārā, Jurjān, Isfarāʾīn, Jurjāniyya, Ghazna, and Herat. The numerous dedicatees of his works indicate the circles in which al-Thaʿālibī moved and the range of his acquaintances; they included Abū al-Fāḍl ʿUbaydallāh ibn Aḥmad al-Mīkālī (d. 1044/1055), Qābus ibn Wushmgīr (d. 1012), Sebüktegin (d. 1021), Abū Sahl al-Ḥamdūnī (d. after c. 1040), and both Masʿūd of Ghazna (d. 1040) and other members of his court such as Abū Naṣr Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn Abī Zayd, Abū al-Ḥasan Musāfir ibn al-Ḥasan, and Abū al-Fatḥ al-ḥasan ibn Ībrāhīm al-Ṣaymarī.[4]: 34–38 

Al-Thaʿālibī gained fame as a composer of both Arabic prose and verse, writing in most verse genres of his culture, and developing literary and philological scholarship. His most famed, however, for his two anthologies of roughly contemporary Arabic verse, much of which would otherwise have been lost: the Yatīmat al-dahr and its sequel the Tatimmat at Yatīma.[4]: 38–40 

Works edit

Al-Thaʿālibī has twenty-nine known works.

Kitāb Yatīmat al-dahr fī mahāsin ahl al-ʿaṣr edit

This is al-Thaʿālibī's best known work and contains valuable extracts from the poetry of his own and earlier times;[1] its title means 'The Matchless Pearl of the Age on the Fine Qualities of Contemporary Men'.[5] In its surviving form — a second edition revised by al-Thaʿālibī — it quotes 470 poets in four volumes, organised geographically. The four volumes cover, in this order, Syria and the west (Mawṣil, Egypt, Maghrib); Iraq; Western Iran (al-Jabal, Fārs, Jurjān, and Ṭabaristān); and Eastern Iran (Khurāsān and Transoxania). Composition began in 384/994.[4]: 61  No satisfactory edition exists.[4]: xvii–xix  The Yatīmat and its sequel the Tatimmat have been characterised as 'our main, if not the sole, source about literary activity' in al-Tha'ālibī's time.[6]

  • ʿAbd al-Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʿālibī, Yatīmat al-dahr fī shuʿarāʼ ahl al-ʿaṣr (يتيمة الدهر في شعراء أهل العصر), 4 vols (Damascus: [al-Maṭbaʿah al-Ḥifnīyah] دمشق : المطبعة الحفنية, 1302 AH [1885 CE]), vol. 1, vol. 2, vol. 3, vol. 4. The most widely used edition, with a Persian interlinear translation.
  • Muḥammad Muḥyī al-Dīn ‘Abd al-Ḥamīd محمد محي الدين عبدالحميد (ed.), يتيمة الدهر في في محاسن أهل العصر, 4 vols (Cairo 1956), vol. 1, vol. 2, vol. 3, vol. 4. Bilāl Urfahʹlī concludes that this is the most accurate edition, and 'offers a preliminary basis of studying the Yātima, even if some points will have to be changed according to what a critical edition might reveal'.[4]: xix 
  • ʻAbd al-Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʻālibī, Yatīmat al-dahr fī maḥāsin ahl al-ʻaṣr maʻ al-tatimma wa-l-fahāris (يتيمة الدهر في شعراء أهل العصر مع التتمة والفهارس), ed. by Mufīd Muḥammad Qumayḥah, 6 vols (Bayrūt: Dār al-Kutub al-ʻIlmīyah (دار الكتب العلمية), 1983), vols 1-4 (index vol. 6). This includes the original work, as well as its sequel (Tatimma): Machine-readable text.
  • Manuscript facsimile from the Thomas Fisher Arabic Collection.

Tatimmat al-Yatīmah ('completion of the Yatīma') edit

The Tatimmat al-Yatīmah was a sequel to the Yatīmat al-dahr. It follows the same geographical structure as its precursor (with an extra, fifth, book collecting miscellaneous poets whom Thaʿālibī had missed) and added poems and poets which al-Thaʿālibī had not been able to include in the Yatīmat. Like the Yatīma, it survives in a second edition revised by al-Thaʿālibī, published in or after 424/1032.

  • The best edition is Ahmad Shawqi Radwan, 'Thaʿālibī's “Tatimmat al-Yatīmah”: A Critical Edition and a Study of the Author as Anthologist and Literary Critic' (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Manchester, 1972).[4]: xvii–xix 
  • The most widely available edition, prior to the digitisation of Radwan's edition, was ʻAbd al-Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʻālibī, Tatimmat Yatīmat al-dahr, fi maḥāsin ahl al-ʻaṣr (تتمة يتيمة الدهر في محاسن أهل العصر), in Yatīmat al-dahr fī maḥāsin ahl al-ʻaṣr maʻ al-tatimma wa-l-fahāris (يتيمة الدهر في شعراء أهل العصر مع التتمة والفهارس), ed. by Mufīd Muḥammad Qumayḥah, 6 vols (Bayrūt: Dār al-Kutub al-ʻIlmīyah (دار الكتب العلمية), 1983), vol. 5 (index vol. 6). Machine-readable text.
  • An earlier edition is Tatimmat ʾal-yatīmah, ed. by ʻAbbas ʾIqbal, 2 vols (Tihran, 1353 AH [1934]) [based on Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Fonds Arabe, 3308].

Other works edit

  • Aḥsan mā samiʿtu ('the best I ever heard'), an anthology of poetry and prose, including 535 poems averaging 2.26 lines each, apparently abridged from a collection called Aḥāsin al-maḥāsin (the best of the best).[7]
    • Al-Thaʿālibī, Aḥsan mā samiʿtu, ed. by Muḥammad Ṣādiq ʿAnbar (Cairo: al-Maktabah al-Maḥmūdiyyah, n.d. [1925]).
  • Kitāb Fiqh ul-Lugha; lexicographical dictionary arranged by semantic subject. (Paris, 1861), (Cairo, 1867), (Beirut, 1885 - incomplete).[8][9]
  • Zād safar al-mulūk
    • Zād safar al-mulūk: A Handbook on Travel by Abū Manṣūr al-Thaʿālibī (d. 429/1038), ed. by Ramzi Baalbaki and Bilal Orfali, Bibliotheca Islamica, 52 (Beirut: Orient-Institut, 2011), ISBN 978-3-87997-692-8.
  • Al-Iqtibās min al-Qurʾān (Arabic: الاقتباس من القرآن الكريم, 'quoting from the generous Qurʾān', literally 'taking hot coals from the generous Qurʾān'), on the cultural and literary influence of the Qurʾān.
    • Ed. by I. M. al-Ṣaffār (Baghdad: Dār al-Ḥurriyya li-l-Ṭibāʿa, 1975).
    • Ed. by I. M. al-Ṣaffār and M. M. Bahjat, 2 vols (al-Manṣūra: Dār al-Wafāʾ, 1992) [repr. Cairo: Dār al-Wafāʾ, 1998).
    • Ed. by I. M. al-Ṣaffār (ʿAmmān: Jidārā li-l-Kitāb al-ʿAlamī, 2008).
  • Makārim al-akhlāq wa-maḥāsin al-ādāb wa-badāʾiʿ al-awṣāf wa-gharāʾib al-tashbīhāt
    • The Book of Noble Character: Critical Edition of Makārim al-akhlāq wa-maḥāsin al-ādāb wa-badāʾiʿ al-awṣāf wa-gharāʾib al-tashbīhāt Attributed to Abū Manṣūr al-Thaʿālibī (d. 429/1039), ed. by Bilal Orfali and Ramzi Baalbaki, Islamic History and Civilisation: Studies and Texts, 120 (Leiden: Brill, 2015), ISBN 978-90-04-30093-4.
  • Kitāb Lata'if al-ma'arif (tr. 'Book of curious and entertaining information' Clifford Edmund Bosworth, Edinburgh University Press, 1968).
  • Kitāb al-Kināya wa-l-taʿrīd aw al-Nihāya fī fann al-kināya (ed. F. al-Ḥawwār, Baghdad & Köln: Manshūrāt al-Jamal, 2006).
  • Ghurar akhbār mulūk al-Furs wa-siyarihim, an Arabic chronicle of pre-Islamic Iranian dynasties, dedicated to al-Nasr(brother of Mahmud of Ghazni).[10]
  • Ādāb al-mulūk or Sirāj al-mulūk, a mirror for princes.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Thatcher 1911.
  2. ^ "Abu Manşūr Tha'ālibī". Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  3. ^ "Histoire des rois des Perses par Abou Mansour 'Abd al-Malik ibn Mohammad ibn Ismaùîl al-Tha'alibi, historien et philologue arabe de la Perse (A.h.350-430)". 1979.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Bilāl Urfahʹlī, The Anthologist's Art: Abu Mansur al-Tha'alibi and his Yatimat al-dahr, Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures, 37 (Leiden: Brill, 2016), ISBN 9789004316294.
  5. ^ James White, review of The Anthologist's Art: Abu Mansur al-Tha'alibi and His Yatimat al-dahr, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 80 (2017), 599-601; doi:10.1017/S0041977X17000982.
  6. ^ Ahmad Shawqi Radwan, 'Thaʿālibī's “Tatimmat al-Yatīmah”: A Critical Edition and a Study of the Author as Anthologist and Literary Critic' (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Manchester, 1972), p. 77.
  7. ^ Adam Talib, How Do You Say “Epigram” in Arabic? Literary History at the Limits of Comparison, Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures, 40 (Leiden: Brill, 2018), pp. 83-85; ISBN 978-90-04-34996-4
  8. ^ Thatcher 1911, p. 716.
  9. ^ Thatcher 1911, p. 716 notes: For his other works see Brockelmann 1898, pp. 284–286
  10. ^ Savran, Scott (2017). Arabs and Iranians in the Islamic Conquest Narrative: Memory and Identity Construction in Islamic Historiography, 750-1050. Routledge. p. 16. ISBN 9780415749688.

References edit

External links and further reading edit

  • Orfali, Bilal (2009). "The Works of Abū Manṣūr al-Tha'ālibī (350-429/961-1039)". Journal of Arabic Literature. 40 (3). Leiden: Brill Publishers: 273–318. doi:10.1163/008523709X12554960674539. JSTOR 20720591.
  • Urfahʹlī, Bilāl, The Anthologist's Art: Abu Mansur al-Tha'alibi and his Yatimat al-dahr, Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures, 37 (Leiden: Brill, 2016), ISBN 9789004316294.

alibi, alibi, redirects, here, people, with, surname, alibi, surname, confused, with, thaalibia, disambiguation, abū, manṣūr, ʿabd, malik, muḥammad, ismāʿīl, thaʿālibī, أبو, منصور, الثعالبي, عبد, الملك, بن, محمد, بن, إسماعيل, 1038, writer, famous, anthologies,. Tha alibi redirects here For people with the surname see Tha alibi surname Not to be confused with Thaalibia disambiguation Abu Manṣur ʿAbd al Malik ibn Muḥammad ibn Ismaʿil al Thaʿalibi أبو منصور الثعالبي عبد الملك بن محمد بن إسماعيل 961 1038 was a writer famous for his anthologies and collections of epigrams As a writer of prose and verse in his own right distinction between his and the work of others is sometimes lacking as was the practice of writers of the time 1 Chess game between Tha alibi and Bakhazari 1896 by Ludwig Deutsch 1855 1935 Contents 1 Life 2 Works 2 1 Kitab Yatimat al dahr fi mahasin ahl al ʿaṣr 2 2 Tatimmat al Yatimah completion of the Yatima 2 3 Other works 3 Notes 4 References 5 External links and further readingLife editAl Thaʿalibi was born in Nishapur and was based there throughout his life 2 Of Arab ethnicity 3 his nickname means furrier or tailor who works with fox fur and medieval biographers speculated that this was his job or his father s but there is no convincing evidence for either proposition The only hint as to al Thaʿalibi s education is that claim that he was taught by Abu Bakr al Khwarizmi who was certainly a source for al Thaʿalibi s poetry anthologies Likewise despite his great proess there are only hints that al Thaʿalibi was himself a teacher Al Thaʿalibi travelled widely beyond Nishapur however autobiographical information scattered in his works shows that he spent time in Bukhara Jurjan Isfaraʾin Jurjaniyya Ghazna and Herat The numerous dedicatees of his works indicate the circles in which al Thaʿalibi moved and the range of his acquaintances they included Abu al Faḍl ʿUbaydallah ibn Aḥmad al Mikali d 1044 1055 Qabus ibn Wushmgir d 1012 Sebuktegin d 1021 Abu Sahl al Ḥamduni d after c 1040 and both Masʿud of Ghazna d 1040 and other members of his court such as Abu Naṣr Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad ibn Abi Zayd Abu al Ḥasan Musafir ibn al Ḥasan and Abu al Fatḥ al ḥasan ibn ibrahim al Ṣaymari 4 34 38 Al Thaʿalibi gained fame as a composer of both Arabic prose and verse writing in most verse genres of his culture and developing literary and philological scholarship His most famed however for his two anthologies of roughly contemporary Arabic verse much of which would otherwise have been lost the Yatimat al dahr and its sequel the Tatimmat at Yatima 4 38 40 Works editAl Thaʿalibi has twenty nine known works Kitab Yatimat al dahr fi mahasin ahl al ʿaṣr edit This is al Thaʿalibi s best known work and contains valuable extracts from the poetry of his own and earlier times 1 its title means The Matchless Pearl of the Age on the Fine Qualities of Contemporary Men 5 In its surviving form a second edition revised by al Thaʿalibi it quotes 470 poets in four volumes organised geographically The four volumes cover in this order Syria and the west Mawṣil Egypt Maghrib Iraq Western Iran al Jabal Fars Jurjan and Ṭabaristan and Eastern Iran Khurasan and Transoxania Composition began in 384 994 4 61 No satisfactory edition exists 4 xvii xix The Yatimat and its sequel the Tatimmat have been characterised as our main if not the sole source about literary activity in al Tha alibi s time 6 ʿAbd al Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʿalibi Yatimat al dahr fi shuʿaraʼ ahl al ʿaṣr يتيمة الدهر في شعراء أهل العصر 4 vols Damascus al Maṭbaʿah al Ḥifniyah دمشق المطبعة الحفنية 1302 AH 1885 CE vol 1 vol 2 vol 3 vol 4 The most widely used edition with a Persian interlinear translation Muḥammad Muḥyi al Din Abd al Ḥamid محمد محي الدين عبدالحميد ed يتيمة الدهر في في محاسن أهل العصر 4 vols Cairo 1956 vol 1 vol 2 vol 3 vol 4 Bilal Urfahʹli concludes that this is the most accurate edition and offers a preliminary basis of studying the Yatima even if some points will have to be changed according to what a critical edition might reveal 4 xix ʻAbd al Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʻalibi Yatimat al dahr fi maḥasin ahl al ʻaṣr maʻ al tatimma wa l faharis يتيمة الدهر في شعراء أهل العصر مع التتمة والفهارس ed by Mufid Muḥammad Qumayḥah 6 vols Bayrut Dar al Kutub al ʻIlmiyah دار الكتب العلمية 1983 vols 1 4 index vol 6 This includes the original work as well as its sequel Tatimma Machine readable text Manuscript facsimile from the Thomas Fisher Arabic Collection Tatimmat al Yatimah completion of the Yatima edit The Tatimmat al Yatimah was a sequel to the Yatimat al dahr It follows the same geographical structure as its precursor with an extra fifth book collecting miscellaneous poets whom Thaʿalibi had missed and added poems and poets which al Thaʿalibi had not been able to include in the Yatimat Like the Yatima it survives in a second edition revised by al Thaʿalibi published in or after 424 1032 The best edition is Ahmad Shawqi Radwan Thaʿalibi s Tatimmat al Yatimah A Critical Edition and a Study of the Author as Anthologist and Literary Critic unpublished PhD thesis University of Manchester 1972 4 xvii xix The most widely available edition prior to the digitisation of Radwan s edition was ʻAbd al Malik ibn Muḥammad Thaʻalibi Tatimmat Yatimat al dahr fi maḥasin ahl al ʻaṣr تتمة يتيمة الدهر في محاسن أهل العصر in Yatimat al dahr fi maḥasin ahl al ʻaṣr maʻ al tatimma wa l faharis يتيمة الدهر في شعراء أهل العصر مع التتمة والفهارس ed by Mufid Muḥammad Qumayḥah 6 vols Bayrut Dar al Kutub al ʻIlmiyah دار الكتب العلمية 1983 vol 5 index vol 6 Machine readable text An earlier edition is Tatimmat ʾal yatimah ed by ʻAbbas ʾIqbal 2 vols Tihran 1353 AH 1934 based on Paris Bibliotheque Nationale Fonds Arabe 3308 Other works edit Aḥsan ma samiʿtu the best I ever heard an anthology of poetry and prose including 535 poems averaging 2 26 lines each apparently abridged from a collection called Aḥasin al maḥasin the best of the best 7 Al Thaʿalibi Aḥsan ma samiʿtu ed by Muḥammad Ṣadiq ʿAnbar Cairo al Maktabah al Maḥmudiyyah n d 1925 Kitab Fiqh ul Lugha lexicographical dictionary arranged by semantic subject Paris 1861 Cairo 1867 Beirut 1885 incomplete 8 9 Zad safar al muluk Zad safar al muluk A Handbook on Travel by Abu Manṣur al Thaʿalibi d 429 1038 ed by Ramzi Baalbaki and Bilal Orfali Bibliotheca Islamica 52 Beirut Orient Institut 2011 ISBN 978 3 87997 692 8 Al Iqtibas min al Qurʾan Arabic الاقتباس من القرآن الكريم quoting from the generous Qurʾan literally taking hot coals from the generous Qurʾan on the cultural and literary influence of the Qurʾan Ed by I M al Ṣaffar Baghdad Dar al Ḥurriyya li l Ṭibaʿa 1975 Ed by I M al Ṣaffar and M M Bahjat 2 vols al Manṣura Dar al Wafaʾ 1992 repr Cairo Dar al Wafaʾ 1998 Ed by I M al Ṣaffar ʿAmman Jidara li l Kitab al ʿAlami 2008 Makarim al akhlaq wa maḥasin al adab wa badaʾiʿ al awṣaf wa gharaʾib al tashbihat The Book of Noble Character Critical Edition of Makarim al akhlaq wa maḥasin al adab wa badaʾiʿ al awṣaf wa gharaʾib al tashbihat Attributed to Abu Manṣur al Thaʿalibi d 429 1039 ed by Bilal Orfali and Ramzi Baalbaki Islamic History and Civilisation Studies and Texts 120 Leiden Brill 2015 ISBN 978 90 04 30093 4 Kitab Lata if al ma arif tr Book of curious and entertaining information Clifford Edmund Bosworth Edinburgh University Press 1968 Kitab al Kinaya wa l taʿrid aw al Nihaya fi fann al kinaya ed F al Ḥawwar Baghdad amp Koln Manshurat al Jamal 2006 Ghurar akhbar muluk al Furs wa siyarihim an Arabic chronicle of pre Islamic Iranian dynasties dedicated to al Nasr brother of Mahmud of Ghazni 10 Adab al muluk or Siraj al muluk a mirror for princes Notes edit a b Thatcher 1911 Abu Mansur Tha alibi Center for the Great Islamic Encyclopedia Retrieved 15 February 2016 Histoire des rois des Perses par Abou Mansour Abd al Malik ibn Mohammad ibn Ismauil al Tha alibi historien et philologue arabe de la Perse A h 350 430 1979 a b c d e f Bilal Urfahʹli The Anthologist s Art Abu Mansur al Tha alibi and his Yatimat al dahr Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures 37 Leiden Brill 2016 ISBN 9789004316294 James White review of The Anthologist s Art Abu Mansur al Tha alibi and His Yatimat al dahr Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 80 2017 599 601 doi 10 1017 S0041977X17000982 Ahmad Shawqi Radwan Thaʿalibi s Tatimmat al Yatimah A Critical Edition and a Study of the Author as Anthologist and Literary Critic unpublished PhD thesis University of Manchester 1972 p 77 Adam Talib How Do You Say Epigram in Arabic Literary History at the Limits of Comparison Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures 40 Leiden Brill 2018 pp 83 85 ISBN 978 90 04 34996 4 Thatcher 1911 p 716 Thatcher 1911 p 716 notes For his other works see Brockelmann 1898 pp 284 286 Savran Scott 2017 Arabs and Iranians in the Islamic Conquest Narrative Memory and Identity Construction in Islamic Historiography 750 1050 Routledge p 16 ISBN 9780415749688 References editBrockelmann Carl 1898 Geschichte der Arabischen Literatur vol i Weimar pp 284 286 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Thatcher Griffithes Wheeler 1911 Tha alibi In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 716 External links and further reading edit nbsp Arabic Wikisource has original text related to this article Tha alibi 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 Urfahʹli Bilal The Anthologist s Art Abu Mansur al Tha alibi and his Yatimat al dahr Brill Studies in Middle Eastern Literatures 37 Leiden Brill 2016 ISBN 9789004316294 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Tha 27alibi amp oldid 1215332971, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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