Ibn Khallikan's Biographical Dictionary, Volume 3Cosimo, Inc., 2010 M01 1 - 706 pages Ibn Khallikan's Biographical Dictionary, or Deaths of Eminent Men and History of the Sons of the Epoch, was the noted Arabic scholar Ibn Khallikan's most well-known and respected work. The author worked on the tome from 1256 to 1274, compiling names, genealogies, and histories of prominent or conspicuous men in the Islamic world. The final work was translated into English by William MacGuckin de Slane and is longer than 2,700 pages. It has been quoted by many Arabic rhetoricians and grammarians in other works, as it is considered one of the most important records of Arabic history ever written. Here, separated into four volumes, the Biographical Dictionary is an essential work for any student of Muslim culture and literature. Volume III includes: A detailed index of all biographies; notes from the translator for each biography; and genealogies of hundreds of Muslim figures, including The Katib Imad Ad-Din Al-Ispahani, Abu Bakr Al-Khowarezmi, Mukhlis Ad-Dawla Mukallad, and Nasr Al-Khubzaruzzi. IBN KHALLIKAN (1211-1282) was a thirteenth century Arabic scholar who studied in Damascus, Mosul and Aleppo, specializing in the fields of language, theology, and law, including jurisprudence. He became a well-respected judge in Cairo, eventually becoming a chief judge in Damascus in 1261. Khallikan wrote several books, but his most well known was Deaths of Eminent Men and History of the Sons of the Epoch, often referred to as the "Biographical Dictionary," which took him almost 20 years to complete. Khallikan retired from his position as judge just before his death in 1282. He was one of the most well-known historians and theologians in Egypt. |
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Results 1-5 of 86
Page 19
... heart , acquired him great celebrity . He met some of the Moslims belonging to the class called as - Sadr al - Auwal ( 2 ) , such as Hisham Ibn Orwa ( 3 ) and al - Aamash ( vol . I. p . 587 ) , and received information from them ; Tra ...
... heart , acquired him great celebrity . He met some of the Moslims belonging to the class called as - Sadr al - Auwal ( 2 ) , such as Hisham Ibn Orwa ( 3 ) and al - Aamash ( vol . I. p . 587 ) , and received information from them ; Tra ...
Page 20
... heart ) ( 1 ) , was noted for his piety and the austerity of his life . He pronounced discourses in the mosque , and composed some treatises on the Tauhid ( 2 ) . Al - Jabal ( Persian Irak ) was his native country , but , as he had ...
... heart ) ( 1 ) , was noted for his piety and the austerity of his life . He pronounced discourses in the mosque , and composed some treatises on the Tauhid ( 2 ) . Al - Jabal ( Persian Irak ) was his native country , but , as he had ...
Page 24
... heart a greater quantity of poetry . Observing one day at his sitting two persons engaged in conversation , he learned with surprise , on asking them whence they came , that one belonged to Isfījāb ( in Transoxiana ) and the other to ...
... heart a greater quantity of poetry . Observing one day at his sitting two persons engaged in conversation , he learned with surprise , on asking them whence they came , that one belonged to Isfījāb ( in Transoxiana ) and the other to ...
Page 30
... heart sees thee , though thou art absent from my sight . The eye can see the beloved and perceive her absence ; but the interior of the heart is never deprived of her presence . These verses are very well known , but it is only from ...
... heart sees thee , though thou art absent from my sight . The eye can see the beloved and perceive her absence ; but the interior of the heart is never deprived of her presence . These verses are very well known , but it is only from ...
Page 39
... heart , he surpassed all his predecessors , and , when students were reading , under his tuition , the poetical compositions of the Arabs of the desert , he would repeat , from memory , the remainder of the piece which his pupil had ...
... heart , he surpassed all his predecessors , and , when students were reading , under his tuition , the poetical compositions of the Arabs of the desert , he would repeat , from memory , the remainder of the piece which his pupil had ...
Contents
Section 23 | 362 |
Section 24 | 365 |
Section 25 | 377 |
Section 26 | 384 |
Section 27 | 386 |
Section 28 | 412 |
Section 29 | 415 |
Section 30 | 437 |
110 | |
123 | |
133 | |
Section 12 | 144 |
Section 13 | 148 |
Section 14 | 150 |
Section 15 | 155 |
Section 16 | 159 |
Section 17 | 172 |
Section 18 | 232 |
Section 19 | 256 |
Section 20 | 317 |
Section 21 | 329 |
Section 22 | 351 |
Section 31 | 440 |
Section 32 | 446 |
Section 33 | 493 |
Section 34 | 502 |
Section 35 | 517 |
Section 36 | 522 |
Section 37 | 530 |
Section 38 | 565 |
Section 39 | 574 |
Section 40 | 608 |
Section 41 | 612 |
Section 42 | 628 |
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Common terms and phrases
Abd al-Malik Abd Allah Ibn Abd Allah Muhammad Abū Abd Allah Abū Bakr Abū Hanīfa Abū l-Hasan Abū l-Kāsim ad-Dawlat Ahmad Ibn al-Azīz al-Farazdak al-Mansūr al-Moizz al-Mubarrad al-Mutanabbi al-Mutawakkil Aleppo anecdotes Arabic asked Baghdad Basra Berbers Cairo composed Damascus death died A. H. dirhems diwān Egypt emir eyes father favour following lines hāfiz Hajji Khalifa heart Ibn Abd Ibn Duraid Ibn Muhammad Ibn Imād ad-Dīn imām Irāk Jaafar Jumāda kādi kasida khalif Khorāsān Kitāb Korān Kūfa l-Abbās learned letter Maan Mahmūd Mālik Mansūr Marwān Masūd mawla Mekka mentioned month Moslim mosque Mosul Muhammad Ibn Muharram Mūsa Nasr native never Obaid Old Cairo Omar person piece poems poet poetry praise prince Rabī Ramadān received recited replied Saīd says shaikh sovereign sultan surnamed Syria thee thou took traditionist Traditions treatise tribe verses vizir whilst word Yahya Yūsuf