Adh-Dhahabi: Difference between revisions
Adam Simmons (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''[pp. 505-506]''' | '''[pp. 505-506]''' | ||
ADH- | ADH-DHAHABĪ | ||
(1274-1348 A.D.) | (1274-1348 A.D.) | ||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
EI (s.v.); GAL 2, 46. | EI (s.v.); GAL 2, 46. | ||
1.) Al-mushtabih fī asmā’ ar-rijāl (A Dictionary of Homonyms) | 1.) ''Al-mushtabih fī asmā’ ar-rijāl'' (A Dictionary of Homonyms) | ||
Ed.: P. de Jong, Leiden Ι881. | Ed.: P. de Jong, Leiden Ι881. | ||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
T.: de Jong A:0 | T.: de Jong A:0 | ||
2.) Ta'rīkh al- | 2.) ''Ta'rīkh al-Islām'' (A Chronicle, later continued by Ibn Shubba down to 1403 A.D.). | ||
Quotations in: Ta'rīkh ad-dawla al-fatimiyya by Ḥasan Ibrahim Ḥasan, Cairo 1964. | Quotations in: ''Ta'rīkh ad-dawla al-fatimiyya'' by Ḥasan Ibrahim Ḥasan, Cairo 1964. | ||
T.: Ḥasan Ibrahim A: 0 | T.: Ḥasan Ibrahim A: 0 | ||
'''[p. 506]''' 1.) from Al-Mushtabih | '''[p. 506]''' 1.) from ''Al-Mushtabih'' | ||
''Αn-Nūbī''. ''An-nūbah'' is a large country of the | ''Αn-Nūbī''. ''An-nūbah'' is a large country of the ''Sūdān'', south of Upper Egypt. It is said that from that country came Bilāl - may God be pleased with him! - and Hibatalla b. Muḥammad b. Nūbī al-Anbārī [another reading: Hibatalla b. Aḥmed b. Nūba, the Nubian]. This information comes from Abū-l-Ḥasan b. al-'Allaf and Abū Naṣr 'Abd as-Samid b. Aḥmad b. Muḥ. an-Nūbī, according to the testimony given by Ibn Kulayb [Hibatalla] died at a mature age in the year 625 H. [1227 A.D.]. (de Jong, p. 63). | ||
2.) From Tarīkh al-Islām | 2.) From ''Tarīkh al-Islām'' | ||
In this year | In this year [572 H. = 1176 A.D.], the battle of al-Kanz took place. He was the leader of the Blacks (''sūdān'') in Upper Egypt. He rallied a great multitude around him and they marched on Cairo (''al-Qāhira'') with the intention of restoring the [Fatimid] dynasty ... Al-Kanz was slain together with a great number of his followers. It is said that the number of those slain was 80,000, according to Muẓaffar Qīzoghlū. (Ḥasan Ibrahim, p. 197). | ||
[Adh-Dhahabī quoting Ibn Abī Ṭayy]: The Turks received their salaries very punctually. We can say that the Turks rose against the Caliph [al-Mustanṣir] - who was then helpless - because of their thirst for bloodshed against the Black soldiers (''al-junūd as-sūdānīyyīn''), whom they hated (''al-makrūhīn lahum''). [The reason for it was that the Black soldiers] were faithful supporters (''ansār'') of the mother of the Caliph and used to take from the booty whatever they liked, while the Turks could collect only the remainder [lit. = "what the circumstances allowed"]. (Ḥasan Ibrahim, p. 553). | |||
[[Category:Literary Sources]] | [[Category:Literary Sources]] |
Revision as of 13:33, 17 February 2015
[pp. 505-506]
ADH-DHAHABĪ
(1274-1348 A.D.)
Abū 'Abdalla Muḥ. b. 'Uthmān b. Qāīmaz Shams ad-dīn Adh-Dhahabī at-Turkumānī. An historian from Damascus, mostly concerned with the Hadith traditions.
EI (s.v.); GAL 2, 46.
1.) Al-mushtabih fī asmā’ ar-rijāl (A Dictionary of Homonyms)
Ed.: P. de Jong, Leiden Ι881.
T.: de Jong A:0
2.) Ta'rīkh al-Islām (A Chronicle, later continued by Ibn Shubba down to 1403 A.D.).
Quotations in: Ta'rīkh ad-dawla al-fatimiyya by Ḥasan Ibrahim Ḥasan, Cairo 1964.
T.: Ḥasan Ibrahim A: 0
[p. 506] 1.) from Al-Mushtabih
Αn-Nūbī. An-nūbah is a large country of the Sūdān, south of Upper Egypt. It is said that from that country came Bilāl - may God be pleased with him! - and Hibatalla b. Muḥammad b. Nūbī al-Anbārī [another reading: Hibatalla b. Aḥmed b. Nūba, the Nubian]. This information comes from Abū-l-Ḥasan b. al-'Allaf and Abū Naṣr 'Abd as-Samid b. Aḥmad b. Muḥ. an-Nūbī, according to the testimony given by Ibn Kulayb [Hibatalla] died at a mature age in the year 625 H. [1227 A.D.]. (de Jong, p. 63).
2.) From Tarīkh al-Islām
In this year [572 H. = 1176 A.D.], the battle of al-Kanz took place. He was the leader of the Blacks (sūdān) in Upper Egypt. He rallied a great multitude around him and they marched on Cairo (al-Qāhira) with the intention of restoring the [Fatimid] dynasty ... Al-Kanz was slain together with a great number of his followers. It is said that the number of those slain was 80,000, according to Muẓaffar Qīzoghlū. (Ḥasan Ibrahim, p. 197).
[Adh-Dhahabī quoting Ibn Abī Ṭayy]: The Turks received their salaries very punctually. We can say that the Turks rose against the Caliph [al-Mustanṣir] - who was then helpless - because of their thirst for bloodshed against the Black soldiers (al-junūd as-sūdānīyyīn), whom they hated (al-makrūhīn lahum). [The reason for it was that the Black soldiers] were faithful supporters (ansār) of the mother of the Caliph and used to take from the booty whatever they liked, while the Turks could collect only the remainder [lit. = "what the circumstances allowed"]. (Ḥasan Ibrahim, p. 553).