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Jarir ibn Atiyyah al-Khatafi Al-Tamimi (Arabic: جَرِيرُ بْنُ عَطِيَّةَ اَلْخَطَفِيُّ اَلتَّمِيمِيُّ) (c. 650 – c. 728) was an Umayyad-era Arab poet and satirist from Najd.
Al-Akhtal, Jarir and al-Farazdaq form a trio celebrated among the Arabs, but as to superiority there is dispute. Abu Ubayda placed him highest of the three on the ground that among his poems there were ten flawless qasidas (Arabic poetic odes), and ten more nearly so, and that this could not be said of the other two.
Another 10th-century poet, Jarir ibn Atiyah, satirized Farazdaq by using the term "Farazdaq-like" to describe an individual who was a "transgressor of the Shari'a". [28] Abu Nuwas, in the 9th century, once responded to an insult from Hashim bin Hudayj, a philosopher, by composing verses sarcastically praising his wisdom, then imploring him to ...
Jarir ibn Atiyah (c. 650 – c. 728), Arab poet and satirist Edward Atiyah (1903–1964), Lebanese born writer, father of Michael and Patrick Karen Attiah (born August 12, 1986), writer, journalist and editor
The great reformist sultan Ahmed Pasha Köprülü brought Abd al-Qadir into his employ with a commission to surpass ibn Hishām al-Anṣarī’s «Commentary», by writing the definitive commentary on the ancient poem Bānat Su'ad by Kaʿb ibn Zuhayr. Meanwhile, Abd al-Qadir al-Baghdādī came to the notice of the Ottoman Sultan Muḥammad ibn ...
Northwestern University in Qatar; Stenden University Qatar [13] Syscoms Institute [14] Texas A&M University at Qatar; Virginia Commonwealth University in Qatar [15] Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar [16] City University College [17] German University Qatar [18] University College London Qatar (UCL Qatar) [19] [2010-2020] MIE-SPPU Institute ...
Women were also traded as gifts across the Muslim world. Ibn Battuta writes about his exchanges with the amir Dawlasa in the Maldives as he brought two slave girls to his accommodation. Similarly, Ibn Battuta gifted "a white slave, a horse, and some raisins and almonds" to the governor of Multan. As a result, he solidified his relationship with ...
The first Grammarians of Baṣra lived during the seventh century in Al-Baṣrah. [1] The town, which developed out of a military encampment, with buildings being constructed circa 638 AD, [2] became the intellectual hub for grammarians, linguists, poets, philologists, genealogists, traditionists, zoologists, meteorologists, and above all exegetes of Qur’ānic tafsir and Ḥadīth, from ...