词条 | Ibn al-Tiqtaqa |
释义 |
| name = Ibn al-Tiqtaqa | birth_date = 1262 | death_date = 1310 (aged 48) }} ‘Ibn al-Tiqtaqā’, or the son of a chatterbox, was an onomatopoeic nickname for the Iraqi historian Jalāl-ad-Dīn Abu Ja’far Muhammad ibn Tāji’d-Dīn Abi’l-Hasan ’Ali, the spokesman of the Shi'a community in the Shi’ī holy cities—Hillah, Najaf, and Karbala; in an Iraq that was to remain the stronghold of Shi'ism, until the forcible conversion of Iran by Shah Ismail I Safavi. According to E.G. Browne's English version Of Mīrzā Muhammad b. ‛Abudi’l-Wahhāb-i—Qazwīni's edition of ‛Alā-ad-Dīn ‛Ata Malik-i-Juwaynī's Ta’rīhh-i-Jahān Gushā (London1912, Luzac), p.ix, Ibn al-Tiqtaqā's name was Safiyu’d-Din Muhammad ibn ‛Ali ibn Muhammad ibn Tabātabā. Around 1302 AD he wrote a popular compendium of Islamic history called al-Fakhri.[1][2] References1. ^Geert Jan van Gelder. [https://books.google.com/books?id=hpda9JwwAPYC&pg=PA50&dq=%22Ibn+al-Tiqtaqa%22&ei=XIfhSNz1F56ujgHGy6nnDg&sig=ACfU3U13SiTOaGg4tvyVYwg3QerInkNnGw The Classical Arabic Cannon of Polite (and Impolite) Literature.] Cultural Repertoires: Structure, Function, and Dynamics. Peeters Publishing, 2003, pp. 45– 58. {{ISBN|978-90-429-1299-1}} 2. ^al-Ṭiqṭaqā, Al-Fakhrî, Histoire des dynasties Musulmanes depuis la mort de Mahomet jusqu’a la chute du khalifat 'Abâsîde de Bagdâdz (11-656 de l'hégire = 632-1258 de J.-C.) avec des prolégomènes sur les principes du gouvernement, traduit par Émile Amar, Paris, Leroux, 1910. [En ligne] https://archive.org/details/alfakhrhistoir00muamuoft.
5 : Iraqi historians|14th-century historians|Iraqi Shia Muslims|1262 births|1310 deaths |
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