Ayn al-Quzat Hamadani
Persian jurist, mystic, philosopher, poet and mathematician
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ayn-al-QużÄt HamadÄnÄ«, also spelled Ain-al Quzat Hamedani or Ê¿Ayn-al Qudat Hamadhani (1098â1131) (Persian: عÛÙâ Ø§ÙÙØ¶Ø§Øª Ù٠داÙÛ), was a Persian[1][2][3] jurist, mystic, philosopher, poet and mathematician who was executed at the age of 33.[4][5]

Title
Life
Ayn al-Quzat was born in Hamedan and his ancestors were of Hamedan judges. His full name is Abuâl-maÊ¿ÄlÄ« Ê¿abdallÄh Bin AbÄ«bakr Mohammad MayÄnejÄ« (Persian: اب٠اÙ٠عاÙÛ Ø¹Ø¨Ø¯Ø§ÙÙ٠ب٠ابÛâ Ø¨Ú©Ø± Ù ØÙ د Ù ÛØ§ÙجÛ). He was a disciple of Ahmad Ghazali and devoted of Hallaj. He became a famous scholar at early age, and by the time he was thirty he was chosen to be a judge. Along with Abu Hamed Al-Ghazali, he is one of the founders of doctrinal Sufism. According to some accounts, he was briefly a pupil of Omar Khayyam. Upon his return from pilgrimage, Khayyam likely stayed in Hamadan for some time. It is possible that during his stay he became tutor to the young Ain al-Quzat.[6]:â351â However, Aminrazavi (2007) believes that from the figures who may have studied with Khayyam Ain al-Quzat is the least likely and that arguing their association is wishful thinking by those who like to view Khayyam as a Sufi.[6]:â23â Unlike most of the Sufis who have lived as respected and revered members of their communities, he fell afoul of the Seljuk rulers and was accused of heresy and executed, either by crucifixion or burning.[7]:â70â
Ayn al-Quzat along with Mansur al-Hallaj and Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi are known as the three martyrs of Sufism.[according to whom?]
Work
The most significant works of Ayn al-QożÄt are TamhÄ«dÄt (ت٠ÙÛØ¯Ø§Øª; Preludes) and Zubdat al-ḥaqÄʾiq fÄ« kaÅ¡f al-ḵalÄʾeq (زبدة Ø§ÙØÙØ§Ø¦Ù ÙÙ Ú©Ø´Ù Ø§ÙØ®ÙائÙ; The Essence of Truth). Both books are masterpieces of Sufi literature and have mystical and philosophical significance.[8] Ayn al-QożÄt HamadÄnÄ« quoted a few verses apparently in his own Iranian dialect (where it is called fahlavÄ«; bayt-e pahlavÄ« in a manuscript variant).[9]
Poetry
A famous quatrain is said to be his:
٠ا ٠رگ Ù Ø´ÙØ§Ø¯Øª از خدا Ø®ÙØ§Ø³ØªÙ اÙÙ
ÙØ¢Ù Ù٠ب٠س٠ÚÙØ² Ú©Ù Ø¨ÙØ§ Ø®ÙØ§Ø³ØªÙ اÙÙ
گر Ø¯ÙØ³Øª ÚÙÙÙ Ú©ÙØ¯ ک٠٠ا Ø®ÙØ§Ø³ØªÙ اÙÙ
Ù ÙØ§ Ø¢ØªÙØ´ Ù ÙÙÙØª ٠بÙÙØ±Ùا Ø®ÙÙÙØ§Ø³Ùت٠اÙÙ
I want death and martyrdom from God
I want it in three low-priced things
If the friend (i.e. God) grant my wishes
I want fire and oil and straw
This quatrain refers to his execution by Caliph's order.