Hamza al-Isfahani

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Diedafter 961
OccupationPhilologist, historian
Hamza al-Isfahani
Bornc.893
Diedafter 961
OccupationPhilologist, historian

Ḥamza ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Mū'addib al-Iṣbahānī Abū ‘Abd Allāh[1] (Arabic: حمزة بن الحسن المُؤَدِّب الأصفهاني ابو عبد الله; c.893 – after 961), commonly known as Ḥamza al-Iṣfahānī or Hamza Esfahani (Persian: حمزه اصفهانی), was a Persian[2] philologist and historian, who wrote in Arabic during the 'Abbasid and Buyid eras. He spent most of his life in his native town, Isfahan, and visited Baghdad at least three times during his lifetime. He had contact with many important scholars and historians, among them al-Tabari and Ibn Durayd. He wrote a history of Isfahan, a famous chronology of pre-Islamic and Islamic dynasties known as Taʾrīk̲h̲ sinī mulūk al-arḍ wa ’l-anbiyāʾ (تاریخ سنی ملوک الارض و الانبیا), and some other works on lexicography and poetry.

Like many other medieval Iranian scholars, details regarding the life of Hamza are obscure. He was born in the city of Isfahan in c.893, where he spent most of his life and was the son of a schoolmaster (mū’addib).[3][4][5] The city had served as an important center in western Iran under the Achaemenid, Parthian and Sasanian Empire.[6] During the 9th-century, many Zoroastrians and other adherents of non-Zoroastrian, Iranian faiths continued to reside in the city. During the late 9th-century or early 10th-century, the city started to gain a large Muslim community, which, nevertheless, preserved their ancient lore.[7] Some scholars such as A.C.S. Peacock have theorized Hamza to possibly have been a secret Zoroastrian, but other scholars have disagreed with this statement.[8][9][10]

Despite his keen interest in Iranian affairs and the pre-Islamic history of the country, Hamza preferred to write in Arabic, like the rest of the literary elite of Isfahan.[a][11] The city seemingly served as a major hub for the collection and transmission of the numerous modifications of the Middle Persian history text Khwaday-Namag (Book of Kings). Hamza made much use of the work, as demonstrated in his Sini Muluk al-ard w'al-anbiya.[7] Not many scholars in Isfahan were familiar with Middle Persian, and it is uncertain if Hamza himself had any knowledge of it.[12] Hamza was seemingly a distinguished citizen of Isfahan, due to his broad knowledge, which also earned him opponents, who referred him to as "drivel merchant."[3] In his work, Hamza immediately puts emphasis on the importance of Iran at the center of the world, a common trend in the historiography of the period as also seen in the works of al-Tabari and Abu Hanifa Dinawari.[13]

Bibliography

Extant works

  • Tā’rīkh sinī mulūk al-arḍ wa’l-anbiyā’[14]
  • al-Durra al-fākhira fī’l-amthāl al-sāʼira
  • Sawāʼir al-amthāl ʻalá af’al[1]
  • al-Amthāl al-ṣādira ‘an buyūt al-shi’r[1]
  • Dīwān ‘Abī Nuwās[1]
  • al-Tanbīh ʻalá ḥudūth al-taṣhīf[1]

Partially extant works

  • al-Muwāzana bayn al-‘arabī wa’l-fārsīya (also titled al-Muwāzana bayn al-‘arabī wa’l-‘ajami)[14]

Lost works

  • Tā’rīkh Iṣbahān[1]
  • Iṣbahan wa-‘akhbāruha[1]
  • Kitāb al-tashbīhāt[1]
  • ‘Anwā’i al-du’ā’[1]
  • Kitāb rasā’il[1]
  • al-Atamāthīl fī tabāshīr al-surūr[1]
  • Kitāb jama’ feyh ‘akhbār ‘esharat min al-shu’arā’ al-muhdithuīn ‘awaluhum Bashār[1]
  • Dīwān sh’ar ‘Abi Tamām[1]
  • Maḍāhik al-‘ash’ār[1]
  • A’yād al-furs (also titled A’yād Baghdād al-furs) [14][1]
  • Risāla al-ash’ār al-sā’ira fī ‘l-nayrūz wa’l-mihradjān[15]

Other works

Hamza also edited a recension of the Kitāb Naqd al-Shi’r (Book on Poetic Criticism) by Qudāma ibn Ja’far, but he only added chapter divisions.[16]

Published editions and translations

Notes

References

Sources

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