Al-Ajurrumiyya Explained

Al-Ajurrumiyyah
Author:Ibn Ajurrum
Language:Arabic
Genre:Grammar
Published:13th century
Media Type:book

al-Ājurrūmiyyah (Arabic: الْآجُرُّومِيَّةِ) in full is a 13th-century book of Arabic grammar (Arabic: نحو عربي, naḥw ʿarabī). Very concise for easy memorization, it formed the foundation of a beginner's education in Classical Arabic learning in Arab societies at the time and was one of the first books to be memorized after the Qur'an along with the Alfiya. It was written by the Moroccan, Berber Abu 'Abd Allah Sidi Muhammad ibn Da'ud as-Sanhaji (aka "Ibn Ajarrum") (d. 1324).[1]

In the Preface to his translation of the work, the Rev. J. J. S. Perowne writes:

"The "Ājrūmīya" is a well-known and useful compendium of Arabic Syntax. It is regarded by the Arabs themselves as a standard educational work; and various editions of it have appeared in Boulak, Algiers, and other places. But it is not always easy to meet with these in this country..."[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Eickelman, D. F. (1992). Knowledge and Power in Morocco: the Education of a Twentieth-Century Notable. Princeton: Princeton University Press, p. 56
  2. J. J. S. Perowne (1852) Al Adjrumiieh: the Arabic text with the vowels, and an English translation (Cambridge: Macmillan & Co.)